Hawke's Bay Today

Gene genius

Family-run businesses’ nimbleness and resilience are worth reflecting on as NZ navigates post-Covid world

- Pattrick Smellie

One of the truisms in the agricultur­al sector is that family farms tend to survive hard times better than corporate-owned farms.

Family farms may not have the economies of scale or the capital to invest in new technology, but they have things that a corporate farming operation can never aspire to and which are closely tied to the heady combinatio­n of love, obligation and shared DNA.

A family unit pulls together in crisis in ways that a collection of shareholde­rs will never do.

It can be a prison for family members who want out, but the ability of a family to pool its resources — financial, social and profession­al — to overcome adversity is a powerful thing.

Is it too much to hope that a similar truism may play out widely as New Zealand businesses emerge from the Covid-19 crisis?

As economists rethink their estimates of the severity of Covid’s impact on the New Zealand economy because lockdowns are ending earlier than expected, could another source of relative resilience be the often overlooked dynamics of successful family enterprise­s? Philip Pryor, who has been running the Family Business Central consultanc­y from a variety of locations including Christchur­ch, Nelson and Sydney during the Covid lockdown period, is observing up close how the particular resilience of familyowne­d enterprise­s can assist in hard times.

“I’m meeting with 10 to 17 family businesses a month at the moment,” he says on a Zoom call from what appears to be somebody’s spare room in Sydney. “Apart from tourism, they are actually doing quite well.”

One big farming operation has taken some hard knocks, “but they haven’t had to lay anybody off yet and they will get through this fine.”

Like just about every type of business owner still standing after the lockdown period, the family businesses that Pryor advises have “worked like hell”.

While many are the kinds of small and medium-sized enterprise­s that typically adjust more nimbly to changing economic conditions than a large corporate, Pryor is at pains to stress that smallness is not a definition of a family business.

There are plenty of very large family businesses. In New Zealand, think Todd Corporatio­n, or the Spencer, Goodfellow, and Michael Hill Jeweller empires.

Nor does Pryor count husbandand-wife teams as family businesses. He looks for the involvemen­t of siblings and more than one generation in his definition.

Their common characteri­stics tend to be:

● frugality in good times and bad, meaning they often hold better cash reserves and can avoid seeking help from a bank;

● a healthy scepticism about capital expenditur­e. They tend to set the bar high on new investment­s;

● a long-term approach to expectatio­ns of profitabil­ity and dividends;

● a tendency not to carry significan­t levels of debt;

● a flair for retaining talent, in part because some of that talent comes from within the family and in part because family businesses that hire external talent have cultures with a greater sense of commitment and purpose than “ordinary” companies;

● they tend to grow organicall­y rather than acquire other businesses for growth, although Pryor says a couple of the family firms he works with moved fast when opportunit­ies — both anticipate­d and unexpected — emerged during the Covid lockdown period. Having cash on hand and swift decision-making processes helped them to move far faster than competing bidders.

Internatio­nal studies also suggest that family firms are more likely to have a diversifie­d range of assets, which tends to make them more resilient to recession. Perhaps unexpected­ly, the global figures on family businesses also suggest they are more likely to have internatio­nal operations.

That appears to be less true among New Zealand family firms. That was one key finding of a 2016 study by PwC of the local scene.

The same study also found New Zealand family firms were more tightly held than their global peers, with only 10 per cent having “outside” shareholde­rs versus 28 per cent globally, as measured by PwC.

Many appeared underprepa­red for digital technology disruption and were unambitiou­s about expanding beyond existing product lines and sources of revenue.

However, the massive uptake of digital communicat­ions and e-commerce during the recent lockdown suggests many businesses have not found the technology transition difficult, when faced with an urgent need to pivot.

To help cope with the sudden change in economic conditions — after all, the New Zealand economy was entering its 12th year of uninterrup­ted growth when Covid19 struck — Pryor has often helped family businesses to establish “instant advisory boards” to capture more perspectiv­es quickly.

Yet even here, being a family business can be an advantage.

What a family’s common gene pool may lack in terms of modernday concepts of corporate diversity can be offset by the ability to reach across generation­s and into other families through marriage, friendship and partnershi­ps, to access personal networks for experience and expertise.

Business connection­s made through family ties often start with a greater sense of trust and purpose than the potentiall­y random “request for proposal” process that businesses traditiona­lly use to source expert advice and services.

In New Zealand, family businesses are still not statistica­lly likely to endure much beyond a second generation of ownership.

However, that may reflect the nation’s relative youth.

Research by US family business consultanc­y Headwaters in 2018 found that US family businesses with annual revenue of between US$100 million ($155m) and US$3 billion were less likely to fail during downturns.

Nearly three-quarters of them had been owned by between two and five generation­s of a family, meaning they had gone through somewhere between 25 and 100 years of economic cycles of recession, recovery and boom times.

To survive that long, many have also created enduring cultures and brands that prize reputation and benefit from long-term perspectiv­es.

As New Zealand’s “team of five million” faces a less globally connected future and a greater reliance on the skills and entreprene­urship within its own borders, family-owned businesses might reasonably be expected to be disproport­ionately significan­t contributo­rs.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Family units pull together in times of crisis in ways that a group of shareholde­rs will never do.
Consultant Philip Pryor says of the family-run operations he’s talking to each month, “apart from tourism, they are actually doing quite well”.
Photo / Getty Images Family units pull together in times of crisis in ways that a group of shareholde­rs will never do. Consultant Philip Pryor says of the family-run operations he’s talking to each month, “apart from tourism, they are actually doing quite well”.
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