For the UAE, a New Approach to Sustaining Family Business

sustaining family business in the uae
Listen

Whether we realize it or not, we interact with family businesses every day.

They are the driving force of the global economy. From neighborhood mom-and-pop stores and restaurants to international conglomerates, like the Gulf Agency Co., Volkswagon, and LG, family businesses make up two-thirds of all businesses in the world. According to a study by Family Firm Institute in 2017, family businesses contribute 70–90 percent of the global GDP. That’s $52–67 trillion U.S. dollars.

Family Business in the UAE

The numbers in the UAE are similarly, if not more, impressive: 90 percent of the private sector comes from family businesses.  Family businesses generate more than 70 percent of the employment in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC).

In April 2016, UAE Economy Minister Sultan Bin Saeed Al Mansouri said the country would focus on building an economy powered by non-oil industries, and projected that the contribution of oil to UAE’s GDP would fall from 30 percent in 2016 to 0 percent in 2066. This new strategy creates a very nurturing environment for family businesses in the country.

However, there is a growing concern that only a handful of family businesses in the UAE, and in the region, survive from generation to generation. According to a survey by KPMG in 2017, 88 percent of family business owners in the GCC believed that preparing the next generation is critical for the businesses’ success, but only 27 percent of the respondents had established a process for training and inducting family members into the business.

Shifting from Family Business to Family Entrepreneurship

While succession planning is top-of-mind among family business owners, many focus only on the idea of handing the business over to the next generation. A good succession strategy is much more than that. Emerging scholarship has suggested that family entrepreneurship is a more comprehensive approach to sustain a thriving, multi-generation family business. It allows the younger generation to explore potential growth connected to the family’s entrepreneurship both within and outside the scope of the existing business. A family entrepreneurship mindset not only catalyzes the transition between generations, but, more importantly, helps the younger generation find meaning in extending the family’s entrepreneurial legacy.

The recently launched Institute for Family Entrepreneurship at Babson College is pioneering this area of study. Led by Executive Director Lauri Union and Bertarelli Foundation Distinguished Professor of Family Entrepreneurship William Gartner, the Institute has developed one-of-a-kind initiatives that focus on the study of family entrepreneurship, including the new Amplifier Course.

During the year-long course, students who come from various family business backgrounds from around the world get a rare opportunity to engage with their parents in a professional/academic context through assignments designed by the lead professors, who are experts in the field of family entrepreneurship. Though important, family discussions about how the next generation can create economic, social and family value, tend not to happen without prompting. The Amplifier Course gives students a legitimate reason to talk to their families about the business. They come to understand their families’ entrepreneurial legacy and ultimately learn how they can take advantage of this unique asset of family entrepreneurship to chart their own course, whether through “intrapreneurship” (an entrepreneurial venture within an established entrepreneurship setting), start-up entrepreneurship, social venture, or philanthropy.

The term “Family Entrepreneurship” may seem novel to family businesses in the UAE, but the concept is more culturally relevant than one might think. In the PwC 2016 Middle East Family Business Survey, 50 percent of the respondents placed a high value on leaving a positive legacy for the family name, as compared to 28 percent globally. Many family businesses in the region have their own charitable foundations, which is a perfect example of how the next generation can engage in their family’s entrepreneurship in an innovative way.

If family business owners in the UAE view succession planning solely as bringing the next generation in to follow exactly in their footsteps, they risk losing out on opportunities for expansion. Worse still, if the younger generation, when presented with this sole option, chooses to take a completely separate path to achieve their personal goals, opportunities for the family to create economic, social, and family value may diminish rather than grow. On the contrary, by adopting the practice of family entrepreneurship, the younger generation can find a meaningful way to amplify the family’s entrepreneurship and value creation. When family businesses in the UAE flourish collectively, the entire economy of the country will benefit from it.

Posted in Insights

More from Insights »

Latest Stories

Students and friends celebrate and hug after winning the competition
‘Moos’ and Ahhs: Babson AI Showcase Draws Rave Reviews A high-tech solution from two MSEL students to improve monitoring herds of cows wins the top prize at the first Babson College AI Showcase, hosted by the C. Dean Metropoulos Institute of Technology and Entrepreneurship.
By
Eric Beato
Editor / Writer
Eric Beato
Eric Beato is the Editor of Babson Thought & Action and Babson Magazine. A native of Chicago and a graduate of the University of Missouri School of Journalism, Eric has worked as an editor and writer at newspapers across the country, including the Chicago Sun-Times and Boston Herald. Eric joined Babson College in 2019 after working as the communications director for a private educational travel company and as the managing editor of six regional sports publications.
May 9, 2025

Posted in Community, Entrepreneurial Leadership

A woman stood next to a Babson student during her visit to class.
Don’t Wait to Be Ready: UX Pioneer Karen Clark Cole on Graduation and Embracing Uncertainty Tech visionary Karen Clark Cole prepares to deliver the Commencement address at Babson’s graduate ceremony, sharing advice on impact, uncertainty, and starting without fear.
By
Hillary Chabot
Writer
Hillary Chabot
Hillary Chabot is a writer for Babson Thought & Action and Babson Magazine. An award-winning journalist, she is known for her insightful reporting and dedication to detailed storytelling. With a career spanning over two decades, she has covered a wide range of topics, from presidential campaigns and government policy to neighborhood issues and investigative series. As a reporter for The Boston Herald, Hillary earned a reputation for tenacity and integrity. Her work at Babson College fuels her passions—to learn something new every day and conduct thoughtful, empathic interviews. She’s thrilled to be at Babson College, where students, faculty, staff members and classes provide compelling copy daily.
May 8, 2025

Posted in Community

Heidy Magaña talking to someone at an event in Knight Auditorium
Class of 2025: How This First-Gen Student Created a Community First-generation student Heidy Magaña ’25 has spent her time at Babson building a community and growing the support available to other first-generation students.
By
Melissa Savignano
Writer
Melissa Savignano
Melissa Savignano, a content marketing manager at Babson College, has worked in higher education for almost a decade, where she tells authentic, compelling campus and community stories. Before Babson, she managed communications for Boston University’s largest college, the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences. She previously worked in client relations, helping brands of various sizes launch content marketing strategies and storytelling initiatives. When not at work, you will find her in the city of Boston, probably at the movie theater.
May 7, 2025

Posted in Community