FAMILY BUSINESS
Professionals
Give An Edge to Family Businesses
Professional
managers are specialists & can manage growth better. So, the dilemma before
family businesses is not whether to professionalise. It is about when to do so
I joined my family business in 1971. My family, a large joint one, owned diverse businesses collectively managed by family members. The businesses ranged from trading to manufacturing, but none leveraged any significant brands. In this backdrop, I strived over the subsequent two decades to create a distinct identity for a successful brand-based FMCG business.
Still, in 1990, when we carved out
the FMCG business into a new company called Marico, it was a leap of faith for
me personally and a quantum jump for the business, which then had a turnover of
Rs 80 crore.
The separate corporate existence did
impart a sharper focus and enhanced the growth potential. But it also held out
a challenge — how would a new, unknown company attract talent? We inherited
about 200 employees of our parent, Bombay Oil.
But we needed fresh talent to build
profitable brands. We could not afford mass advertising. So we adopted an
innovative approach. We came out with two news-styled recruitment ads. The
first dramatically announced: ‘200 Employees Walk Out of Bombay Oil’. The
second screamed: ‘Mass Killer Nabbed’. The campaign was fresh and unique, and
fetched us the desired attention. The transition towards professionalisation is
crucial for a family business. In such an enterprise, typically, members of the
family handle virtually all key aspects. They take most decisions with or
without professional qualifications or business exposure.
However, a mix-up between ownership
and management could lead to conflicts in decision-making. I have seen
organisations where relationships among owner-manager siblings get too complex.
Finally, the business wilts under emotional strain and lack of business focus.
Interestingly, the seeds of such a decline are sown during growth itself.
The evolution phase is exhilarating.
Owner-managers carry limitless energy and are eager to do well. But that is
against the backdrop of potential conflicts on how to deal with the growth, and
the dreams and thoughts that underlie growth ideas. There could be more sparring
and deadlocks on the arrival of the next generation, armed with better
education, more sophisticated exposure and new ideas. Families could differ
over the pace of growth and the investments required or eventual aspirations.
This eventful phase in the scaling up of an enterprise is crucial and needs
careful handling.
A key institutional decision that
needs to be taken is about the role of professional managers. My experience
with professionalisation has been excellent. Since I stressed on professionalism,
Marico’s business has grown 50 times — from Rs 80 crore in 1990 to Rs 4,000
crore in 2012. Let me share with you what I learned from my own growth journey.
Professional managers bring in specialisation — in general management or expert
functions. They are qualified and experienced to deal with growth. They can
take decisions and run the business on sheer merit, not yielding to undue
influence. The merits are many. Therefore, the dilemma before owners is not
whether to professionalise. It is about when to do so. Scaling up business
requires scaling up the organisational apparatus and management. Usually, there
comes a point beyond which the owner family cannot meaningfully organise and
manage the business.
If a family business does not
professionalise in time, it could end up restricting its growth orbit. I do,
however, reckon it is natural for family businesses to be and stay confused
about the need, suitability and timing of inducting professionals.
I recommend that a family take time
to get concurrence. It is also important to send out a unified and sustainable
signal to build a good brand in the talent market, to attract the best possible
hands.
This strategic clarity on recruiting
professionals enables the owner family to tap head hunters with a clear brief,
precise needs and realistic targets. A family business may have to struggle to
overcome the initial challenges of the professionalisation process. My
experience is that it pays to be resourceful in this struggle. For instance, it
could take time before one starts attracting quality talent. In the mean time,
growth could reveal talent gaps. I filled up such gaps resourcefully, using
individual consultants.
Another challenge is presentability.
The growth story may be attractive, but the physical presentability to
prospective talent could be suspect. I faced a unique challenge. Our office was
in the crowded commodity markets of Masjid Bunder, hardly a place a bright MBA
would visit, forget join! I dealt with this creatively. I would fix the first meeting
in the top-class environs of Willingdon Sports Club. That provided a fitting
ambience to “sell the Marico dream”. I would, of course, take the newcomer to
Masjid Bunder. But that would be later, when the talent was sold on the Marico
story!
The nature of a business drives the
need and extent of professionalisation. For instance, family enterprises seem
to excel in low-margin businesses such as trading, maybe because owners can
drive crucial decisions (commodity positions, forex transactions) with far more
firmness than overcautious, indecisive or recklessly risk-taking professionals.
Professionals may do better in
high-margin businesses, that need higher sophistication in business management,
e.g. IT, manufacturing, branded products/FMCG. Professionals can add tremendous
value in brand-building, where the owner family may not possess the necessary
skills, bandwidth and refinement needed for sustained success.
Family businesses need not give up
the entrepreneurial flair while professionalising. In fact, the best situation
is one where professionals imbibe the goodness of entrepreneurship. There could
be a dilemma as to which level to professionalise first. It is not necessary to
straightaway get a professional CEO.
One could start with middle-level
specialists staffing critical domains such as marketing and manufacturing. A
lot depends on the aspirations of the owner family. It has to reach a consensus
on many important points — specific aspirations, the extent of leeway to be
given to professionals, how much to delegate, up to what level, who should give
up what responsibility, who is retiring and who is succeeding him/ her, and who
should contribute the most or the least. It helps if the owner family sits
together and arrives at a concrete thought process starting with the basic
issue of whether and when to professionalise. This would be driven by family
aspirations, needs of domain expertise and availability within the family. The
family must ensure there is a mechanism for conflict resolution besides a
well-known code of conduct for members. Cohesion in the family fabric through a
family council or trust sends the right signals to professionals. Another
critical factor is the readiness to let go.
Entrusting crucial functions and
handing over charge to professionals demand adjustments and sacrifice. There
would be, like everywhere else in life, an element of risk. Occasionally, the
owners may make mistakes by choosing ‘wrong’ professionals. But that should not
lead the family to lose faith. To end, I quote Ernest Hemingway, “It is good to
have an end to journey toward; but it is the journey that matters, in the end”.
The process of professionalisation is as critical as the end — of staffing the
business with professionals. And the process highlights the importance of
building an enduring and effective culture in an organisation.
Harsh C Mariwala
CHAIRMAN & MD, MARICO LTD in ET120714
CHAIRMAN & MD, MARICO LTD in ET120714
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