Prada case. Although Miuccia didn’t set up the business she made an empire from small family business. (I am sorry I only found German webpages about this but goole it if you want to know more about the two successful business women)
“Mario Prada started the Prada label in 1913. He designed and sold handbags, shoes, trunks, and suitcases though two boutiques in Milan, and had clients across Europe and the US.
In 1978, Mario’s granddaughter, Miuccia Prada, took over the company. Miuccia was a former mime who had spent five years studying at Milan’s Teatro Piccolo, and had a PhD in political science. Although her qualifications didn’t seem appropriate, her sense of fashion was unmistakable. The label was still mainly a leather goods manufacturer at that point, and had been struggling financially for several years. Competition from other fashion houses like Gucci had taken its toll. Miuccia turned things around and steered the House of Prada towards the world of haute couture.
About the same time as she took the helm of the Prada label, Miuccia married Patrizio Bertelli. Bertelli took on the role of business manager, allowing Miuccia to focus on designing and perfecting the new Prada look.
American financial newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, has named Miuccia one of the thirty most powerful women in Europe. From fabulous runway shows to gracing the bodies of actresses like Uma Thurman and Cameron Diaz, Miuccia Prada has taken her grandfather’s struggling leather goods business and created a true empire.”
source: http://www.lifeinitaly.com/fashion/prada.asp
“There is an emergent and growing presence of women in U.S. family-owned businesses. As their
presence changes the face of family business in America, some areas deserve particular focus:
• Female-owned firms exhibit greater productivity than male-owned firms. Since both types of firms operate in the same top five business sectors, clearly something is happening in the management style of female-owned firms to garner these results. Learning from the management
approaches of female owners may be an important future step for family business success.
• Familiarity with women on the ownership-management team seems to breed their acceptance.
Once family-owned firms include women as either owners or CEOs, the level of full-time
participation by women family members and female leadership on the board or as CEO rises.
• Family-owned businesses have long been looked to as philanthropic donors to causes and
their communities. As female owners bring an increased emphasis on charitable giving to their
family businesses, philanthropic organizations can expect to benefit.
• Families seeking to shore up family involvement and satisfaction in their businesses might look to the model of woman-owned firms. Woman-owned family firms experience higher levels of family loyalty, business goal agreement, and business pride, and benefit from lower rates of family
member departure from the business.”
“Overall, female-owned firms have fared less well in terms of revenue growth than those owned by males. Again, this may be linked to the relative youthfulness of their firms. Less experience in the marketplace may make it harder to rely on an established business base to generate new sales opportunities.
On the other hand, it is also the case that woman owned firms tend to be more fiscally conservative. More of these firms carry no debt, other than trade payables, compared to male-owned firms. Such fiscal conservatism may give them greater ability to weather adversity, but it foregoes the opportunity to use debt to finance growth. It is a matter of investigation whether the reduced use of long-term debt by woman-owned firms is due to barriers to access for credit, which have in the past been reported by women business owners and entrepreneurs, or simply a slightly more risk-averse financial posture on the part of these owners. The use of financial leverage could be an important variable for the future growth of woman-owned family businesses. Femaleowned firms may benefit by funding future growth through levels of debt comparable to those at male-owned firms.”
WOMEN IN FAMILY-OWNED BUSINESSES
I. ELAINE ALLEN, PHD NAN S. LANGOWITZ, DBA
From the Center for Women’s leadership at Babson College
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“More women stepping into roles in family business”
“Glory Dolphin became executive director of a business that distributes air purifiers in 2000 in part because of family ties: Her fiance was the son of the company’s founder. But during the Silicon Valley native’s first years at the Southern California company, IQAir North America, Dolphin so impressed the company’s sceptical patriarch that she recently was promoted to chief executive officer of U.S. operations for the firm — replacing her husband. Dolphin, 29, assumed her CEO post earlier this week.
She is among a new generation of women succeeding male relatives in top jobs at family-owned enterprises. The trend is expected to escalate as more women secure business degrees and management experience while gender-biased attitudes of the past fall.It wasn’t a given that Dolphin, a Milpitas native, would get such a powerful position at her husband’s family company. But she had the education, savvy and drive to get the support of the company’s founder.
“It’s not automatic. I don’t think today that there is some inheritance right,” Dolphin said. “Even within the family, you’ve got to prove yourself.’ About 34 percent of family-controlled firms projected in 2002 that their next CEO would be a woman, up from 25 percent in 1997,according to a survey by the Centre for Women’s Leadership at Babson College and MassMutual Financial Group, which jointly released a report on the subject late last year.The growing number of female-owned businesses is contributing to the change. Nearly half of all privately held companies in the United States — 10.6 million — are 50percent or more female-owned, according to a study conducted by the Center for Women’s Business Research. Those numbers are up 17 percent compared to 1997, the group found.“As more and more women start their own firms, it becomes much more acceptable to consider that a woman in your family might be the most appropriate person to be included in the business and to have succeed the owner over time,” said Nan Langowitz, director of Babson’s Center for Women’s Leadership. While apparently on the rise, the number of women taking the reins at family-owned firms remains more of a trickle than a flood. “The tide is starting to turn, although we’re probably 10 to 20 years away from it being a major trend,” said Andrew Keyt, executive director of the Loyola University Chicago Family Business Center. About 100 colleges nationwide have launched family business programs to assist companies with everything from helping young family members decide whether they want to work in a family firm and developing a succession plan to defuse sibling rivalry.”
In the article “More daughters get keys to family firm” by Jim Hopkins, I found an interesting fact, which relates to the above post by Dimitris - which I have highlighted. “Half of all business bachelor’s degrees now go to women — up from 34% in 1980. Among master’s degrees, it’s 40% vs. 22%. “As women became more qualified … they became a potential (CEO) candidate,” says Lee Hausner, a family firm consultant and psychologist.” This shows a direct correlation between the business degrees earned and the CEO positions filled by women. The author attributes the proliferation of top-notch women CEO’s to 3 factors: 1) high profile women role models (such as Tami Longaberger, who succeeded her fathers basket-making business in Ohio, achieving $1 bn in revenues, and controlling over 7,000 employees), 2) changing values (such as businesses shifting from autocratic/military type management to communicative and coordination type management, which women are better at) and finally 3) better backgrounds, such as the increase of business degrees from women. You can check the article out here.
By Michele Chandler, Mercury news
Link: http://www.usfca.edu/fbc/More_women_in_family_bus.pdf
Hi,
Found some charts outlining the major industries with the most women-owned.
Link: http://www2.census.gov/econ/sbo/02/womencharts.pdf
“Over the past five years, woman-owned family businesses have increased by 37%. There is also evidence to indicate that women-owned family businesses are better prepared for transition scenarios and have higher success rates than businesses controlled by their male counterparts. A recent trend worth noting is the increasing number of family businesses that are being passed down to daughters.”
“Women in family Business: an Untapped Resource” (Lyman et al, Women in Family Business Program, warton Applied research Center, University of Pensilvania 2001)
” Women facing the pressures of family business life often think that they are the only ones in the predicament”
This article advises women to develop networks with other women working within family business environments in order to share experiencesand to evolve. The author believes that there are few groups of this sort but by creating more women will be provided with better ideas and constructive advice as to how they can enhance their professional life.
BLUE TEAM - “WOMEN IN FAMILY BUSINESS” SKIT SCRIPT. CHECK IT OUT!
http://www.slideshare.net/alidhanji/women-in-family-biz-skit
The following source is basically a website “the greater Cambridge partnership” where I found a myriad of links to women in business-related websites. I think it is quite useful for those of you who are interested in exploring the topic in more detail… perhaps for your dissertation?
http://images.google.co.uk/imgres?imgurl=http://www.gcp.uk.net/images/women.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.gcp.uk.net/women-websites.php&usg=__UdrqLqYv_dQRhewQ-PyetfXF2zM=&h=333&w=390&sz=17&hl=en&start=3&um=1&itbs=1&tbnid=wdRfJIzDrw68PM:&tbnh=105&tbnw=123&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dwomen%2Bin%2Bbusiness%26um%3D1%26hl%3Den%26client%3Dfirefox-a%26sa%3DN%26rls%3Dorg.mozilla:en-US:official%26tbs%3Disch:1
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Most of the selected articles paint a pretty picture of women-owned business. For arguments sake I decided to look up articled with an alternative view.
Changanti .R: From the abstract of her article titled ‘ Management in Women-Owned Enterprises,’ the author discusses the ‘feminine model,’ which explains that women enjoy success in “female-dominated service businesses.” Furthermore adding that the businesses would “tend to initiate in sectors which are generally accepted as being “appropriate” for women, e.g. personal services.” Read More Here
Nancy & Allen: In their article acknowledge that ‘women-owned businesses’ is one of the fastest growing segments of the US economy. However it states that women owned business are still small in terms of sales and income. It goes on to explain reasons due to characteristics of women. These characteristics have also come up in some of our other blogs. Read More Here
MSN Lifestyle’s Most Influential Women of 2009
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Gold team Skit and sildes
Women in business SCRIPT
5 women meet after class for lunch at a restaurant in London. They start drinking, and start talking about their families.
Woman 1(eshanka): she is an Indian, who is most educated in her family which has 2 more brothers, who do nothing yet the father is planning on transferring the business to the sons, instead of her. Even though, they are younger and not as educated and academically stimulated as her. So she is complaining about her situation. Her father believes that women have no say and no place in business in India, thus she should get married and take care of her family, contrary to what she believes.
Woman 2, 3, 4, 5 are all in SHOCK!!!
Woman 2 (Monique): in my family, we believe that women are important part of any business or family business. When I am older I will definitely add value to my business and be an integral part of it just as my mother is!
All women are talking about the benefits and support her
Woman 3 (Maxi): although my mother did not have any part in the family business, times have changes now, and I am already interning with my father as he wants me to learn everything from scratch and will only promote me if he believes that I have the knowledge, education and experience to be the director of the company.
After all, 64% of all graduates are Now WOMEN!!!
Man 1 (yousef): well we have a flourishing business and both the sons (himself and his elder brother) work with his father in the family business, and his mother is the one who communicates, and plays the most important role even though she isn’t formally involved in the business and without her, our family and our family business would fall apart and would not exist. There are many conflicts and differences in opinions between him, his brother and his father which are all articulated through one medium: His MOTHER!!!! She bridges the business and the family and helps encourage family relationships, has been centrally involved In times of conflicts between the 3 and has hence, resolved all!
Woman 4 (Inga): I feel that women definitely have an important part in the business. For eg: they can often use their sensitivity and intuition and can multitask at all levels. Further more, in the family they can communicate and also help in the stewardship in family culture. In my family, my mother organizes a formal dinner every Friday where all family members and extended family members need to be present., which keeps us going.
At the end, Eshanka read the powerpoint saying she has learned from the discussion and will take the points to her father to help in her argument that she should be part of the family business.
http://www.slideshare.net/maximhq/women-in-family-business