20/05/2026
The biggest threat to many family businesses today is not market disruption, competition or even succession itself. It is the growing gap between how different generations define the future. Founders often built their businesses through discipline, sacrifice and long-term caution. Their children and successors, however, are entering a world shaped by technology, sustainability, digital transformation and rapidly changing expectations around wealth and purpose.
A recent global study found increasing tension between founders and younger heirs within family offices and enterprising families. Yet these disagreements should not automatically be seen as warning signs. In many cases, they reflect something deeper: a family enterprise entering its next stage of evolution. The real danger is not disagreement, but the absence of structures that turn differing perspectives into meaningful dialogue and shared direction.
Five (5) lessons stand out for family businesses navigating this shift:
1️⃣ Different generations often optimise for different risks. Founders fear losing what was built, while next-gens fear becoming irrelevant.
2️⃣ Younger family members need room to test ideas responsibly, even if not all initiatives succeed.
3️⃣ SMEs should start governance discussions early, even informally, before complexity increases.
4️⃣ Structured family dialogue reduces emotional escalation and prevents assumptions from hardening into conflict.
5️⃣ The strongest family enterprises combine founder wisdom with next-generation adaptability.
This complements many of the themes we have previously explored around stewardship, reluctant successors, trust capital and multigenerational planning. Continuity today is no longer about preserving the past exactly as it was. It is about preserving the family’s ability to adapt together.
A study reveals young heirs and founders of family offices are clashing over investment strategies, highlighting succession planning challenges. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.