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Mitch Wienick

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... was made head of North America Operations, Starbuck's largest business ... Obtain outside advice. Develop a clear business plan extending beyond your retirement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mitch Wienick


1
  • Some Key Facts
  • 90 of U.S. businesses are family owned
  • 33 of the Fortune 500 are family owned or
    controlled
  • Only 30 of family owned businesses succeed to
    the second generation
  • And only 15 of family owned businesses survive
    into the third generation

2
  • Why Does This Happen?
  • There is no qualified successor
  • Businesses fail to plan for succession

3
  • A Brief Story Not About a Small Business But
    Relevant
  • When Orrin Smith became President/CEO of
    Starbucks in 2000, planning for his succession
    was his top priority
  • He established a 2005 exit date when he would be
    62 years old
  • Two years into his job, Smith realized internal
    candidates were too unseasoned to assume his
    position by 2005
  • He decided on an outsider, Jim Donald, the
    President/CEO of Pathmark
  • Starbucks gave Jim Donald a 90 day dedicated
    immersion
  • He worked in the stores to understand the
    customer experience
  • He observed firsthand the coffee-roasting plants
  • Then he was made head of North America
    Operations, Starbucks largest business
  • Progressively he become accountable for more
    pieces of the company
  • One task was to plan for his own successor before
    he succeeded Smith
  • His ability to assess and develop a talented
    replacement was carefully monitored by the Board

4
  • Overview of the Succession Planning Process
  • Is business succession within the family or other
    executives viable?
  • Develop your succession plan (and your
    successors)
  • Monitor plan implementation
  • Coordinate your succession plan with personal tax
    and estate planning

5
  • The Viability of Succession
  • Are your children capable of running the business
    when you retire?
  • Are they interested in succeeding you?

6
  • Seven Critical Competencies for Business Leaders
  • Leadership
  • Multi-Business or Multi-Functional Experience
  • Value-Added Solutions
  • Change Management
  • Alliance Building
  • Financial Acumen
  • Courage and Integrity

7
  • Leadership
  • Strong and passionate can form, lead, and
    motivate high-performance teams
  • Continually demonstrates a commitment to the
    business and dedication to its success
  • Excellent organizational and communication skills
  • Personal and professional integrity

8
  • Multi-Business/Multi-Functional Experience
  • Diverse experience in the organization
  • Track record of successful contribution in
    multiple assignments
  • Effective in working in a matrix management-
    oriented organization
  • Ability to work and make decisions in a
    fast-paced environment

9
  • Value-Added Solutions
  • A proven track record of creating new solutions
    and improving existing products
  • Quality oriented, focused on making continual
    improvements

10
  • Change Management
  • Build cooperation among all team members and
    motivate them
  • Understand the components of organizational
    design that promote change

11
  • Building Alliances
  • A demonstrated track record of building and
    growing strategic alliances
  • A skilled negotiator

12
  • Financial Acumen
  • A proven track record in meeting financial
    targets
  • A strong business sense and knowledge of the
    financial environment

13
  • Courage
  • Decisive with a sense of conviction
  • Ability to find new solutions and take
    calculated-risks
  • A commit to invest in RD

14
  • Succession Plan Development and Implementation
  • Accept that a succession plan is necessary
  • Clearly identify your successor
  • Start the process early
  • Establish a clear timetable for the process
  • Obtain outside advice
  • Develop a clear business plan extending beyond
    your retirement
  • Retain key non-family employees
  • Fair doesnt mean equal relative to your children
  • Review the progress of the plan regularly

15
  • Onboarding and Assimilation of New Key
    Executives
  • Its less straightforward than you think
  • Suppose you need to go outside for a new C-level
    executive (e.g., a COO)
  • Does the following sound familiar
  • Perhaps you hire an Executive Recruiter (whose
    fees range from 25 to 33 of first year
    compensation)
  • The search might take 3-4 months and involved 10
    days of interview time for you, your staff, and
    your board
  • You may have to pay an upfront signing bonus in
    addition to market based salary, bonus, and
    equity
  • The mere fact that youre hiring an outsider may
    trigger other senior management departures
  • The new hire will now run and control a major
    part of the business
  • So, given this big investment and responsibility,
    do you just want to let this new person sink or
    swim when coming on board?

16
  • Types of Transitions
  • Promotion to a more senior functional role or
    moving from a functional role to a general
    manager position
  • Moving to a new position within an existing
    organization
  • Moving to a new position in a new organization
  • Moving from a staff to a line position or
    vice-versa
  • Taking over either (a) group facing very serious
    problems or (b) a group widely viewed as very
    successful

17
  • Key Reasons for High Outside Hire Fail Rate
  • Executives from outside the company are not as
    familiar with the organizational structure and
    the existence of information networks of
    information and communication
  • Outside hires are not familiar with the corporate
    culture and therefore have greater difficulty
    assimilating
  • Outside hires are not familiar with your style
    and approach, and you provide no usable guidance
    in this area
  • Outside hires are unknown to the organization and
    therefore do not have the same credibility as
    someone promoted from within
  • A long tradition of promoting from within makes
    it difficult for companies to adjust to
    senior-level executives who are viewed as
    outsiders

18
  • What Needs to be Shared Performance History
  • How has the organization performed in the past
    and how do people think it performed?
  • How were goals set?
  • Were internal or external benchmarks used?
  • What measures were employed? What behaviors did
    they encourage or discourage?
  • What happened if goals were not met?

19
  • What Needs to be Shared
  • If business performance has been good, why has
    that been the case?
  • What have been the relative contributions of the
    organizations strategy, its structure, its
    technical capabilities, its culture, and its
    policies?
  • If business performance has been poor, why has
    that been the case?
  • Do the primary issues reside in the
    organizations strategy? Its structure? Its
    technical capabilities? Its culture? Its policies?

20
  • What Needs to be Shared The Present
  • Vision and Strategy
  • What is the stated vision and strategy of the
    organization?
  • Is it really pursuing that strategy? If not, why
    not? If so, is the strategy going to take the
    organization where it need to go?
  • People
  • Who is capable and who is not?
  • Who can be trusted and who cannot?
  • Who has influence and why?

21
  • Some Basics That Need to be Shared

22
  • Organization
  • Organization charts
  • Biographies and backgrounds of key executives
    with whom new hire will be interfacing
  • Organizational and executive developmental
    histories
  • Systematic and structured orientation meetings
    (including regional facility tours) with you and
    others

23
  • Whats Your Preferred Working Relationship
  • Formal versus informal
  • Written versus verbal
  • Group versus individual
  • Tight versus loose
  • Broad guidelines versus detailed metrics

24
  • Business Content Documentation
  • Strategic plans
  • Operating plans
  • Board presentations
  • Analyst/Industry reports
  • Acquisition/JV plans and write-ups
  • Climate/employee satisfaction surveys
  • Category structure/segmentation analyses
  • New product analyses/pilot project summaries

25
  • Decision Making
  • Formal processes and procedures
  • Spending, decision making, and approval
    authorities
  • Informal processes, networks and power centers
  • SEC/Sarbanes-Oxley requirements for foreign
    transactions/JVs/alliances
  • Rules on disclosure, controls and documentation,
    and compensation

26
  • Leadership Expectations
  • Priority areas
  • Goals and objectives
  • Deliverables and timeframes

27
  • It Doesnt End at the Beginning Ongoing
    Coaching for Success
  • Business strategy development
  • Personal mentoring
  • Sounding board availability
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