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Unit 6: Delegation, Authority and Power




                                                                                                Notes


             Caselet       Bringing Kids into the Family Business

                  ringing offspring into the family business can be a source of pride for parents who
                  are business owners; it can also be a sore spot, a source of destructive politics for
             Beveryone  involved.  Employees  may  automatically  question  a  young  family
             member’s talent or commitment to the business. Senior managers may worry about the
             security of their jobs as the person rises in rank at the company. “They may feel their own
             chances for advancement are now limited, or they may be worried about being caught in
             the middle  of family  conflicts, such  as, getting  one  set of directions  from the  older
             generation and another set from the younger one,” explains Jeff Wolfson, an attorney who
             specializes in family business at the Boston law firm of Goulston and Storrs.
             Should parents who own businesses avoid hiring their children, or hide their children’s
             identity once they are hired? Of course not. But Wolfson says they can prevent or end
             destructive politics in a number of ways.

             First, they can hire offspring at an entry level in the company, as did Miles Ezell, Jr., and
             his brother Bill, who own Purity Dairies Inc., based in Nashville, Tennessee. Three sons, a
             daughter, and a son-in-law who joined the company now hold management positions, but
             they started “small”. “Because they came here directly out of college and hadn’t worked
             elsewhere first, they spent at least three years working in different areas, getting a feel for
             them,” says Miles. “They worked in some of the worst jobs, like cleanup detail in the milk
             plant or in the garage, and they spent six months running milk routes.” The Ezell offspring
             never displaced another worker, and it became clear early on that favouritism was not
             going to be a problem.
             Wolfson agrees that children of founders or owners must  learn the business from the
             bottom up, even if they are assured of succession. “The second generation needs to show
             some patience,” he advises.
             Mentoring can also help avoid destructive politics, as long as the mentor is not a family
             member. A trusted or long-term manager can help acquaint the young person with the
             company in  an unobtrusive manner, sometimes even acting as a go-between with the
             young person and other workers.
             Referent power with the young family member can work both ways. The young family
             member can work both ways. The young person may worry that his or her associations
             with other employees are based solely on connections with the founding family. But in
             other cases, it benefits everyone. Gray Langsam, president of Plaut & Stern Inc., a wholesale
             meat company and meat packing plant in New York City, recalls positive relationships
             with other employees, even though they knew his father was a company partner. They
             watched him work his way up from the bottom and grew to trust him. “I would listen to
             their suggestions and pass them along to my father,” he says. “All that helped me ease my
             way and break down any resentment the workers had at having the boss’s kid in their
             midst”.

             Hiring the kids doesn’t have to be a disaster. It just takes good political strategies that
             benefit everyone in the organisation.










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