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How Do I Fire My Son Toby? My Wife Won’t Allow It
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| Guest post by: Dr. Rick Johnson |
Article Overview: "I love Toby. He's my oldest son, he's Vice President of Sales but he just doesn't get it. My daughter should be running this business, she's brilliant but she's married to a surgeon and doesn't want anything to do with wholesale distribution. She's quite happy with all the charity work she is involved in. My youngest son has potential but he's only twenty two and just isn't ready to take over a 0 million dollar distribution business. Two events have occurred recently that are wearing on me a little. First, I transferred 75% of my stock equally to my three kids, 25% each. All three receive a salary although my daughter rarely appears at the office due to her charity work. The second event occurred after I hired a succession consultant to help me transition into retirement. He told me that Toby was incompetetent.
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How Do I Fire My Son Toby? My Wife Won’t Allow It
"I love Toby. He's my oldest son, he's Vice President of Sales but he just doesn't get it. My daughter should be running this business as I transition into retirement, she's brilliant but she's married to a surgeon and doesn't want anything to do with wholesale distribution. She's quite happy with all the charity work she is involved in. My youngest son has potential but he's only twenty two and just isn't ready to take over a 0 million dollar distribution business. Two events have occurred recently that are wearing on me a little. First, I transferred 75% of my stock equally to my three kids, 25% each. All three receive a salary although my daughter rarely appears at the office due to her charity work. The second event occurred after I hired a succession consultant to help me transition into retirement. He told me that Toby was incompetent, destructive to the business and I should fire him."
Excerpts from a real world conversation disguised to protect confidentiality.
Does this conversation sound familiar? Maybe it's not about your son or your daughter. Maybe it's about Aunt Lilly or Uncle Chester. The point is if you own a family run business with multiple family members working in the business, chances are you have or will face the dilemma of what to do when a family member just does meet satisfactory performance standards.
The key word here is family and the closer the family member is to you the owner, the more difficult the decision and action becomes. If the non performing party happens to be your son or daughter it is even more difficult, after all you have your home life to consider and that son or daughter has a relationship with their mother who happens to be your wife. Don't kid yourself about your level of control at home being equal to your level of control at the office.
You Will Ride the Roller Coaster
Terminating a family member will likely be the most difficult decision you will ever have to make as a CEO. There will be ups and downs in the process. However, before you come to the conclusion that you are actually going to hand Aunt Lilly or your son a pink slip, you must be sure that you have exhausted every possible option and scenario imaginable to solve the problem short of termination. Your closeness to the family member is the major determinant to the amount of patience and effort you put into the process. And of course, the amount and type of destructive behavior is also paramount to the decision you make. It is possible that this family member can be placed in a position that is not detrimental to the company and does provide value. This can be a drawn out process that starts with frank, open & honest communication with the family member. It will most likely require some form of counseling to be effective and may require a separate family discussion dependent upon circumstances.
If you enlisted the aid of a consultant, remember that as an outsider it is very easy for them to see a clear picture of the business side of the situation due to not being involved in the actual culture of the business. However, it is likely that they can't come close to feeling or understanding the emotions that you will experience during this process unless they themselves have gone through it in a family business they owned. I say that because having fired my own wife, brother-in-law and nephew from my own family business exposed me to the turmoil, the pain, the frustration, the guilt and the personal second guessing that you too may experience as you go through the process.
Accept Your Circumstance
If you have exhausted every effort to salvage the situation and feel you have no other alternative, understand going in that it is going to be extremely difficult to terminate a family employee in the same effective manner that you would terminate a non family regular employee. Complications are even greater if that family member is a stockholder regardless of the type of legal agreements your lawyer may have drawn up. The first thing a family member will do when facing termination is to seek the support of other family members. If it is your son or daughter this could actually create a serious challenge at home. It is no secret that one of the primary reasons an entrepreneur starts a business in the first place is to provide income and security for his family. "Blood Is Thicker Than Water".
Personally, I believe the last thing you should want to do is sacrifice family for the business. If you actually get to that point in the process ----- Don't sacrifice your family life, your relationship with your children or the relationship between brothers and sisters.
Sell the business. I repeat --- If it comes to that - Sell the Business.
Put Business Needs Ahead of Personal Needs
This sounds contradictory to my previous statements doesn't it? Well, I am not recanting. I am assuming that the situation has not deteriorated to the point of family destruction. Often times there are situations where a family member is relieved to not have to work in the family business. Johnny is there because he doesn't want to disappoint Dad. Johnny feels he is supposed to act like an incumbent president because the family expects it but he would rather be a missionary in Africa or build his own auto parts dealership or pursue some other passion they have.
Remember, firing a family member doesn't necessarily mean cutting them off financially without some form of remuneration. Every thing is negotiable. This is especially true if they own stock even if there is no legal buy out obligation. The last thing you want is an angry ex-employee that is a family member and a stockholder. They most likely will know about all the skeletons in the closet, the aggressive tax position the company has taken and many other issues that the company may not want to go public. So, although the family member may not have a legal position to force a minority stock buy-out, it may be in your best interest to negotiate some form of buy-out that is fair to the family member.
Consult your attorney, but remember, this is still a family issue.
Don't Apologize
If you can turn this family/business problem in to a win-win situation, there is no need to apologize. Don't backpedal and don't be afraid to confront other family members that may not be supportive of the process.
This is a business and once you have determined that this situation will not destroy the family you must treat it in a professional business manner. Remember, if it is going to destroy the family --- Sell the Business.
All This Can Be Avoided ---- Right!!!
As a family business consultant in wholesale distribution, it would be easy to preach to you about how to avoid this situation in the first place. You can read all the articles, the advice, research on the internet and the books that give advice on family management offering solutions like the following;
- Establish specific job descriptions for family members
- Establish expectations up front
- Create advancement criteria up front
- Establish official family compensation programs paying family members based on the position
- Establish accountability and structure up front
- Create a Board of directors that is not family dominated
- Define a philosophy and stick to it
- Make no exceptions for family regarding performance
- Set specific education requirements
- Annual training, coaching and mentoring requirements
In the end ---- immediate family does come first. If you find yourself in a difficult situation, take a step back. Evaluate your circumstance form both the business side and the family side. There is no easy answer but nothing is impossible. Keep the faith. E-mail rick@ceostrategist.com for template tools like the family doctrine, the family management partnership agreement or the family code of conduct that may help you resolve some of your internal family issues.
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Article Tags: family business, leadership, success, Succession
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About the Author: Dr. Rick Johnson RSS for Dr. Rick's articles - Visit Dr. Rick's website www.ceostrategist.com - Sign up to receive "The Howl" a free monthly newsletter that addresses real world industry issues. - Straight talk about today's issues. Rick Johnson, expert speaker, wholesale distribution's "Leadership Strategist", founder of CEO Strategist, LLC a firm that helps clients create and maintain competitive advantage. Need a speaker for your next event, E-mail rick@ceostrategist.com. Dr. Rick Johnson has over 35 years of experience in distribution sales and operations. Rick�s career can be broken down by decades. The first ten years of his distribution career were spent with the largest steel-processing distributor in the world (Joseph T. Ryerson). The second ten years began with Rick starting his own processing distribution center from scratch. In the first year, sales reached $1 million dollars and had grown to $25 million in its tenth year when Rick sold the business to one of the major national chains. The third ten years of Rick�s career dealing with financially troubled Turn-A-Round companies. After completing ten years of TAR work, Rick decided a decade of acting like Darth Vader was enough and became a consultant to the Wholesale Distribution Industry in 1999. Rick received an MBA from Keller Graduate School in Chicago and a Bachelor's degree from Capital University, Columbus Ohio. He also served six years in the United States Air Force as a survival instructor. Rick completed his dissertation on Strategic Leadership and received his Ph.D. in 2005. Rick is frequently published in numerous magazines including a column in Supply House Times, with over 250 different articles published to date. He�s also a published author with eight books to his credit. Click here to visit Dr. Rick's website Puddles in the Parking Lot Wounded Wolves The Journey Forward Striving for Greatness Leadership Tips Shoot From the Hip Sales Mentality Ten Steps that Focus on Sales Success |
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