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FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET

Year 2021, , 48 - 51, 30.07.2021
https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421

Abstract

Purpose- This study aims to analyze family businesses in The Gambia Textile sector and their succession plans. Specifically, this paper seeks to find answers to these questions: ‘Why the number of family businesses passing to the next generation is limited?” and “What can be done to increase family business succession in The Gambia Textile Market?”.
Methodology- The qualitative research method was used in this study to interact with people who own family businesses and understand how they transfer the company from founder to successors. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with ten (10) family business owners in the urban area, mainly in Serekunda (Kanifing Municipal Council) and Banjul (the capital city of The Gambia).
Findings- The findings revealed that only four passed to the second generation out of ten firms, and none of them had a written succession plan. The successors were identified based on experience, skills, abilities, responsibilities, customer relations, and interest in the family business. All successors were satisfied with their succession experience except one. Also, they noted that family members play an essential role in the family business. Additionally, six firms mentioned they do not have any succession plans for their family businesses.
Conclusion- Although most Gambia businesses are family businesses, they do not consider succession plans a necessary action. Due to the lack of family business succession planning, the number of family businesses passed to the next generation is limited.

References

  • Beehr, T. A., Drexler, J. A., & Faulkner, S. (1997). Working in small family businesses: empirical comparisons to non-family businesses. Journal Of Organizational Behavior, Vol. 18, 298-300.
  • Bewayo, E. D. (2009). Family Business In Africa: A Comparison with The U.S.-Western Model. The Journal of Global Business Issues, Volume 3 Issue 1, 172-180.
  • Chua, J. H., Chrisman, J. J., & Sharma, P. (1999). Defining the Family Business by Behavior. 19-35.
  • Cioca, A., Wehbe, K., Popescu, D., & Popescu, C. (2020). Innovation in Family Business. Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Economics and Social Sciences (2020), ISSN 2704-6524, pp. 786-802, 789-797.
  • Devine, A. (2017). An Exploration Of Governance Arrangements And The Succession Process Within Family Businesses. 4-28.
  • Falco, S. E. (2016). Defining and Classifying Family Businesses. In S. E. Falco, Family business, Ownership Governance and Management (pp. 3-5). Rome: settembre 2016.
  • Gil Bozer, Leon Levin, Joseph C. Santora,. (2017). Succession in family business: multi-source perspectives. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 10-12.
  • Holte, B. t. (2019). Making family business succession into family business success. The influence of soft issue-focused external advice on the bottlenecks in family business successions, 12-51.
  • Johnson, C. (2021). Retrieved April 13, 2021, from https://www.johnson.cornell.edu/smith-family-business-initiative-at-cornell/resources/family-business-facts/
  • Kazakin, A. W. (2014). Determinants of Family Business Progress. Journal of Intercultural Management, 5-13.
  • Machek, O., & Votavová, P. (2015). Advantages and Disadvantages of Family Entrepreneurship and How to Prevent Distress: Evidence from the Czech Republic. Mathematical Models and Computational Methods, 166 - 169.
  • Mikušová, M., Friedrich, V., & Horváthová, P. (2020). Who is More Sustainable? Family Business or Non-Family Business? Czech Evidence. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5540, 5-6.
  • Pandey, D., & Sharma, D. (2014). Succession Planning Practices and Challenges: Study of Indian Organisations. Symbiosis Institute of Management Studies Annual Research Conference (SIMSARC13) (p. 156). Procedia Economics and Finance.
  • Ramadani , V., & Hoy, F. (2015). Context and Uniqueness of Family Businesses. 10.
  • Rubio, M. C., Lombardo, G. F., & Martos, M. C. (2017). Influence of the lack of a standard definition of “family business” on research into their international strategies. European Research on Management and Business Economics 23 (2017) 132–146, 142.
  • Senegović, I., Bublić, V., & Ćorić, G. (2015). Family Business Succession Risks: The Croatian context. ResearchGate, 1.
  • UNCTAD. (2016). National Entrepreneurship Policy Draft. UNCTAD
Year 2021, , 48 - 51, 30.07.2021
https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421

Abstract

References

  • Beehr, T. A., Drexler, J. A., & Faulkner, S. (1997). Working in small family businesses: empirical comparisons to non-family businesses. Journal Of Organizational Behavior, Vol. 18, 298-300.
  • Bewayo, E. D. (2009). Family Business In Africa: A Comparison with The U.S.-Western Model. The Journal of Global Business Issues, Volume 3 Issue 1, 172-180.
  • Chua, J. H., Chrisman, J. J., & Sharma, P. (1999). Defining the Family Business by Behavior. 19-35.
  • Cioca, A., Wehbe, K., Popescu, D., & Popescu, C. (2020). Innovation in Family Business. Proceedings of the 3rd International Conference on Economics and Social Sciences (2020), ISSN 2704-6524, pp. 786-802, 789-797.
  • Devine, A. (2017). An Exploration Of Governance Arrangements And The Succession Process Within Family Businesses. 4-28.
  • Falco, S. E. (2016). Defining and Classifying Family Businesses. In S. E. Falco, Family business, Ownership Governance and Management (pp. 3-5). Rome: settembre 2016.
  • Gil Bozer, Leon Levin, Joseph C. Santora,. (2017). Succession in family business: multi-source perspectives. Journal of Small Business and Enterprise Development, 10-12.
  • Holte, B. t. (2019). Making family business succession into family business success. The influence of soft issue-focused external advice on the bottlenecks in family business successions, 12-51.
  • Johnson, C. (2021). Retrieved April 13, 2021, from https://www.johnson.cornell.edu/smith-family-business-initiative-at-cornell/resources/family-business-facts/
  • Kazakin, A. W. (2014). Determinants of Family Business Progress. Journal of Intercultural Management, 5-13.
  • Machek, O., & Votavová, P. (2015). Advantages and Disadvantages of Family Entrepreneurship and How to Prevent Distress: Evidence from the Czech Republic. Mathematical Models and Computational Methods, 166 - 169.
  • Mikušová, M., Friedrich, V., & Horváthová, P. (2020). Who is More Sustainable? Family Business or Non-Family Business? Czech Evidence. Sustainability 2020, 12, 5540, 5-6.
  • Pandey, D., & Sharma, D. (2014). Succession Planning Practices and Challenges: Study of Indian Organisations. Symbiosis Institute of Management Studies Annual Research Conference (SIMSARC13) (p. 156). Procedia Economics and Finance.
  • Ramadani , V., & Hoy, F. (2015). Context and Uniqueness of Family Businesses. 10.
  • Rubio, M. C., Lombardo, G. F., & Martos, M. C. (2017). Influence of the lack of a standard definition of “family business” on research into their international strategies. European Research on Management and Business Economics 23 (2017) 132–146, 142.
  • Senegović, I., Bublić, V., & Ćorić, G. (2015). Family Business Succession Risks: The Croatian context. ResearchGate, 1.
  • UNCTAD. (2016). National Entrepreneurship Policy Draft. UNCTAD
There are 17 citations in total.

Details

Primary Language English
Subjects Finance, Business Administration
Journal Section Articles
Authors

Aminata Drammeh This is me 0000-0001-6468-0015

Nurgul Keles Taysır This is me 0000-0002-0232-2404

Publication Date July 30, 2021
Published in Issue Year 2021

Cite

APA Drammeh, A., & Taysır, N. K. (2021). FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET. PressAcademia Procedia, 13(1), 48-51. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421
AMA Drammeh A, Taysır NK. FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET. PAP. July 2021;13(1):48-51. doi:10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421
Chicago Drammeh, Aminata, and Nurgul Keles Taysır. “FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET”. PressAcademia Procedia 13, no. 1 (July 2021): 48-51. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421.
EndNote Drammeh A, Taysır NK (July 1, 2021) FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET. PressAcademia Procedia 13 1 48–51.
IEEE A. Drammeh and N. K. Taysır, “FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET”, PAP, vol. 13, no. 1, pp. 48–51, 2021, doi: 10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421.
ISNAD Drammeh, Aminata - Taysır, Nurgul Keles. “FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET”. PressAcademia Procedia 13/1 (July 2021), 48-51. https://doi.org/10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421.
JAMA Drammeh A, Taysır NK. FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET. PAP. 2021;13:48–51.
MLA Drammeh, Aminata and Nurgul Keles Taysır. “FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET”. PressAcademia Procedia, vol. 13, no. 1, 2021, pp. 48-51, doi:10.17261/Pressacademia.2021.1421.
Vancouver Drammeh A, Taysır NK. FAMILY BUSINESS SUCCESSION PLANNING IN THE GAMBIA TEXTILE MARKET. PAP. 2021;13(1):48-51.

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