Showing posts with label governance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label governance. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 25, 2015

Leadership Lessons from Great Family Businesses

It’s no secret that family businesses can struggle with governance, leadership transitions, and even survival. Consider a few high-profile examples: Banco Espírito Santo was rescued by the Portuguese government last year following the resignation of its CEO, the great-grandson of the bank’s founder, amid allegations of financial improprieties. The Doosan Group, a South Korean conglomerate, was thrown into turmoil when the clan that runs it replaced one brother with another in the chief executive role. Fiat, the Italian auto group run by the heirs of Gianni Agnelli, went through five CEOs and three chairmen in two years before bringing in an outsider to lead it. And in the United States the New England grocery chain Market Basket faced employee protests and lost $583 million in sales as two cousins—one a board member, the other the chief executive, both grandsons of the founder—publicly vied for control of the company.

Although we’ve also heard numerous family-enterprise success stories, cases of harmony, health, and longevity seem to be exceptions to the rule. According to the Family Business Institute, only 30% of these organizations last into a second generation, 12% remain viable into a third, and 3% operate into the fourth generation or beyond. Even those that do continue often see their value decline significantly when power changes hands at the top. Joseph Fan, a professor at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, tracked the market performance of 214 family-run firms in Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore; he found that on average their shares dropped by almost 60% in the eight years surrounding a change of CEO. Leaders of family companies acknowledge the problem. In a survey conducted by the Harvard Business School professor Boris Groysberg and the researcher Deborah Bell, directors of family business boards gave themselves much lower performance ratings than members of nonfamily boards, especially in the area of talent management. Fewer than 10% said their companies were effective at attracting, hiring, retaining, or firing employees or at leveraging diversity in the workforce.

Only 30% of family businesses last into the second generation; 12% are viable into the third.

And yet family-owned or -controlled businesses play a key role in the global economy. They account for an estimated 80% of companies worldwide and are the largest source of long-term employment in most countries. In the United States they employ 60% of workers and create 78% of new jobs. These aren’t just mom-and-pop shops either: In one-third of S&P 500 companies, 40% of the 250 largest firms in France and Germany, and more than 60% of large corporations in East Asia and Latin America, family members own a significant share of the equity and can influence key decisions, particularly election of the chairman and the CEO.

Imagine the benefit, then, if more of these companies mastered key people management, leadership development, and succession practices. How? By learning from the best in their class: large family-owned or family-controlled organizations that have prospered for decades, if not centuries.

With advice from Sabine Rau, a professor at King’s College in London, our firm, Egon Zehnder, partnered with Family Business Network International to analyze 50 of these leading family firms. Each had annual revenue above €500 million, and together they represented all major industries in the Americas, Europe, and Asia. Although we did find a few cases of subpar governance and undisciplined succession at the top, most of these companies offer valuable lessons for unlocking great leadership in family businesses. Through our interviews with both family and nonfamily executives, we uncovered several best practices: The most successful family firms establish good governance as a baseline, preserve “family gravity,” identify and develop both family and nonfamily talent, and bring discipline to top-level succession. 

A Governance Baseline
Family businesses cannot hope to manage internal talent (both family and nonfamily) or attract the best outsiders without establishing good governance practices that separate the family and the business and ensure oversight from a professional board. Even among the leading companies in our study, a quarter of the nonfamily executives we interviewed said they originally had governance-related concerns about joining a family business: uncertainty about levels of autonomy, hidden agendas, lack of dynamism, and the potential for nepotism and irrational decisions. “What would have absolutely stopped me from coming,” said the CFO of a British investment trust, “would have been if I had a feeling that I could not be independent and the family was running the business rather than it being professionally run.” The CEO of a U.S. consumer business who also proceeded cautiously before signing on told us, “I was making sure there was a level playing field in terms of future possibilities, growth, and advancement.”

Only a small minority of the companies in our study had no advisory or supervisory board, but all those were entirely family-owned, and some were considering instituting a form of independent oversight in the future. Meanwhile, 94% of the surveyed firms were controlled by supervisory or advisory boards of about nine members, on average. Family representation on these boards averaged 46% in Europe, 28% in the Americas, and 26% in Asia, but a clear separation between family and business existed in most cases. “We have an official governance structure, and this codifies the boundaries,” reported the nonfamily CEO of a well-known consumer company in the UK. And the CEO of an American maker of high-performance materials explained his firm’s explicit rules: “We have a supervisory board, and each branch of the family tree is allowed to send one member, unless the branch already has a member as part of management. For every family member on the board, one external, nonfamily member is also nominated.”

Good governance is an obvious first hurdle for family businesses that want to hire and keep the best people and compete successfully over the long term. Committing to sound decision-making and management practices is thus essential, whether a company is publicly traded, partly owned by professional investors (such as private equity firms), or completely under family ownership.

 "Family Gravity”
Although family businesses should match nonfamily ones in their governance structures and opportunities for professional growth, they must also be careful not to lose what makes them special. We call this “family gravity,” and our research shows it’s another critical factor in achieving long-term success.

The firms we studied usually have one key family member (but up to three) standing at the center of the organization, like the sun in our solar system. These people personify the corporate identity and align differing interests around clearly defined values and a common vision. They focus on the next generation, not the next quarter. They tend to embrace strategies that put customers and employees first and emphasize social responsibility. And they have strong personalities that draw talented people into their orbits and keep them there. One nonfamily CFO of a Japanese education company told us, “I decided to join because I fully respected [the family patriarch] from my heart.” The nonfamily CEO of a Swedish media business expressed similar sentiments: “I liked the family. They were somehow real people with personalities that were exciting to manage.” Other executives said, “My shareholders have faces” and “The beauty is that we think long term, about the legacy we will leave behind.” When a single family member (or a few who are completely in sync) maintains the right presence in a family business, recruitment, retention, and results clearly benefit. 

Finding Future Leaders
Companies with sound governance and gravity should have no trouble attracting managers—from within or outside the family. But how do you decide who is right for the highest-level positions in your firm? All talent, and especially family members, must be assessed on competencies, potential, and values.

The competencies most frequently required for success at the top of any sizable business include strategic orientation, market insight, results orientation, customer impact, collaboration and influence, organizational development, team leadership, and change leadership. In family businesses you should also look for people who understand the company’s ownership dynamics, accept that responsibility for multiple generations comes with the job, and are able to manage social ventures and sustainable growth. Along with competencies, candidates must demonstrate potential—the capacity to change, learn, and grow into increasingly complex and challenging roles that we might not envision today.

But in the family businesses we studied, values seem to be the acid test. When we reviewed the transcripts of our interviews, we found a 95% overlap in the language that each firm’s family members and nonfamily executives used to describe their corporate ethos: words such as respect, integrity, quality, humility, passion, modesty, and ambition. “We are working on the same page, in the same way, and he understands my commitment to bring the company forward,” the nonfamily CEO of a German retailer said, referring to the group CEO. The family chairwoman of a Chinese consumer company reported, “We have the same values, the same vision. We trust each other.”

Family members told us that when evaluating senior executive candidates, they considered cultural fit above all else: “He did not have all the operational requirements the board had asked for on paper, but he had so much more!” said the family chairman of an Indian consumer business, describing his nonfamily CEO. “He is the kind of person who just fits into our culture, and that is more important than the role spec.” The family chairman of an American beverage company echoed those sentiments: “We evaluate people on the basis of leadership qualities, which extend to the interaction with the family. That includes their values, which is very different from a résumé that says this person built up the Russian business.” 

About the Research
With family executives, in whom cultural fit was more easily found, the key concern was development. More than 40% of the companies in our study included members of the next generation on their boards and committees in order to nurture their business and management skills. Younger family members also held positions such as head of U.S. sales, China country manager, and adviser to the CEO, and they filled roles at various levels in corporate strategy, innovation, product management, and the family office. At one U.S. consumer company, the CEO, a family member, told us, “We very consciously develop family talent with two to six interns every year. The culture used to be, Go out and make it on your own, and come in with a track record. Now there is more encouragement to consider working for the company [from the start].”

The best family firms find their future leaders early and invest in them—whether they are cousins and grandchildren, existing nonfamily employees who show promise, or outsiders with no previous connection to the firm. Likely prospects are carefully brought up through the business so that when they’re ready for more-senior roles, the values and competencies match is a sure thing. “I prefer to hire and grow,” the family chairman of an Indian consumer company told us. A top nonfamily executive at a Chinese business outlined his firm’s approach: “We created a corporate university sponsored by the family, not the company, and educated 100 people at MIT and Stanford to prepare them for management.” 

Disciplined CEO Succession
The greatest threat to any large corporation is a failed CEO succession. In his analysis of once-great companies in decline, Jim Collins, a leading business thinker, found that all but one had experienced a problematic transition at the top, and Joseph Fan’s research confirms the value destruction often seen in such scenarios. If there is one area in which most family businesses could stand to improve, this is it. Even among our exemplary sample, nearly 30% considered only a single candidate for their top succession, and about two-thirds didn’t follow a properly structured selection process. Instead, a leading family member intuitively chose the successor, who was then formally approved by the supervisory and management boards and introduced to the rest of the organization. Sometimes the decision came about through inspiration or chance: “[Our CEO first] worked with us on a consulting project,” said a family representative from an Indian consumer company. “Over that period of four months, I got to know him and his style really well.” In other cases, recommendations were sought. At one Spanish company, a family member consulted a management professor he trusted and chose between the two people the professor recommended. At a Japanese consumer business, the board appointed a family member who had risen through the ranks. “He built up his career here and knows the daily operations and products very well,” a nonfamily director explained.


However, ample research shows that CEO appointments are far more successful when they follow a disciplined search involving multiple candidates. The best family businesses in our sample addressed CEO selection proactively and strategically (see the chart “A Disciplined Succession Process”). In the initial stage, the supervisory board appointed a formal nominations committee to define the specifications for and conduct a broad internal and external search. This included outlining the ideal profile, developing a long list of candidates, and assessing all of them through behavioral interviews and reference checking. Next the committee selected a short list, agreed on a ranking, and presented it to the supervisory and management board members, who chose a finalist. Finally, the family members and the independent directors approved the selected candidate, although in most cases they had an informal yet significant veto power.

The former (nonfamily) CEO of a British construction company told us, “The process was handled very professionally. Initially, I was interviewed by HR and the third-generation family, then I had sessions with the leading family member, then with the brother, then with all five of the fourth generation together, and then I had one-on-one sessions with all the nonexecutive directors. All of them took references on me.” At the Swedish media company, the family chairman led a similarly comprehensive assessment process: “I decided that seven elected board members would each get some time to interview [the prospective CEO], either by themselves or a few together. Then we compared notes and came to a conclusion.”

Most of the companies followed a clear hierarchy when considering candidates, giving preference to family first, internal talent second, and external executives third. We enthusiastically endorse that practice, provided that the right assessment and development processes are in place. In family businesses, where culture and personal relationships are critical, internal hires stand the best chance of success. In the 50 firms we studied, 38% of CEOs were family members. Of those who weren’t, 54% were internal appointees and 46% external. In those cases, we found three basic types of executives. The sidebar “Three Nonfamily CEO Archetypes” describes them and their suitability for particular mandates.

Of course, the initial integration period can make or break any newly appointed executive. On the basis of our experience, we estimate that the right transitional support can cut the risk of a failed hire or promotion in half. Especially for nonfamily CEOs coming into family firms, major conflicts almost inevitably arise in this phase, as we heard from some of the executives we interviewed. “The owners say that I am responsible, but the next day they move into this field and make decisions, and sometimes they don’t even notice,” the managing director of a German business told us. “It is impossible to become part of their world,” said an executive from a different company. “I never got the feeling that it is my project.”


To avoid these problems, family firms must ensure that new CEOs are given adequate time to get to know the organization and its key players as well as to meet and bond with important family members. “When we get someone in, we accompany him like a personal scout,” one family CEO explained. “A director or board member introduces him, helps him, and talks to him regularly. The know-how is transferred personally.” The family chairman of a Belgian food and beverage company described a similar approach: “He will have lots of contact with me, and I will make sure that I can show him what the family wants.” A thoughtful onboarding process, along with a professional, fair selection system, can help a CEO succession unfold smoothly and effectively, creating value for the company rather than destroying it.

Leadership decisions, particularly at the very top, can be a minefield for family businesses. But our research shows that companies can navigate safely and prosper for generations if they establish good governance as a baseline, preserve family gravity, identify and develop high-potential executives both within the family and outside it, and bring the right discipline to their CEO succession and integration processes. The payoffs are clear: Research by Ernst & Young, the Family Business Network, Credit Suisse, and others shows that large, long-standing, publicly traded family businesses grow faster than nonfamily companies, are more resilient, and outperform market returns by several percentage points.

Claudio Fernández-Aráoz is a senior adviser at the global executive search firm Egon Zehnder and the author of It’s Not the How or the What but the Who (Harvard Business Review Press, 2014).

Sonny Iqbal is a partner at Egon Zehnder and coleader of its global family-business practice.

Jörg Ritter is a partner at Egon Zehnder and coleader of its global family-business practice.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

ROLE OF AN ADVISORY BOARD - BDC Study

ROLE OF AN ADVISORY BOARD ACCORDING TO AN SME BUSINESS LEADER
It is not unusual for the CEO of an SME to be a “one-man band,” personally seeing to every detail and micromanaging his business. Isolated, he tends to manage everything himself. According to Jean-Yves Sarazin, CEO of the Delom Group, an advisory board allows entrepreneurs to break free from their isolation and to have a sounding board to validate their strategies. An advisory board allows business leaders to question themselves and forces them to reflect. The mission of an advisory board is to ask the most relevant questions and delve deeper into underlying issues. It can also help compensate for weaknesses. An entrepreneur who lacks financial expertise can benefit from the recommendations of an advisoryboard member who has financial expertise. Moreover, an advisory board forces theleader to be prepared, triggering the thinking process: [Translation] “When preparing, one often self-corrects one’s strategy. Having an advisory board builds discipline.”

BENEFITS ACCORDING TO LEADERS
As a governance tool, advisory boards are not common among Canadian SMEs. However, according to business leaders who have set them up, they yield tangible benefits. When asked to rate the advantages on a scale of one to 10, they responded that the advisory board:
·         is an essential tool                                                                        8.2
·         is like having a sounding board                                                    8.1
·         is a support for the owner/management team                              8.1
·         allows you to develop a broader vision                                        8.0
·         strengthens the management team’s convictions                        8.0
·         forces management to look at the company                                7.5
·         challenges the company’s management team                            7.5
·         brings rigour in to the company                                                   7.2
·         is a driving force for the growth of the company                          7.1

            In particular, the existence of an advisory board allowed them to:
·         improve strategic business choices                                             8.0
·         broaden the universe of knowledge and skills                             7.8
·         develop new ideas                                                                       7.8
·         put in place a better management structure                                7.4
·         improve company reputation and image                                      7.3
·         reassure shareholders and investors                                           7.2
·         avoid costly mistakes                                                                   6.7
·         break down the isolation of company executives                         6.4
·         ensure succession of the company                                              6.1

IMPACT OF ADVISORY BOARDS
Most (86%) respondents who have benefited from the advice of their advisory board believe it has had a significant impact on their company. In particular, respondents note that advisory boards had a direct, positive impact on:
·         company vision                                                                            7.7
·         innovation within the company                                                     6.9
·         risk management                                                                          6.8
·         company profitability                                                                     6.8
·         company survival                                                                          6.6
·         sales growth                                                                                  6.6
·         labour relations                                                                             6.5
·         hiring the best emp                                                                       6.2

These results clearly show that an advisory board improves the company’s vision and enables better strategic decisions. Moreover, an advisory board encourages entrepreneurs to think long term and define a direction for their company.


Tuesday, September 10, 2013

IT Governance is Killing Innovation

Recent CEB research shows that work has become much more interdependent — employees increasingly need to tap a broader array of internal and external colleagues and partners to be successful in their jobs. The emergence of this new work environment has significant implications for how IT should enable business growth and, more specifically, for the kinds of investments IT should be making to support employees.

Unfortunately, when it comes to IT's ability to allocate investments in response to the new work environment, traditional governance processes prove grossly outdated. Some of the key challenges:
  • Companies don't identify the very best ideas for investment because most capital allocation processes start with business partners' existing ideas about projects to fund. As we've noted in our previous blog, senior business partners might not be that knowledgeable about what actually drives productivity on the front lines.

  • Companies allocate capital to the wrong investments because our traditional emphasis on ROI-based business cases undermines IT's ability to invest in high-return-but-hard-to-measure areas like improving knowledge worker productivity.

  • Companies tend to spread their capital allocation bets too thinly across business groups or functions, often for political reasons. This practice helps 'keep the peace' but means that often the most transformational opportunities get short-changed.

Across our year of research into this problem, we have identified a select group of companies that are rethinking their governance and investment processes to circumvent the problems outlined above. 
 
Expand First, Filter Second
Most CIOs will tell you that they have no shortage of ideas to invest in — the hard part is whittling down to the right ones. Push that a bit further and what most CIOs say is that those ideas are in the form of project requests from business partners. The problem is that these "bottom-up" project requests often miss the big picture as too many are incremental or uninspiring. Yes, while most of these requests are vetted for alignment with corporate strategy, what's often missing is how these requests fit within a broader context of how the business overall generates value. Furthermore, this lack of context prevents organizations from identifying other investment ideas that have high potential but haven't bubbled up organically through project requests.

To address this challenge, a global transportation company we spoke with is using a strategic lens to expand the list of project ideas to find the ones with the highest potential corporate value, before filtering them. They start with a map of the company's critical business capabilities — those concrete business activities that are vital to meeting a strategic goal (e.g. rapid new product roll-out). Then, they look at the health of the information available to business leaders who manage those capabilities. They find this leads them into all sorts of overlooked opportunities and provides them with a good proxy for where IT investment can have significant business impact, which can better inform prioritization decisions. 

Prioritize Capabilities, not Projects
The currency of most IT project prioritization meetings is the ROI-based business case. As mentioned above, this measure works very well for comparing projects that deliver hard benefits, but undermine the ability to invest in critical capabilities that have a long-term payoff horizon or highly innovative capabilities where the payoff is uncertain.


A global high-tech equipment provider is taking a different approach. Similar to the transportation company mentioned earlier, they start with a top down view of critical business capabilities and pillars required to support long-term business strategy. Then, using customer preference measurement methodologies like conjoint analysis, they survey senior business leaders to determine the relative criticality of each of these pillars. Based on this — and before any projects are even discussed — they are able to map out the relative level of IT investment each capability should receive. So, if the business leadership agrees that capability A is twice as important to realizing their goals as capability B, capability A is targeted for twice as much investment. Projects can then be assessed on contribution to the needs of that pillar, rather than purely on financial metrics like ROI.

CIOs are being asked to arm employees with the capabilities required for success in a new, much more integrated and interdependent work environment. But to do that requires more than capital: it requires a different approach to making decisions and, specifically, rethinking traditional IT project-centric approaches to identifying and funding capital investment opportunities. 


Andrew Horne and Brian Foster

Andrew Horne and Brian Foster

Andrew Horne, a Managing Director at CEB, works with the CEB’s membership network of Chief Information Officers, and leads global research teams in producing best practice case studies, benchmarks, implementation tools, and executive education. Brian Foster, a Managing Director in CEB’s IT Practice, oversees a global team that provides advice and consultation to a network of more than 2,500 IT leaders, including CIOs, enterprise architects, applications, infrastructure, security, and PMO executives.