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Author(s)

Jennifer Pendergast

Sachin Waikar

This case concerns a family business's efforts to assess and shape collective decision-making among a large sibling leadership group and transition from an informal founder-led operation to a more formalized organization. In late 2021, the family behind MIC Food, a Miami-based processor and distributor of tropical fruits and vegetables, such as plantains, was led by six second-generation siblings, the children of the Honduran-immigrant company founders. The business had come through the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic well, with record expected annual revenue. But as competition and regulation increased, the siblings had to consider whether their informal decision-making--including weekly meetings and regular group texts--should be systematized to ensure strategic and efficient decision-making in the future. Readers will put themselves in the siblings' shoes to consider the best approaches to gaining consensus on strategy and growth goals; sharing power within the sibling group and, potentially, with executives brought in from outside; and creating vision and objectives for bringing the third generation into the enterprise.

Date Published: 12/09/2022
Discipline: Family Business
Key Concepts: Decision making, Enterprise agility, Entrepreneurial business strategy, Family businesses, Leadership, Leadership transitions, Organizational culture, Organizational decision making, Organization structure and design, Strategy
Citations: Pendergast, Jennifer, Sachin Waikar. MIC Food: Shaping the Right Decision-Making Process for the Future. 5-322-502 (KE1239).