URI business professor, colleagues look at mortality and leadership succession in family business
By Tony LaRoche
By 2030, more than 30% of family businesses in the U.S. will lose their aging leaders to retirement, or death.
Many of those leaders don’t have a strategy for letting go of their business, turning it over to a successor, or selling it. While it is rare for an incumbent leader to die while in office, it is difficult for them to face their mortality.
Yet letting go and
the outsized effect of facing one’s mortality have not been examined closely
since early writings in family business.
Nancy Forster-Holt, assistant professor of innovation and
entrepreneurship in the University of Rhode Island College of Business, has
seen that up close. About 20 years ago, she and her husband bought a marine
products company from an aging owner, “Paul,” who hadn’t planned for his
eventual retirement.
“Very few business owners have an exit plan. When we bought our business, the owner told us, ‘I didn’t have an exit plan; I had a heart attack.’ That was so profound to me. That’s what led to my Ph.D. topic on the retirement of business owners.”
In reading Atul Gwande’s book “Being Mortal,” she was struck by the parallels between facing one’s mortality and planning to let go of one’s business.
“It struck me as different from what I’d heard in the
medical world where if you understood your mortality, you’re a little more
likely to let go instead of pressing for life-saving outcomes,” said
Forster-Holt, whose research interests include succession of family business
owners, and gerontology and retirement of aging “ENDrepreneurs.”
Instead, existing scholarship on family business
succession emphasizes the leader’s quest for immortality, stating it was the
chief cause of failed succession, she said.
Now Forster-Holt and co-authors Susan DeSanto-Madeya, a URI associate professor of nursing and palliative care expert, and James Davis, a professor of management, marketing and strategy at Utah State University, are looking at the phenomenon of the disconnect in succession planning of small business owners in a new paper.
Their essay, “The Mortality of Family Business Leaders: Using a
Palliative Care Model to Re-imagine Letting Go,” was published
in March in the Journal of Management Inquiry, a leading peer-reviewed journal
for scholars and professionals in management, organizational behavior, strategy
and human resources.
Their paper explores existing literature on family business succession and rethinks the understanding of mortality and its connection to a business owner’s planning to “let go” – inserting the medical model of palliative care to understand its possible effects on the process.
Palliative
care makes use of tools that span a period from diagnosis to death, and the
paper introduces the idea that planning to let go of one’s business takes many
forms. The authors offer the Mortality Awareness Model, which depicts four
states of letting go, reflecting where a person is in confronting their
mortality.
Forster-Holt, who made a call for a better understanding
of the struggle to let go in a TEDxURI talk, ran the family business center at Husson
University in Bangor, Maine, prior to coming to URI, and found that existing
scholarship on family business succession didn’t provide for an adequate way to
discuss it.
“The tools were lacking for me in my practice with family
businesses,” she said. “You just would hear story after story of advisors not
knowing how to get deeper, and not knowing the language that would help leaders
and their families to talk about the future. We didn’t have the tools, not even
the conversational tools. I said, ‘What if there was a toolkit for that? What
if there was a better way of talking about it?’”
In their essay, the authors offer an interdisciplinary
approach to the question of letting go by adding palliative care, specialized
care that is recognized by the American Board of Medical Specialities and the Accreditation
Council for Graduate Medical Education.
Palliative care places emphasis on mortality awareness
and planning, Forster-Holt said. It provides an evolving approach that focuses
on a person’s quality of life during serious illness and at the end of life,
while also promoting an understanding of one’s mortality – not necessarily that
the person’s death is imminent – and facilitating an appropriate level of
planning.
It addresses the reluctance of incumbent family business
leaders to plan for letting go by including family or other stakeholders in the
process, setting up ground rules, and promoting clear and timely communication,
goal setting, dignity, trust and a shared understanding of choices.
The essay also looks at levels of mortality awareness and
advanced care planning – key parts of palliative care – creating a model of
four states of letting go and organizational succession outcomes, including
good, forced, failed, and eluded. The typologies provide a diagnostic tool in
which letting go can be better understood, managed and planned for.
“This model could start a thousand conversations,” said
Forster-Holt. “For example, a leader and their family can be in the quadrant of
‘Good Death,’ with high mortality awareness and high levels of planning, or
they can be in ‘Denial of Death,’ with low levels of awareness and
planning.
“This is simply labeling the outcomes from lack of
awareness to high awareness and from lack of planning to very high planning and
everything in between,” she said. “The family business literature talks about
not judging. I can’t tell you whether you had a good or bad succession. It’s up
to you to judge. Palliative care promotes the ‘rescued journey’ where you can
use the tools available to improve outcomes – in our case, business exit. We’re
asking, ‘Is there a way to see where you are now and understand that maybe
there’s a way to go somewhere else, using your family with you.’”
Forster-Holt sees future research opportunities from the
essay, including exploring the relationships of gender and culture to mortality
awareness and letting go. It could also inform advisory services for family
business and promote the inclusion of palliative care specialists
as trusted family business advisors.
“I want to produce work that is useful to advisors,
practitioners and family businesses,” she said. “I also would like to see it
taught in the classroom. We don’t teach about mortality in business school, but
we probably should.”