Family businesses have distinctive strengths and challenges, and leading one — as a family member or an outside executive — takes particular understanding. Here is what it involves.
Where family and business meet
A family business is distinctive because family and business are intertwined — family relationships, values, history, and interests interact with commercial decisions and management. Leading one, whether as a family member or an outside executive, means navigating this interplay thoughtfully. The family dimension brings real strengths — long-term thinking, strong values, commitment, and continuity — but also complexity, where family and business considerations can pull in different directions. Understanding and respecting this interplay is fundamental to leading a family business well.
Honouring values and legacy
Family businesses often carry deep values, a legacy, and a long-term orientation that matter greatly to the family and shape the company's identity. Leaders benefit from genuinely respecting and honouring these — the values, history, and long-term view that make the business what it is — rather than overriding them with a purely short-term commercial lens. Leaders who understand and value the family's legacy and long-term perspective, while bringing professional rigour, tend to lead family businesses far more successfully than those who ignore or clash with them.
Balancing family and commercial
A central challenge is balancing family and commercial considerations — running the business professionally and commercially while respecting family relationships, interests, and dynamics. This balance can be delicate, particularly around difficult decisions, succession, and the roles of family members. Leaders need judgement and sensitivity to navigate it, honouring the family dimension while ensuring the business is well run. Handling this balance thoughtfully, rather than treating the family business as either purely a family matter or purely a business, is much of what leading one takes.
Leading as an outside executive
For an outside (non-family) executive, leading a family business takes particular judgement — earning the family's trust, understanding and working within family dynamics, respecting the family's role and legacy, and leading effectively without being a family member. It can be a rewarding role, but requires sensitivity to the family dimension that a conventional corporate role does not. For families hiring outside leadership, and executives joining a family business, understanding these dynamics is key, and a search partner who grasps them helps get the fit right, especially around leadership transitions.
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We help family businesses find leadership — family or external — who fit their values, dynamics, and ambitions.
Explore Executive Search →Frequently asked questions
What does leading a family business take?
Navigating the interplay of family and business — honouring the family's values, legacy, and relationships while running the company professionally and commercially — with the judgement to balance family and commercial considerations, and, for outside executives, to lead within family dynamics.
What is the challenge of being an outside CEO of a family business?
Earning the family's trust, understanding and working within family dynamics, and respecting the family's role and legacy while leading effectively — a role requiring particular sensitivity to the family dimension that a conventional corporate leadership role does not.
Related: Founder to CEO Transition · What Is Succession Planning? · Culture Fit vs Culture Add in Executive Hiring
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