Managing for the Long Run: Lessons in Competitive Advantage from Great Family BusinessesFidelity, Hallmark, Michelin, and Wal-Mart are renowned industry powerhouses with long leadership track records. Yet these celebrated companies are united by another factor not generally equated with competitive success: They are all family-controlled businesses. While many view the hallmarks of family businesses—stable strategies, clan cultures, and unencumbered family ownership—as weaknesses, Danny Miller and Isabelle Le Breton-Miller argue that it is these very characteristics that create formidable competitive advantages for many such firms. Managing for the Long Run draws from a worldwide study of enduring, family-run organizations—including Cargill, Timken, L.L. Bean, The New York Times, and IKEA—to reveal their unconventional success strategies and how these strategies can be adopted and applied in any organization. Miller and Le Breton-Miller show how four driving passions of family-run firms—command, continuity, community, and connection—give rise to a set of practices that defy modern management thinking yet ensure a company’s long term competitive advantage. Outlining how these practices can enhance strategic efforts from operations to brand leadership to innovation, this book shows what every company must do to manage for the long run. |
Contents
What Distinguishes Great Family Businesses? | 11 |
Potent Priorities at the Great FamilyControlled Businesses | 31 |
Brand Builders | 53 |
Craftsmen | 79 |
Operators | 105 |
Innovators | 127 |
Deal Makers | 155 |
When FamilyControlled Businesses Stumble | 183 |
Managing for the Long Run | 209 |
Common terms and phrases
apprenticeships Bechtel Bombardier brand builders build business model capabilities Cargill chapter clients collaboration Command commitment competencies competitive advantage Connection Continuity Coors core Corning corporate costs craftsmen culture customers Danny Miller deal makers Don Tyson economic employees Estée Lauder executives Family Business family control family members FCBs Fidelity firms focus Fortune Grid Hallmark Harvard Business School IKEA improve incentives industry infrastructure innovation investment Journal L.L. Bean Laurent Beaudoin leaders leveraged Levi Strauss Levi's long run long-term major Market Share Michelin million mission Motorola non-FCBs Nordstrom number-one Olympia & York operations organization organizational Ownership partners percent performance plant policies priorities profits projects Reichmanns relationships risk rivals Sam Walton sell shareholders Simplot social staff stewardship strategy successful Sulzberger superior suppliers Table Tetra Pak thriving Timken tion top team Tyson Tyson Foods values versus Wal-Mart winners York

