A steady source of calls and
e-mails I get from all different types of contractors from all around the country center on the trials and
tribulations of working with family. If your family dynamics are great, congratulations!
This blog isn’t for you. But if your family business is generating more stress
and strain than you’d like, keep reading.
Even if
you don’t work with any relatives and are thinking, “I don’t need to read this,”
think again. The nature of all businesses is that they reflect the same type of
dynamics a related by blood family has. That means you act like the dad, mom,
the brothers, the sisters and so forth. Keep reading and see if you don’t
agree.
Why read
what I’m saying? Because, I was the third generation of what is now a company
that has the fourth generation hard at work. What I can tell you is the same as
I tell my clients, “It’s fantastic and exhausting all in the same moment. On
any given day, there were either too many Levis
or not enough.”
Sound
familiar?
You
ought to know that I think there’s something very special about building a
business that’s made to last so it passes easily to the next generation to run,
develop and grow for many years to come. Unfortunately, that’s not likely to
happen if there are troubles like:
1. You haven’t made a clear
succession plan for passing the company from one generation to the next.
2.
You saddle the new generation with old debts and outdated ways of doing
business.
3. You treat the arriving generation like an
indentured slave rather than a welcome member of the team.
4.
You treat them too well and give them a free pass on conforming to company
standards (assuming you have them) and you let them slide on being accountable.
It’s demoralizing to all the other staff whether they’re family members or not.
5.
You have no real training other than what you think is training, which is
criticizing them for whatever they say and do until they choose to wait and do
nothing rather than risk your wrath.
So, what should you do? Here’s
what you can do right now to make working with family so much better:
Create
the 10 Commandments of Family Business. These are the Golden Rules you all
agree to abide by.
Note: If you want a copy of mine I use with
customers, please e-mail me at al@appleseedbusiness.com and I’ll be
glad to send it along.
Create an Organizational Chart with
all the boxes it takes to run your company. We’re not talking about fancy titles
like President, Vice President and such. We’re talking about positions like Service
Manager, Marketing Manager and Financial Manager to name just a few.
Note: It doesn’t matter if there is no one at work
besides you. You must have all the boxes
filled out and your name in every box. This way as you grow and people (especially
family members) come on board, there is a clear place they’re at today and a
clear path on where they can go tomorrow.
Respect the Chain
of Command amongst family members.
Create a Buy-Sell
agreement and cover at least the 4Ds which are death, divorce, disability and
disabled.
Meet formally at least once a week some
place where you won’t be overheard and get on the same page philosophically so
you don’t present a mixed message to your other staff.
These
are just the basics, but they’ll go a long way to building a family business
that’s worthy of your blood, sweat and tears.
Announcement:
The Step by Step Success program solves the “Contractor
Overwhelm” issue by offering one simple, powerful business building Step at a
time. Through interactive teleseminars and one-to-one coaching in Office Hours,
Al Levi and
Ellen Rohr will help contractors implement ONE action each month
that will help them make more money and start living a better life.
One
simple Step … one problem SOLVED every month. Topics include …
- Firefighting
101 teaches you how to handle ANY problem … once and for all.
- Establishing
yourself as someone worth playing with, following and fighting for.
- Launching
laser-focused direct marketing to get massive results on a shoestring budget.
Learn
more at
www.StepByStepBusinessBuilding.com.