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How to adopt a startup culture within a family business

Adopting a startup culture within a family business can grow the business, diversify risk and reduce tensions between the different generations.
David Harland
David Harland
family business

A family-owned business does not have to be staid and conservative. In fact, for several reasons, adopting a startup culture within a family business can be a good way to grow the business, diversify risk and reduce tensions between the different generations.

Many â€” if not most â€” startups receive their first round of funding from families, family offices or family-owned businesses, so this is not a new idea. Family businesses are well-placed to nurture and capitalise on the abundance of opportunities that exist.

When we talk about ‘adopting a startup culture within a family business’, the outcome can take several forms. The business can launch new businesses itself, invest in other startups, or it could merely experiment more actively with new products or markets.

Here are just a few of the reasons why family businesses should develop a startup culture.

Accommodating different aspirations

It’s only natural for different generations to have different goals for their careers and for the type of work they want to do. This can often lead to conflict within a business and can even lead to younger members of a family choosing to leave the business to pursue their own careers.

Nurturing smaller projects within a business can offer a compromise. Members of the next generation can launch and manage a new product or brand, or target a new market, without putting the entire business at risk. At the same time, they can test new markets and ideas and provide the business with new sources of revenue.

Bringing the business into the digital age

There is more to e-commerce than creating a web-based shopfront. E-commerce introduces new ways to test products and marketing strategies by gathering data and then using that data to optimise the strategy, user experience or price.

Many businesses will soon have to embrace some form of digital platform in order to remain competitive. A low-risk approach to doing this is to launch a digital platform as a distinct business unit, and then migrate the rest of the business onto the platform when the model has been proven.

Introduce a social element to the business

Younger generations are increasingly concerned with social issues and how businesses respond to them. This applies to younger customers, staff and family members. It’s something that the next generation within any family business can take the lead on. Even doing so on a small scale can help a business keep in touch with the market of the future.

Reaching a global audience

Most startups are built to scale from the start. They are not designed to achieve high penetration in a small market, but to achieve some penetration across the largest market they can reach: the global market.

Often this is the opposite model from that employed by a legacy business. Nevertheless, the skills and expertise acquired by multi-generational businesses can be a tremendous asset for startups selling a similar product to a global audience. A startup culture can allow a business to leverage the intangible assets it already has and monetise them in a much larger market.

Avoiding complacency

Startups are lean and nimble businesses that readjust their course as they learn from successes and failures. This type of approach can bring a new dynamic to any business. If a business sticks dogmatically to a five-year plan, it may take too long to become apparent that the strategy isn’t working.

If some parts of a business are operated with a more flexible strategy, the information that business generates can be priceless. New opportunities and potential risks can be can be identified quickly, and the business can adjust course accordingly.

Diversify risk and deploy capital where it will grow

While Warren Buffett is best known as an investor, his success can also be attributed to his skills as a capital allocator. He manages a portfolio of hundreds of businesses and moves capital amongst them – always to the businesses with the best growth prospects.

If a family business is managed as a portfolio of small businesses, capital can be allocated where risk is lowest and growth opportunity highest. The reality is that not all businesses can grow forever. Having a portfolio of smaller, newer businesses allows capital to be more optimally allocated and avoids concentration of risk.

Ultimately, startups are flexible businesses that test ideas as cheaply as possible, quickly killing those that don’t work and building on those that gain traction. This organic approach to business can be invaluable to a family business that is at risk of becoming stuck in rut. And it also happens to be a very effective way to accommodate divergent aspirations within a family.