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Healing founder's rift: Turning family conflict into lasting continuity
Daily FT
|November 17, 2025
WHEN my previous article “The Unspoken Rift: When Founders and Siblings Collide in Family Businesses” appeared in the Daily FT (https://www.ft.lk/columns/Unspoken-rift-When-founders-and-siblings-collide-in-family-businesses/4-783309), I was unprepared for the overwhelming response it received. My phone rang continuously for days. Many of the calls came from founders of Sri Lanka’s most respected family enterprises, from their children, and from professionals who have long observed such struggles from the sidelines. Almost every conversation began the same way: “You have written what we have all felt, but never dared to say.”
The outpouring of emotion confirmed a truth I have long believed but had rarely seen so openly expressed—that behind the impressive facades of many Sri Lankan family businesses lies a layer of silence, frustration, and emotional fatigue. The founders who built their empires through sacrifice and sheer determination now find themselves battling not the market or regulation, but their own children and siblings. It is a quiet pain that does not make it into financial statements—yet it shapes the future of every family enterprise.
But this response also revealed something far more encouraging: a deep readiness for change. Many who reached out did not just identify with the pain; they wanted to discuss solutions. They spoke of their desire to build bridges with their families, to professionalise governance, and to ensure that the next generation strengthens, rather than divides, their legacy.
This realisation marks a turning point. The first article gave voice to the unspoken pain; this one will explore how that pain can be healed. How can Sri Lankan family enterprises turn conflict into continuity, resentment into renewal, and emotional inheritance into institutional strength? The answer lies in governance, empathy, and the courage to reinvent family leadership for a new era.
The real cost of silence
If the first symptom of conflict is denial, then the most fatal disease in family enterprises is silence. Many founders, even after sensing friction within their families, choose not to address it—believing that keeping peace is better than confronting pain. But in reality, this silence costs more than any financial crisis ever could.
It erodes trust, paralyses decision-making, and turns once-vibrant organisations into guarded fortresses of suspicion.
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