1st Edition

Family Capitalism Best practices in ownership and leadership

Edited By Gry Osnes Copyright 2017
    218 Pages
    by Routledge

    218 Pages 13 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In most countries family businesses make up between 50 - 95% of business entities. Families control 30% of the Fortune 500 companies. These owners and their businesses are often an important part of the social fabric in local communities, and increasingly the international economy. Despite this, Family Capitalism, or ownership, has been seen as synonymous with stagnation, conflict and crises. The authors focus on how family owners avoids these pitfalls, and how emotional resources develop strategizing capacities.





    The book explores how successful family businesses innovate and create Visionary Ownership, and implement it. Two crucial leadership capacities are introduced; Leadership of Paradox and Distributed Leadership.





    A renewed understanding of family businesses show how the family can generate unique strategic advantages in stewardship, succession, long-term thinking, risk management and building social capital. It shows a different perspective regarding value creation in the economy. The book provides new insights for family owners, advisors, leaders as well as scholars.





    The findings are from a best-practice research project with cases from China, USA, Germany, Colombia, Israel, Tanzania, France and Sweden. Applying strategy-as-practice theory shows how family owners, across different cultures and sectors, use generic ownership strategies and experiment, such as with cluster ownership and creating new ventures in succession.



    Part 1: Visionary Owenership  Chapter 2. Overview  Chapter 3. Ladder Entrepreneurship: A social mobility case in USA James and Victoria Grady  Chapter 4. Building Social Capital: An emigration case from UK to Tanzania Gry Osnes  Chapter 5. Strategizing Successions: Sibling loyalty in a French Case Gry Osnes  Chapter 6. Cluster Ownership: A multi-generation case from China  Olive Yanli Hou  Chapter 7. Technological Innovation: Family commitment in a case from Sweden  Liv Hoek  Chapter 8. Stewardship and Integrity: A Lutheran Arab Family in Jerusalem  Gry Osnes  Chapter 9. Renewal of a Dynasty: A Colombian owner own account Angelica Uribe  Part 2: Leadership Strategies  Chapter 10. Overview: Leadership of Paradox and Distributed Leadership  Chapter 11. Autonomy and Role Liv Hoek  Chapter 12. "Letting Go" and "Moving On" James and Victoria Grady  Chapter 13. Selling the Business: A UK owner Gry Osnes and Victoria Grady  Chapter 14. Having Power or Strategizing Authority  Gry Osnes  Chapter 15. Gender and Leadership Mona Haug  Chapter 16. Strategic Avenues for Succession Gry Osnes  Chpater 17. Developing Healthy Ownership: A Non-family Chairman in Norway  Gry Osnes  Chapter 18. Summary: Family Capitalism Drive

    Biography

    Gry Osnes is a clinically trained and licensed psychotherapist and family therapist. She works with owners, entrepreneurs, with succession processes, coaching of boards and interpersonal dynamics. She coaches and advises focusing on individuals and groups increasing their transitional and strategic capacity, using both system and modern psychoanalytic theory on transitions, authority and change. Her earlier research, and PhD. publication, is on succession dynamics in different types of organization and entrepreneurship. She develops action research and collaborative research and was the academic leader of the research project leading to this book.



    James D Grady is a US based organizational behavior consultant. He is co-founder of Pivot Point Business Solutions, a consulting firm specializing in the behavioral implications (eg. decreased performance, productivity and profitability) of organizations introducing and implementing organizational change—with specific focus on organizational culture, structure and overall effectiveness.





    Victoria M Grady is currently Director of MBA/MSM Graduate Programs and an Assistant Professor Management/Organizational Behavior in the School of Business at George Mason University located just outside Washington DC. Her consulting practice includes family businesses, federal government institutions, non-profit organizations, higher education, and health related institutions.





    Mona Haug works as an executive coach in Germany. Clients include national and international senior executives, managers and teams to accelerate effectiveness and enhance efficiency to achieve excellent project outcomes. Her coaching work spans different industries to include major family business companies, public enterprises, political organizations and many more.





    Liv Hök is a Licensed Psychologist, Psychotherapist and Organisation and Role Analyst in Sweden offering support and organisational psychological services to individuals, small workplaces and large companies. Each assignment is conducted in close consultation with the primary client and the approach is based on task orientation and functional support.





    Olive Yanli Hou is a communication adviser with expertise in promoting business and cultural exchange between Europe and Asia. She writes and contributes to the Chinese business community publications such as China Family Business Review, Economic Weekly and China Entrepreneur Magazine. 





    Gry Osnes is a clinically trained and licensed Psychotherapist and family therapist, she works with owners, entrepreneurs with succession processes, coaching of boards and/or interpersonal personal dynamics.  She develops collaborative research projects and her PhD research focused on succession dynamics in different organisations. 





    Angelica Uribe colombian lawyer enterpreneur with a real estate and education business. In the recent years worked in the real estate family business and the expansion of Colegio San Patricio a co-ed girl's school in Bogota, Colombia.



    As a book, Family Capitalism is a practical tool that families can use. They can ask the questions posed by the authors and apply them to their own situation. It is also backed by rigorous study, and is likely to be equally valuable to the student and researcher.

    Denise Kenyon-Rouvinez, Director of the IMD Global Family Business Center, Switzerland