By Christian Gaya Business Times April 05, 2013
Idda
Mbilinyi and Patrick Mwaigaga have been business partners for 35 years as
co-owners of Uyole Grocery a 30-employee, TZ 10.5 million Mbeya institutions
with four locations. Their marriage was less successful: It lasted two years,
from 1988 to 1990, and “was not a good personal dynamic,” Patrick says. Despite
their failure to make their marriage last, they attribute their ability to
remain in business to mutual trust and admiration for each other’s business
skills, among other reasons.
Figuring
out how to sustain a family business after a divorce is important: Roughly 65
percent of U.S. businesses are family owned, with about 30 percent co-owned by
spouses, estimates Glenn Muske, an entrepreneurship professor at North Dakota
State University who has spent 14 years researching couples in business.
Between 40 percent and 50 percent of all first marriages will end in divorce, a
rate that has declined slightly over the past decade as marriage became less
common, according to the National Center for Health Statistics.
After
a divorce, couple-owned businesses tend to fold, get sold, or have one partner
buy the other out, though “we do see [ex-spouses] remain in business,” says
Muske. “They may find they don’t get along together at home, but they are great
business partners and they’ve got a solid, going business that they don’t want
to tear apart. If the business is performing in terms of dollars coming in,
sometimes neither one can buy the other out, and they don’t want to split up
the property.”
He
notes that the fast growth in the number of women-owned businesses-up 54
percent over the past 15 years, according to a 2012 American Express requires
coping skills, given that women increasingly found companies and then bring
their husbands into management.
That’s
what Mwajabu Ramadhani, founder and president of TZ 5 million Rama Skincare in
Dar es Salaam, did back in 2007. Ramadhani had started the company in her
kitchen in 2002 and then asked her husband, Hamis Kocha, to join as operations
manager when the business gained national retail distribution through such
outlets as Whole Foods. In 2010, the couple separated, but Kocha stayed on for
two further years.
“We
were friends for 11 years before we got together and we will always remain good
friends, so for us it was perfectly O.K. [to continue working together], but it
was probably harder for our employees,” says Rama, who finally bought Kocha out
last year. “They didn’t really know what the power structure was and they
didn’t know sometimes what to do or who to go to when issues came up. I think
they didn’t really believe we were on as good terms as we actually were.”
Navigating
through such situations is important if a business enterprise is to move
forward. It’s not easy: “When you get divorced, sometimes you want to go away
and not see that person, but you can’t do that and run a business together. In
the beginning, it was painful and uncomfortable seeing each other every day,”
Ngole recalls. “But it’s sort of like having a child—you still both love the
child even if you get divorced, and we both love this business and are very
proud of it.”
Successful
divorced business partners tend to retain basic trust in each other, take a
mature attitude toward resolving arguments, and occupy clearly defined company
roles that keep them from having to interact constantly, says Rose Marijani,
who operated a joint counseling practice with her husband, Majid Mbwiga, in SUA
Morogoro., for 30 years, co-authoring a book with him on entrepreneurial
couples, You or Me Partner Inc.
“They
realize they need each other, and they are clear about what their strengths are
and what each person contributes to the business they are passionate about,”
says Marijani Hawley. Having a joint financial stake in a business is also a
powerful motivator for couples to keep it up and running, even after their
personal relationship has faltered.
That
was the case at Uyole’s Grocery, says Mbilinyi: “We both needed for the
business to stay intact, and we both brought something. I was the inspired,
creative one, but the business was in the red when I ran it alone because I
didn’t really think about costing things out. He brought along the business
side and we worked well and complemented each other.”
Over
the years, she and Mwaigaga have had their struggles, though they liken the
relationship now to a brother-sister dynamic. “We adore each other most of the
time, and then we have periods where we relate like six-year-olds, then somehow
we get through it and keep going,” Mbilinyi says.
Though
many clients express surprise that divorced couples would choose to keep
running companies together, it’s not all that strange, Marijani says. “One of
the divorced business couples we interviewed for the book said there are three
possibilities: Intimate partnership, friendship, and business partnership. And,
he said, two out of the three are pretty good.” Ends
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