It was on the cusp of a fourth-generation succession that the Carvajal family, one of Latin America’s most respected family enterprises and the winner of the 2022 IMD Global Family Business Award, faced the same fate as 95% of other enterprising families.
After surviving two world wars, political and social unrest, and extremely turbulent economic times, the transition from the third to the fourth generation posed a significant challenge to the family legacy. It required careful navigation of the succession process which meant trust in the leadership capabilities and vision of the next generation to ensure the continuity of what had been established. This was not an easy task, as the business needed to refocus, which involved selling divisions and determining a new strategy for its desired focus. Ultimately, this led to the appointment of its first external CEO.
While its first, second, and third generations lived as a close-knit sibling family above the family’s printing business, in the early 2000s, the fourth generation began leaving Columbia – uninterested in steering the family business and placing its leadership in the hands of a non-family chief executive for the first time in over 100 years.
The family enterprise which started as a printing press had expanded into the three disciplines of packaging, paper making, and technology. Within a short period of time, they had expanded to the Capital of Columbia, Bogota, and then Puerto Rico – the family’s first international expansion. They then started making the Yellow Pages and various types of notebooks, importing a machine that made lined pages. It was a period of tremendous growth, but their challenge became keeping everyone together.
Despite being successful in his ambition to refocus the increasingly diversified business, the CEO’s lack of alignment with the family values “made for a harsh transition from family CEO to non-family CEO,” recalls Cristina Carvajal. It was only once Pedro Carvajal took over in 2020 that the family came back together again. “It revived the whole culture of the family and our values,” added Carvajal, whose role it is to relay communications between the family and the business as president of the family council.