Asking
                      the Big Questions
                    
An
                      Interview with Charles Collier
                      
                    
MTM
:
                    Your book, 
Wealth in Families
, stresses the importance
                    of families asking what you call "the big questions."
                    What do you mean by that and how does it help resolve family
                    differences?
                    
CC
: I think asking
                      essential questions is a key to family cohesion. I call
                      it "the art of questions." When I ask parents
                      what they want for their children, they say: "I just
                      want them to be happy." Then I ask an important question:
                      "What will make them truly happy?" They typically
                      respond, "Being passionate about something."
There are things more important than money
                      in a family, but so often we act as if money is what matters
                      most. I would say that the most important things in a family
                      are a sense of purpose, meaning, and identity-and
                      that having those qualities is what will make your children
                      happy. So the question to ask becomes: "How can we
                      nurture the growth and development of our family members,
                      and what role does money play in their life journey?"
                      By discussing that question, financial tensions and family
                      differences may be resolved more harmoniously.
MTM
: Are there other
                      questions families need to ask themselves?
CC
: Before families
                      can make effective decisions about money, they ought to
                      ask themselves a number of big questions, chief of which
                      are: "What is the meaning of our family's financial
                      wealth?," "What does our family want to preserve
                      besides our financial wealth?," and "What is
                      our family's purpose?"
MTM
: How do families
                      answer those questions?
CC
: First, families
                      ought to understand that they have four dimensions to their
                      family's wealth (as developed by the faculty of the
                      Family Office Exchange Learning Academy):
 
Human
                      capital
 has to do with talent, skills, and "calling."
                      Human capital needs to be nurtured and grown over a lifetime.
                      To do that, you can ask your children: "What are you
                      good at? What are your talents and gifts and how can we
                      invest in them?"
 
Intellectual
                      capital
 is about knowledge, communication, and managing
                      family differences and conflict. To foster the development
                      of intellectual capital, you can celebrate differences in
                      learning styles, encourage lifelong learning, and think
                      deliberately about family governance.
 
Social
                      capital
 has to do with civic engagement, developing
                      bonds and networks to your community, and extending care
                      beyond your own family. To develop your family's social
                      capital, you need to ask: "How do we raise compassionate
                      children? How do we encourage our children to form and sustain
                      a commitment to the public good?"
 
Financial
                      capital
 is your money and other assets, such as stocks,
                      bonds, and real estate.
 I suggest
                      that the purpose of financial capital is to enhance the
                      other three dimensions of true family wealth. The real wealth
                      of your family is not financial. Financial wealth is simply
                      a tool to enhance the growth of every family member, no
                      matter what life journey they are on.
MTM
:
                      Would you say more about how asking the questions resolves
                      differences and promotes family harmony?
CC
:
                      Just asking these fundamental questions is not enough. You
                      need to act on the answers. For example, you might ask your
                      son or daughter, "What is your passion?" and
                      "How can we invest in your talents and interests?"
                      If a career as a boat builder is not your family's
                      definition of success, yet that's what your son or
                      daughter wants to pursue, then what do you do? You need
                      to allow your children to dream their own dreams, but it's
                      not easy.
Parents
                      may want to ask themselves, "In what ways are we using
                      money as a form of control?" I would say a key issue
                      in wealthy families is the inability to let go of their
                      children. For example, when a young person in their late
                      twenties rejects the family money, there is often an issue
                      around control. The individual may have the perception that
                      the parents are controlling him or her with money-and
                      the parents actually are! The issue is not really about
                      money-money is the tool for control. To resolve the
                      relational issue, parent and child have to reach out to
                      one another. Usually, it is a parent who needs to take the
                      first step by reflecting on his or her contribution to the
                      relationship.
Many
                      wealthy families tend to overprotect and rescue their children.
                      They often think money can "fix the problem."
                      For example, they or their lawyer will call the boarding
                      school headmaster to get their children out of trouble.
                      I like to remember what Albert Camus said: The purpose of
                      all that love is that they shall separate.
MTM
:
                      How might "the big questions" affect family
                      communication?
CC
:
                      When you are deciding what to do with your financial resources,
                      if you start with the question, "What is the meaning
                      and purpose of our family's financial wealth?"
                      the decision process has the potential to enhance communication
                      and personal growth for the whole family. The process itself
                      holds within it the statement of what the family values.
                      For example, if a family decides to leave 90 percent of
                      its money to the family, 10 percent to tax, and nothing
                      to charity, just as important as the final decision is the
                      process that was used to reach it. Having that discussion
                      over time among family members holds enormous possibility
                      for growth and for clarifying the family's values,
                      as well as for enhancing everyone's human, intellectual,
                      and social capital. If the parents make the decision alone,
                      the children may feel disenfranchised-they may feel
                      as if their parents do not value their contribution, as
                      if they do not value them as people.
That
                      is the ultimate decision- how are you going to address
                      these questions? Engaging in these kinds of conversations
                      with your family over time forces you to think about your
                      values, to communicate, to resolve conflict, and to be lifelong
                      learners. It's not something you do in one weekend
                      retreat. The process itself is an incubator for the competencies
                      of the four capitals, including how the family will deal
                      with money in the next generation.
MTM
:
                      Do you do this in your own family?
CC
:
                      I'm trying! In my family, something positive that
                      grew of this approach happened recently with my father.
                      He is 88 and has 10 grandchildren, and has sometimes shown
                      more preference to some of his grandchildren than others.
                      Because of family meetings we have had, my siblings and
                      I decided to tackle this unevenness. We convinced him to
                      e-mail all of his grandchildren and their spouses, offering
                      them $250 each to give to a cause they cared about. His
                      only request was that they call him and discuss what cause
                      they wanted to give to and why it is important to them.
My father
                      was glad that we suggested this idea. He learned a great
                      deal about each of his grandchildren as individuals. He
                      was thrilled by their passions and the variety of their
                      interests. Also, this exercise was important in that he
                      made a statement to his grandchildren (independent of their
                      parents) that charitable giving is important. The grandchildren
                      all had a positive experience around giving. The amount
                      of money was not important; the process was.
MTM
:
                      It sounds as if you have had good results with family meetings.
                      Would you say more about them?
CC
:
                      Because of positive experiences in my own family, I'm
                      a great advocate of family meetings. They send two wonderful
                      messages: You count, and you belong. This is a process that
                      takes time, but you can get noticeable effects fairly quickly.
                      You may struggle in the first meetings to get it right,
                      but it will get better over time. (See sidebar: Family Meeting
                      Tips.) Some family topics are so emotionally charged that
                      you need an outside facilitator. A facilitator will often
                      interview individual family members before a meeting. I
                      know of families who, with a capable outside facilitator,
                      worked through issues and, in six months, resolved serious
                      conflict and increased family cohesion. Of course, it entailed
                      a commitment of time and effort.
It's
                      important to remember that enhancing family harmony is a
                      learning process-and it can take a lifetime. I like
                      to think of the learning curve. You start out at the bottom,
                      where you're in a state of "chaos." Then
                      you grow more competent as you go along. Eventually, you
                      may level out, and then you might start off in a direction
                      of learning something new, or of staying where you are and
                      going deeper into that learning. I like to ask families:
                      Where are you on the learning curve? Where is your family
                      on the learning curve? What are you called to do next? What
                      impact does your family want to have? 
-Interviewed
                      by Pamela Gerloff
Charles
                      Collier's book, 
Wealth in Families
 is available
                      (in single copies or in bulk) from Harvard University. To
                      order, call: 617-495-5040.
        
 
                            
Legacy
                              Planning: Letting Go
                            When transferring assets to the next generation, these
                            steps will help you release control and promote children's
                            financial competence and independence:  
                              - 
Transfer
                                the money in flexible trusts.
- 
For
                                children who are beneficiaries trusts, include
                                them as co-trustees.
- 
Think
                                about one of the trustees being someone outside
                                the family who act as a mentor.
- 
Give
                                the child a say in who the third trustee is.
- 
Pay
                                for your son or daughter to have his or her own
                                fee-only financial planner (not the same as yours).
Family
                              Meeting Tips
                            
                              - 
Rotate
                                the leadership of the meeting among family members.
                                Sometimes you may need an outside facilitator.)
- 
Give
                                everyone input on the agenda.
- 
Meet
                                regularly; for example, at least once a year as
                                an extended family, and more often with committees
                                (such as a family foundation meeting).
- 
Start
                                your first family meeting by talking about family
                                stories, traditions, rituals, or history, before
                                tackling more sensitive issues, such as financial
                                wealth and family philanthropy.
-Charles
                            Collier
  
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