Myths and Mortals. Keyt Andrew

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Andrew Keyt

      Myths and Mortals

      Myths and Mortals

FAMILY BUSINESS LEADERSHIP AND SUCCESSION PLANNINGAndrew Keyt

      Copyright © 2015 by Andrew Keyt. All rights reserved.

      Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, New Jersey.

      Published simultaneously in Canada.

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       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

      Keyt, Andrew, 1969–

      Myths and mortals: family business leadership and succession planning / Andrew Keyt.

      pages cm

      Includes index.

      ISBN 978-1-118-92896-7 (hardback) – ISBN 978-1-118-93229-2 (epdf) -

      ISBN 978-1-118-93230-8 (epub)

      1. Family-owned business enterprises – Succession. 2. Family-owned business enterprises – Management. I. Title.

      HD62.25.K49 2015

      658.4′092 – dc23

      2015007884

      Cover Design: Wiley

      Cover Image: Monument © iStock.com/Djete;

      Circle Paving © iStock.com/daizuoxin;

      Walkway © iStock.com/STILLFX;

      Young Man © iStock.com/Alija

      To all of the graduates of the Loyola University Chicago's Quinlan School of Business Next Generation Leadership Institute. Your willingness to take on challenges, dream big dreams for both your families and businesses, and step into authentic leadership is the inspiration for this book.

      And

      To my parents, Marcia and Douglas Keyt, who gave me the foundation to find my own path, a path true to who I am

      Preface

      It was the early 1990s. I was a fresh college graduate. Like many fresh-outs, I wasn't sure what to do with my life. I was passionate about people but didn't know how to turn that into a career. Becoming a psychologist was an option, but the life of a therapist was unappealing.

      I felt very lost.

      In my quest to match my passion with a career, I returned to my roots. My grandfather was a county judge in Ohio; my father was an attorney for Northern Trust in Chicago; my brother, a paralegal, was on track to become a lawyer. So what was my natural conclusion? Pursue law. I tested out the idea as a paralegal.

      While working as a paralegal, I traveled to San Francisco to meet with a client. It was April of 1992. I remember it clearly. While I wasn't particularly enthralled with the work, I felt important as a 22-year-old flying cross-country to hobnob with attorneys and business people from a large multinational corporation. One night, while I sat in my hotel room at the Hyatt Embarcadero, the phone rang. It was my father. I knew something was wrong. My father never called. Normally, my mother called and handed the phone to my father: “Here, talk to your son.”

      My father (age 52), who had quit smoking 15 years before, said he had lung cancer.

      I was shocked. Then I, along with my mother and two brothers (I am the middle child), rallied around the idea that it could be treated. My father would beat the cancer.

      Slowly, it became clear that he would not. The weekend of July 4th 1992, my father was determined to get up to our summer home in Wisconsin for our annual family vacation. Because he was undeterred, we flew him up from Chicago. It was a short-lived and frightening vacation. He was hospitalized and then Medivacced to Chicago. For the next month, our family life was organized around getting our work done as quickly as possible, so we could spend as much time as possible with him at the hospital.

      One month later, on August 6, my father asked me to stay a little later during my visit. My brothers and mother had left. Something weighed on him. He had some requests. His final one was to tell me that he was passing 100 percent of his ownership in the family business (a family farm) to me and not splitting it among me and my brothers.

      I was incredulous: “We have a family business?” My father had spent much of his life insulating us from the pressures and challenges of working with family. He hadn't told us anything about the farm that he co-owned with his brother and cousins. Surprised with this revelation, I left the hospital, my head spinning with a list of things to do to help my dad.

      That was the night he died.

      On August 7, 1992, I woke up, a newly minted family business owner. While dealing with the grief of losing my father, I also grappled with the new challenge of understanding the family business. Although his one-sixth ownership wasn't Walmart money, it came with a set of expectations and responsibilities that I wasn't fully prepared for at the tender age of 22.

      My father was the one to whom all of the cousins looked for input and advice. He was the one whom they trusted to make the right decisions. Now,

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