专栏创业

When the time comes to fire the founder

Last week I had lunch with the founder of PizzaExpress, Peter Boizot, at his grand old club, the National Liberal. He is 84 and has just written an autobiography: Mr Pizza and All That Jazz. Peter is a typical founder – maverick, obsessive, extrovert, energetic, egotistical and relentless. In many respects he has led an impressive and exemplary life – inventing businesses, creating jobs, providing entertainment and donating almost his entire fortune to good causes. As he puts it in the final chapter of his memoir: “I will always be proud that at every stage of my life I have invested everything into the things I love – whether it was pizza, jazz, heritage, sport or the arts. I think my work has benefited all of my passions, which is a fine footprint to leave behind.” He stepped aside with grace from his restaurant company after almost 30 years in 1993 when we took over, and remains its life president.

Many other founders do not depart smoothly. Dov Charney, the ex-boss of clothing firm American Apparel, is the latest example of a high-profile founder to be fired. For years his directors indulged Mr Charney’s eccentric conduct; but recently it seems that “alleged misconduct” provided a handy pretext for a boardroom coup. It is a surprise that Mr Charney was surprised; yet many founders are so narcissistic that they fail to accept their weaknesses, or take threats seriously.

The guru on this subject is Noam Wasserman, who wrote an insightful book called The Founder’s Dilemmas. The author quotes research indicating that almost three-quarters of founder-CEOs are sacked rather than step down voluntarily. The major reason for these dismissals is that most founders do not make the best long-term chief executives; but they find the handover of control an agonising loss. As a company grows, its very success often exposes the founder’s lack of managerial skills – thus hastening the day a successor is required.

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卢克•约翰逊

卢克•约翰逊(Luke Johnson)是一位成果颇丰的企业家和创业家,他为英国《金融时报》撰写企业家专栏。他目前担任英国皇家艺术协会的主席,并管理着一家私人股本投资公司——Risk Capital Partners。约翰逊曾在牛津大学学医,但是毕业后却进入投行业。他在1992年收购PizzaExpress,担任其董事长,并将其上市。到1999年出售的时候,PizzaExpress的股价已经从40英镑涨至800英镑。

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