-Grower and Marketer, Lancaster Farming, Saturday, March 10, 2001 222 Dr. Cindy’s Focus On Family Helps Insure Business Stability ANDY ANDREWS Editor HERSHEY (Dauphin Co.) Dr. Cindy lannarelli has had her share of rescuing family businesses from plight. According to “Dr. Cindy,” the name her clients know her best, what’s the greatest mistake an owner of a busi ness, such as a farm market, can make? It’s “not talking about the business at the dinner table,” said Dr. Cindy. “It’s the worst mistake you can make for your children.” Dr. Cindy spoke to a few dozen growers and agri industry representatives in early February at the Mid- Atlantic Fruit and Vegetable Convention at the Hershey Lodge and Convention Center. Dr. Cindy reviewed several myths of operating a family business. She has come up with strategies in which her own consulting firm, Dr. Cindy lannareUi’s Business Cents, helps other businesses to cope. Dr. Cindy noted the dire statistics for family busi nesses. She said that of 100 businesses started by the first generation, only 30 percent survive to the second. Of those, only 10 percent survive to the third generation. Of the 100 started, only three survive “due not to business reasons, but to family reasons,” she said. “It’s sad to see how fami lies can actually disintegrate over issues of family busi ness,” she told farm market owners and operators at the convention. What’s fair in the house is not always fair in the busi ness, she said. But the earlier you begin involving children in the business, the more communication and training you do for them, “the better chance you have of importing business sense to them,” Dr. Cindy said. She spoke about growing up in Bridgeville in western Pennsylvania, near Pitts burgh. Her father was an im migrant from Italy. He came to the states with $5OO to start his own dry cleaning business in the early 19505. He rented a storefront, put up a sign, worked at a front counter with a cash reg ister and took all the cloth ing to a friend’s business to dry clean, returning it on time for customers. The dry-cleaning business “was our life,” Dr. Cindy said. She lived and breathed the business growing up until her father died unex pectedly, leaving his wife in charge. Her parents had other plans for Cindy and her brother, including something “better,” she said. “My father wanted us to have educational programs,” (the; MBBBBBB BSHHT ••• TO '* 1 * Operating A Business With Your family c lannarelli has authored a business “cents” guide to operating a family business. said Dr. Cindy, to be either a pharmacist, doctor, accoun tant, or attorney custom ers her father believed it better than most (working a simple 9 to 5 shift, rather than the countless hours her own father put in). Their father died while both Cindy and her brother were in college, leaving their mother with 100 employees in 10 locations. The next three years, Dr. Cindy said, “were like a living hell.” Dr. Cindy learned, and advised her mother on a vari ety of issues that allowed the business to stay viable. Her real-world education allowed her to develop her doctorate program that looked into the issues of family businesses, while using the business as “a classroom,” she said. The following are several studies of the “myths” about family businesses: • Myth 10: “We’ve never had a family meeting, so how can we start now?” Someone not the leader of the busi ness should command this meeting. You have to go beyond any tensions and have this for the sake of gen eral business planning. • Myth 9: “Nobody knows our own business like us. Why have outsiders?” De velop a board of directors from a noncompetitive area. This neutrality can be critical to the conduct of the busi ness. • Myth 8: “Each of my children have different needs, so I pay them accordingly.” Forget giving anyone prefer ential treatment. Pay all by industry standards. • Myth 7: “If I die, my spouse and five children will work things out together.” If you did die, as a business owner, what is going to happen? Estate planning will help decide who will run the business and in what capac ity. Insurance is critical. • Myth 6: “Everyone in the family should be happy, so we avoid areas where con flicts arise.” Raise these issues at family meetings. Dr. Cindy advised reading many good business family strategy books. Baby boomers stand to inherit the largest windfall in history from inheritance $10.4 trillion so prepara Ujj* Even kid games are critical to developing “business cents” with Dr. Cindy’s program. tion is critical • Myth 5: “My wife wants to be fair to all the children, so we will divide the business equally.” This may be com pletely unreasonable. Every one wants to make sure they are treated fairly, but is this always reasonable? • Myth 4: “My girls are not interested in the busi ness.” Not true, in cases where the business owners didn’t pay attention at the dinner table to what younger siblings had in mind. • Myth 3; “The kids are teen-agers, and too young to think about the business.” It’s important to train and develop a plan early. • Myth 2: “Why sell the business to the children when they expect us to leave it to Use Of Genetically Modified Plants (GMP) In Crop Rotation Sequences With Vegetables M.D. Orzolek Department of Horticulture Penn State Within the last three years, availability of genetically modified plants, especially field corn and soybeans, has been cited as a major ad vancement in the production of these field crops. Unfortunately, herbicide resistance of genetically engi neered field corn and soy beans is not viewed as an achievement for vegetable growers in the state. Glyphosate (Roundup), imidazolinone (Pursuit, Scepter), and sulfonylurea (Classic, Accent, Beacon, Harmony, Oust, Ally) resis tant field corn and soybean varieties now being grown by many grain farmers can have dire consequences if placed in a rotation with vegetables. With regard to Roundup ready corn and soybeans, while glyphosate does not cause any residual problem, spraying the corn or beans on a windy day near sensitive vegetable crops can be disas trous and result in stunting of the vegetable crop, delay in maturity, reduced yield and in certain severe cases, plant mortality. Postemergence ap plications of Roundup must be planned in context to the total cropping sequence on your farm and the need to identify locations where sig Dr. Cindy lannarelll, left, with Jim Sargent, Bucks County business management agent, at the Mid- Atlantic Fruit and Vegetable Convention. them?” Begin estate transfer planning early. • Myth 1: “When my chil dren enter the business, they can just watch me and learn what to do.” It’s important to train them early and often to create successor develop ment. One person needs to be a champion of these issues in nificant economic loss can occur with drift from Roundup. With respect to the pos temergence application of sulfonylurea and imidazoli none herbicides, generally the off-target drift may not be as serious a problem as the re sidual effect from both of these herbicide families. Soil pH levels above 6.8 favor the persistence of sulfonylurea type herbicides that could affect some vegetable crops in rotation. In addition, sul fonylurea herbicides are ap plied at recommended rates of 0.5 to 6.0 ounces of active ingredient per acre. Any increase in the rates of sulfonylurea herbicides whether for insurance or mis- every family business, ac cording to Dr. Cindy. And some start early one busi ness she dealt with had a “100-year plan” in place for the family. “A family meeting on a regular basis to talk about family business and how it af fects them is so important,” she said. calculation can cause serious residual problems on some vegetable crops. The imida zolinone herbicides will cause similar problems as the sul fonylurea herbicides with the addition that only legumes should follow legumes with the use of imidazolinone ap plied herbicides. Non-legume vegetables have demon strated severe stunting planted after an imidazoli none ready soybean crop or after application of Pursuit to labeled crops like peas and snap beans. Use of herbicide resistant agronomic crops requires more intensive and long range planning for vegetable growers who plant them in their crop rotation programs.