ME family-owned businesses see disruptions
BEIRUT, May 23, 2017
Forty-six per cent of the next generation of leaders of family-owned businesses in the EMEA region expects that the market in which they operate will face disruption in the next two to three years, according to a new survey.
Twenty-seven per cent also expects to lose market share to new entrants, highlighted the NextGen Survey conducted by Deloitte, a leading provider of audit, tax, consulting, and financial advisory services.
Deloitte talked to 268 family-owned businesses in the EMEA region (Europe, Middle East and Africa) and discussed specific challenges such as succession but also growth, strategy and the speed with markets change nowadays.
“The global economy is changing rapidly and fundamentally, due to the exponential speed of transformation in digital infrastructure, among other things. Quicker than ever, the past is being left behind—a tendency that in the perception of many goes against the tradition of family-owned businesses. That is why, especially now, it is important to listen to the leaders of the future,” said Walid Chiniara, partner and head of Family Enterprise Consulting practice, Deloitte, Middle East.
The next generation
The next generation of leaders of family-owned companies says they are well prepared to anticipate disruption. The survey and the conversations show that they have a clear picture of the direction in which their industry is moving and that they understand the nature of the disruptive forces in the market and in their company.
They do indicate that they face two big challenges: the structure of leadership revolves too much around the family/management and there’s a lack of skills among staff to optimally perform in a disruptive environment (17 per cent does not have the skills, 35 per cent only partly has these skills).
Fast and agile
According to the next generation, the biggest disrupting factor for family-owned businesses is not market disruption (20 per cent), but the changes in family relationships (24 per cent). Succession is seen as the biggest disrupting factor by 14 per cent of the interviewees. 73 per cent states that succession is a natural moment of disruption.
The next generation is more aware of the meaning and effect of disruption than the previous generation. Interviewees indicate that the biggest advantage family-owned businesses have in times of disruption is that they are ‘fast’ and ‘agile’ when compared to other organizations. – TradeArabia News Service