LAGOS — In the world of African commerce, there is a haunting statistic: nearly 70% of family-owned businesses do not survive the transition to the second generation, and 90% fail before the third. On March 26, the Lagos Business School (LBS) is convening a high-stakes summit at the Ecobank Pan African Centre to rewrite this script.
The mission of the 2026 International Family Business Conference (IFBC) is clear: move the African family business from a “survivalist” mindset to a “legacy” institution.
1. The 80% Reality
Family businesses are not just “mom-and-pop” shops; they account for over 80% of private companies in Africa. According to Dr. Okey Nwuke, the prosperity of Nigeria is directly indexed to the health of these families. If the family business fails, the national GDP feels the tremor.
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The Governance Gap: Most African firms are built on the charisma of a single founder. The LBS initiative argues that charisma is not a scalable asset.
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The “Culture” Fix: The 2026 theme focuses on “Governance & Culture.” This is a move to turn rigid legal frameworks into living, breathing family disciplines.
2. The Channels Media Blueprint
The choice of John Momoh (Channels Media Group) as keynote speaker is a strategic one. Momoh represents a rare breed of Nigerian founder who has successfully transitioned a family vision into a regulated, corporate powerhouse.
The Lesson: Success isn’t just about profit; it’s about “Institution Building.” The summit aims to teach founders how to stop being “The Boss” and start being “The Chairman.”
3. “A Crowd to Prosperity”
Advisory Board Chairman Rasheed Sarumi made a bold claim: Family business is a “crowd to prosperity.” By referencing the Forbes list, Sarumi is reminding local entrepreneurs that the world’s biggest brands—from Walmart to BMW—are essentially family businesses that figured out Succession Planning.
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Advocacy as a Shield: The LBS Family Business Advisory Council is now stepping into a lobbying role, ensuring that the interests of these firms are protected in national policy discussions.
4. The 2026 Curriculum
LBS isn’t just hosting a one-day talk shop. They are launching a full-year “War Room” of webinars and intensive programs. This suggests a shift toward continuous education for both family members and the “non-family executives” who are often caught in the crossfire of family politics.
The Verdict
The 2026 IFBC is a wake-up call for the “Founding Fathers” of Nigerian commerce. The goal is to stop building businesses that die with their creators. By focusing on institutional governance, LBS is trying to ensure that the “wealth of the fathers” doesn’t just survive the children, but empowers the grandchildren.
