Are you building a masterpiece or a museum piece?
You’re a decade into running the family business. The bumpy years are behind you, you’ve got a proper grip on it now, and you’re clear on where you’re taking it and the story you want to tell.
And somewhere inside that confidence, a new fear takes the place of the old one. You’ve stopped worrying about failing the generation before you. Now you worry about burdening the one after you.
So you set out to hand your children something ironclad, finished, perfect, something that won’t weigh on them the way it weighed on you.
Most second-generation owners do exactly this.
They hold on tighter, perfect every detail, and try to pre-empt every problem, calling it protection when really it’s fear of dropping the ball.
In today’s episode, I talk about the unfinished masterpiece, and why the most loving thing you can leave the next generation isn’t a finished business, but an open one.
Because when you hold too tightly and try to perfect everything, you don’t protect the next generation. You hand them a monument to guard, the very thing you never wanted to be yourself.
There’s a Japanese form of collaborative poetry called renga that understood this centuries ago. A single poem with many authors across time, where the opening verse must be strong enough to stand on its own, and open enough for the next person to build on.
Because your contribution was never meant to be the finished masterpiece. It was always meant to be one verse in a much longer story.
In today’s episode, you’ll learn:
1.- Why the tightest grip and the most perfect concept become the heaviest inheritance you can leave the next generation.
2.- Why your contribution was never meant to be finished, and how the Japanese art of renga reveals what enduring legacies actually do.
3.- The three things second-generation owners do that trap the next generation: perfecting the concept, sealing the box, and perfecting the what instead of the why.
By the end of the episode, you’ll know why the most enduring thing you can build is one you deliberately leave open, strong enough to stand on its own, and open enough to be continued by the people who come after you.