According to PwC's 2016 India Family Business Survey Report, there has been a shift in the thinking of family business owners when it comes to future plans for management of their companies.
Only 35 per cent of Indian family businesses plan to pass the business fully to the next generation, lower than 40 per cent in 2014.
Further, nearly half of the respondents in the survey, up from 40 per cent in 2014, plan to pass on ownership but bring in professional management, the report said.
Even more alarming is the fact that only 15 per cent of those surveyed have said that their succession plan is robust, documented and has been communicated.
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"Strategic planning in both dimensions of a family business - the family and the business - will go a long way in enabling family business leaders to achieve their goals," said Praveen Bhambani, Partner and Leader - Private and Entrepreneurial Business, PwC India.
Of the participants surveyed, 81 per cent have non-family members on board, 72 per cent plan to bring in non family professionals to help run the business.
Around 35 per cent plan to pass on management to next generation, while 48 per cent of family businesses plan to pass on ownership but will bring in professional management, it added.
The report said 85 per cent of Indian family businesses have a mechanism in place to deal with family conflict including by way of shareholder agreements, measuring and appraising performance, family councils etc.
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