At one of my recent corporate governance classes, a participant wondered out loud why large retailers that were family-owned were not regulated by the government.
His question arose after we had undertaken a case study on what is now becoming an unfortunately familiar situation of mammoth retailers collapsing with significant supplier payments outstanding.
The knock-on effect of such a collapse is always fraught with dire economic effects on the supply chain of both processed and unprocessed goods, the manufacturers and growers of the same, their cash flows and overall financial stability thereafter, especially where such a mammoth retailer has turnover in billions of shillings.
Truth is, you can’t expect the government to register your company, give you the licence to operate a business and then regulate the management of the millions of companies and sole proprietorships that fuel Kenya’s economy.
It would require hundreds of thousands of civil servants to do that. Where the government does step in is when a business decides to seek capital from the public in the form of equity or debt, at which point approval of such an issue will be required from the Capital Markets Authority whose role is to ensure that the public is well informed about the issuer not only at the point of issuing the equity or debt instrument, but for the years following such issue by requiring publication of the financials of the issuer and tracking of their financial performance.
A recent report issued by the Retail Trade Association of Kenya (RETRAK), titled Kenya Retail Industry Outlook Survey 2020, was quite illuminating. RETRAK boasts a membership of up to 600 businesses made up of supermarkets, restaurants and specialty stores such as mobile phone shops, clothes and furniture shops amongst others.
The report provides the outcomes of a survey undertaken by members in June 2020 where 28 percent of the respondents said that the greatest barrier to trade was weak corporate governance structures especially in family-owned businesses.
You know the drill: an entrepreneur starts a business with one branch, the business grows based on customer popularity, more branches are opened and family members are recruited (or forced) into the business primarily out of trust rather than professional qualifications and before you can say Bob’s your uncle, the business has multiple branches and the family owners are stretched to capacity and, in some cases, to their level of incompetence.
Spouses and adult children are now running an enterprise with hundreds of employees, multiple suppliers, complex supply chains and even more complex financing structures. More often than not, the founder is unwilling to bring in outside professionals to run the business as that would entail letting out “family secrets”. The result is that family tensions spill over into the business and the rest is history.
A good start would be to design job descriptions for the various roles in the business. From the chief executive officer, chief finance officer, supply chain manager, etc, which would then help the founder and the role holder to have clarity on what his or her specific functions are and, perhaps, allow him or her to see where there are individual skill gaps that need to be addressed. Doing this in tandem with a well designed organisation chart allows role holders to see their reporting structure which helps avoid tensions that accrue when one family member feels undermined where decisions are made without his or her input.
Setting up regular business meetings outside of the family’s dining table and in a more formal office setting, with an agenda and a performance dashboard on the various work functions is also a good way to infuse some professionalism into the business as well as awareness and accountability on what the various role holders are doing.
And for the love of God and country, it would be advisable to avoid the jua kali route of writing the job description yourself and bringing in a human resource professional (of which there are several available) to do this task as it allows independence and the right amount of challenge in ensuring the job description is one that is benchmarked with what is out in the market.
While this is not a panacea to weak governance it is a good start to helping the business prepare for the professionalisation of key organisational roles critical to the organisation as it begins to scale and make an impact on the wider (and often unsuspecting) economy.
Carol.musyoka@gmail.com
Twitter: @carolmusyoka
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