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Death of the Family
Owned Business
"Failure to provide for the perpetuity of your
business beyond your working lifetime means simply that you have
overstated your profits, for when you go, the whole company goes
with you.
As a teacher, advisor and consultant to many closely held
businesses, I am convinced that the privately held company is an
endangered species. The threat lies not so much from competitors,
regulatory legislation, consumer movements or other outside forces.
The real threat to the private business lies primarily within the
business practices and policies of its owners. Too many family owned
companies seem to suffer from "corporeuthanasia," a term I
use to describe the owner's act of willingly killing off the
business he loves by failing to provide in his lifetime for a viable
organization with clear continuity.
This disaster occurs because the owner of the business cannot
face the fact that at some point he must...and will be replaced. If
the successful business owner, who had the ability, vision, and guts
to build his business from nothing, does not have the courage to
face the problems of the future, then his banker and attorney will
do it for him on the way back from his funeral...four cars back from
the flowers.
The family owned business is the strength of America. In each
time of crisis, the business owner has come through a winner while
others wring their hands and whine. Business owners as a whole know
what it takes to come out ahead. They have scratched their way up a
splinter ladder to success. The problem is that when they finally
reach the top, they wonder what it is they are suppose to do next.
If new answers are not readily forthcoming, they repeat what they
did before. Therein lies the problems.
Unless he is willing to have his business close up when he is
through playing with it...in which he doesn't really have a business
but a profitable hobby...the business owner must change his role
from that of super employee to that of respected leader and teacher,
who must gain his ultimate glory in the accomplishments of those who
follow him."
Leon Danco
Beyond Survival , 1975 & 1977
2nd Ed. The University Press, Inc.
Cleveland, Ohio
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