How To Work Through Conflicts In a Family Business
Frank Williamson
Investment banker serving entrepreneurs, venture-backed companies and nonprofits
Anyone who’s managed a business with other family members knows that working side by side with loved ones can be a double-edged sword.
While there’s often a high level of trust and loyalty that comes from working with those you know best, that long shared history can sometimes cause personal conflicts to spill over into the workplace.
When family disagreements threaten to affect a business’s quality of service or derail long- term goals, it’s sometimes necessary for family members to dedicate time to identifying and working through those conflicts before they worsen.
In my experience as an investment banker, I’ve found that conflict within a family business often falls into two buckets. The first is defined by continual small disagreements among family members over business decisions and who has the right to make those decisions. Over time, this can cause the line between family and business matters to blur.
The other bucket, the one in which I work, involves a major inflection point for a business that has implications for the entire family, whether or not they work directly in the business. These inflection points — selling the business, buying another business, taking on new investors or a change of generational leadership — all come about through the passage of time. Circumstances create a need to make a choice about the future, which creates the opportunity for stress, ill will and unspoken assumptions to spill into the workplace. Personal dynamics can become workplace dynamics in a way they weren’t before.
My experience is that the most intractable family business conflicts arise from what I call a “poorly set table.” This happens when somebody who is affected by the decision is excluded from the decision-making process early on, which causes confusion and, over the long term, builds resentment. In many cases, those things could have been avoided by family members making explicit what has previously only been implicit.
Setting the table for decision-making makes a huge difference when it comes to generating a positive outcome. It might feel like a lot of prologue, but if you skip these steps, the potential for conflict becomes much greater.
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A business’s value can also be more than monetary. Some families, intentionally or not, build their identity around their businesses, which can make the prospect of selling an emotionally charged issue. When a business owner reaches the end of their career, a change is going to happen one way or another because of time and age. This can lead to a big, existential question: Change to what? Finding the answer to that question can often provide greater clarity for families trying to evaluate multiple options.
When circumstances create a need for change, conflict often arises when there’s more than one right answer about what the post-change world could look like. In these situations, the process of working through conflict often comes down to good communication, which can sometimes be challenging even with the people we’re closest to.
But by putting in the time and effort to set the table in your decision-making process, you can reduce the opportunity for conflict, and potentially even open the door to resolving long-held issues you’ve been putting off.
Do you need expert guidance to navigate through conflicts in a family business? Schedule a consultation today.