Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Tips on Running a Family Business
Tips on Running a Family Business Thinking about going into business with a family member? Tread lightly. One disagreement could rip that relationship to threads, but youâll give yourself the best chance of success with these tips on how to keep a family business from tearing the family apart. Foster a Business Mindset One of the biggest hurdles to overcome when going into business with family is hurting a family memberâs feelings or making them feel unimportant or undervalued. This happens easily when there are various positions of power. Combine that catalyst with individual egos and you have a recipe for certain disaster. âItâs difficult to keep all the past relationship baggage out of business, but you have to compartmentalize,â says Jennifer Moss, founder and CEO of BabyNames.com, who works with her siblings. âIf I pull a sister off of a project, she canât feel itâs personal; itâs all about the bottom line.â Clearly Define Expectations Itâs not uncommon for family members to get lax at work, especially if theyâre not an owner of the business, which makes it critical to your own success that duties and expectations are clearly outlined. DeAnna Kennedy, author of the book Find the Talent Within You and Sell It! has worked with her daughter for about 20 years. Kennedy suggests drafting specifically defined job descriptions and hour expectations with titles and pay rate. With these details on paper, you can avoid at least a few of the problems commonly associated with employees who take advantage of unclear expectations. Read More: Why You Need a Household Strategic Plan â" and How to Create It Praise Good Work âEveryone wants to feel appreciated, and itâs important to let the family members know when theyâre doing a good job,â Moss says. In other words, everyone needs praise and compliments from time to time to keep morale elevated. You would do it for non-relative employees, and you need to do it for relatives too. Communicate Regularly If you are business partners with family members who may not be in the same place often, you need to find a way to keep the lines of communication open and have access to the decision-making individuals at all times. Moss suggests using social media, online chat services, and texting to check in with the team regularly. Read More: Why Donât You Ever Have As Much Money As You Think You Do? Address Time Off Family members might think they qualify for nepotism, especially when they want something that benefits them â" like time off â" but you have to avoid making special arrangements and creating unique circumstances for family members. You need to document vacation requests, days off, and sick leave as you would any other employee. There are no privileges for family members that non-family employees wouldnât get. Schedule Reviews Not all family businesses work out. Sometimes you have to let a family member go because theyâre not pulling their weight, and youâll have an easier time of it if youâre documenting their progress through quarterly or half-yearly reviews. Sit them down privately to discuss what theyâre doing right and where they can improve. If itâs a situation where the problem areas arenât improving, at least youâll have documentation that you gave this relationship a fighting chance before cutting it loose. Read More: 3 Financial Building Blocks That All Parents Should Teach Their Kids Donât Let Business Seep Into Family Time âItâs easy to start talking business when everyoneâs together, but set aside a specific time and place for that,â Moss advises. âDonât bore other family members with business talk. Keep your business private â" even from other close family members, who arenât involved.â Train the Next Generations Is your business going so well that youâll eventually need someone to take it over? The trick is to make the transition as smooth as possible and give the business the TLC it needs to survive new people at the helm. âWhatâs going to happen to the business when you can no longer participate? Are there children or grandchildren that can take over? If so, get them involved early,â says Moss. âWe gave our high-school children data-entry jobs to let them get familiar with the business. Then, after they graduated from college, they had a choice if they wanted to participate or not.â
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