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Mechanisms to Assure Long-Term Family Business Survival

A Study of the Dynamics of Cohesion in Multigenerational Family Business Families

by Torsten Pieper (Author)
©2007 Thesis XXI, 310 Pages

Summary

The business world is dominated by family businesses of all sizes. Economies and societies depend on them. One tremendous advantage is that they focus on sustainability, long-term business and community support, and survival. Answering the question of how they survive intact and how families can maintain family unity over hundreds of years is essential. To answer this question, interviews with seven multi-century, large multigenerational family businesses from Germany were undertaken to uncover secrets of their success. Chief among health indicators is family cohesion. What these families practice is the use of multiple dimensions of cohesion to bond the widest number of owners to the family and business, and to fulfill the family and business dreams. The specific different mechanisms they use are revealed in this text. Maintaining family cohesion also requires family business leaders to effectively manage the ambiguities that come along with seemingly irreconcilable forms of cohesion and with potentially diverging interests and goals of owners. By exploring the conditions for sustainable family cohesion, the study adds new recommendations for effective family business governance.

Details

Pages
XXI, 310
Year
2007
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631570500
Language
English
Keywords
Unternehmerfamilien Familienbetrieb Corporate Governance Gruppenkohäsion Großfamilie Familienunternehmen Gruppendynamik
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2007. XXI, 310 pp., 13 tables, 23 graphs

Biographical notes

Torsten Pieper (Author)

The Author: Torsten M. Pieper graduated with a Master of Science (MSc) in business administration (Dipl.-Kfm.) from Saarland University Saarbrücken and with an MSc in management from EM LYON Business School (France). This study originated from his work at the European Family Business Center at European Business School (Germany) where he received his doctoral degree. He continues his research on family business at Kennesaw State University (USA).

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Title: Mechanisms to Assure Long-Term Family Business Survival