Return
to Article Index
A
Family Mission Statement Can Keep Family Goals First
and
Money Squabbles at Bay
When
rich families squabble over the family legacy, it
becomes headline news. Witness the recent battle over
the ownership of the Wall Street Journal between members
of the Bancroft family. When approached by media titan
Rupert Murdoch, various family members fought over
whether to preserve the family legacy at the legendary
daily business paper or take the money and run. Money
eventually won.
For
most average Americans, such stories are an illustration
not only of how money doesn't buy happiness, but how
it breeds dissention and distance between people who
could be enjoying their wealth and moving in concert.
With all that money, how can people be so unhappy
and contentious?
Families
with substantial assets – or the promise of substantial
assets as a business grows – might consider creating
a family mission statement. While the end product
should produce a document built from discussion, argument
and consensus, it's not so much about the piece of
paper as the process. When a family sits down to discuss
what is really important to them, it's an opportunity
to take the machine apart and see how it works. Many
families start the process as a way to build consensus
about long-term financial, business, estate and philanthropic
goals, but to their surprise, money can take a back
seat. Families discover particular strengths, weaknesses
and unexpected courses of action within their ranks.
The process might identify future leaders of the family.
Trained
financial advisors, such as Certified Financial Planner
™ professionals, can explain and guide the process.
Some planners may be trained to facilitate such discussion
based on the size and goals of the family involved.
The
general creation of a family financial mission statement
should have four key touchpoints: estate issues, philanthropy,
business direction and family dynamics.
Here
are some questions that should be asked of everyone
in preparing the family's financial mission statement.
They should focus on relationship issues first, and
then move into business and money matters.
- What's most important about our family?
- What do you think our goals should be?
- When do you feel most connected to the rest of
us?
- How should we relate to one another?
- What are our strengths as a family?
- Where do you think we'll be as individuals in
5, 10 and 15 years?
- In order, what are the five things you value most
in life?
- How should we behave toward each other?
- How should we resolve our disputes?
- How important is the family business to you?
- What should we be doing differently with our family
money as well as our assets inside the business?
- What's the best way for us to be building our
wealth?
- What do you think the role of our family should
be in helping the community?
- What should we be doing individually and as a
family with regard to philanthropy?
Structurally,
the written mission statement can be whatever you
agree it should be – a few paragraphs or a page or
two. And it needn't be set in stone – a family should
have a meeting every year or two to revise or approve
its mission. The family mission statement helps your
family establish its identity and the variety of voices
within. It can help set goals and diffuse tensions
later. It can also be used to moderate discussions
that inevitably happen after major changes within
the family – death, divorce or happily, an increase
in the number of heirs and participants.
As
for the age of the participants, it can start in very
basic form with younger children and the process can
mature as they age. It's actually a good idea to bring
young members into a customized version of the process
for youngsters so they can comfortably adjust to working
as adults with the older members of the family.
For
a handy resource on writing a family mission statement,
go to this site: http://www.nightingale.com/mission_select.aspx?from=homepage&element=missiontitle
November
2007 – This column was authored in cooperation with
Financial Planning Association.
|