Continuity Model Generation. Justin B. Craig

Continuity Model Generation - Justin B. Craig


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orchestration.

      So how does it all come together?

      Back inside the tent, when a family member who does not work in the business understands that there are meaningful ways that they can engage with the enterprise, such as through a family office or business governance role, they are more likely to feel valued. Likewise, a married-in will feel included when they hear about opportunities for involvement in the family's philanthropic activities. Or, when a rising-generation member finds out about the enterprise pathway, they will enthusiastically consider the family business a venture partner they may need in the future to execute their own entrepreneurial vision.

Schematic illustration of the big tent approach.

      p

      The RIPCC framework is something I have stolen, but paraphrased, from a book written by my friend and colleague Professor Emeritus John Ward. But given the remarkable number of books and articles John has produced to help readers understand family enterprises, it's difficult for me even to know from which work I got the idea!

      The first dimension, the one that begins with R, is that the families respect the challenge: that is, families who get it right understand that functioning optimally in a business-owning family is challenging. The second dimension, the I, reflects that Ward believes the issues across families are the same, but the perspectives are different. What that means, I suggest, is that the issues facing business-owning families are fundamentally the same, but how they manage and navigate these issues will vary, dependent on the perspectives of individuals and family groups. The third dimension relates to planning. Ward suggests that those who get it right don't leave it to chance. They are consummate planners. This dimension, though not intentionally framed as such, is at the epicenter of the Continuity Canvas and will be clear in Part II.

      The fourth dimension of the RIPCC framework concerns communication. Ward suggests families who get it right are those who find ways to communicate. Finally, and arguably the most important of the RIPCC best practice framework dimensions, concerns having a commitment: to the “us” in question.

Schematic illustration of RIPCC framework.

Schematic illustration of the four Ps framework.

      The fourth framework in the familial meta-framework is cut-and-pasted from the research of Professor Danny Miller and Professor Isabel LeBreton Miller. Their groundbreaking study of long-lived family-controlled businesses (FCBs) revealed that, unlike managers of most other for-profit businesses, those of FCBs seek ends in addition to profit. As such, they are more willing to make bold decisions (i.e. commands) that sacrifice some of their personal interests for the sake of their employees (i.e. community) and larger society (i.e. connections), as well as for the long-term survival of the businesses they operate (i.e. continuity).

      While the common perception of FCBs is that they are clannish, inward-thinking nests of nepotism, the exemplar firms in the Millers’ study suggest otherwise. Their owning-families foster a cohesive organizational community of employees for whom joining these FCBs is akin to joining


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