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PODCAST: Ashley talks to businessman David Smorgon

Dashiel Lawrence
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PLUS61J 2406 (3)

Published: 25 March 2022

Last updated: 4 March 2024

Ashley talks to the prominent business figure about family dynasties, some family mistakes and his beloved Western Bulldogs footy team

At its peak, in the early 1990s, Smorgon Consolidated Industries was one of the largest and most diverse family businesses in Australia.

LISTEN TO THIS AND OTHER EPISODES

David Smorgon estimates that there were 25 family members across three generations working in the business, whose origins can be traced to a kosher butcher in Lygon Street, Carlton, in 1927.

On top of that, there were another 200 family members who didn’t work in the business, but who were nevertheless involved as direct and indirect shareholders.

The company was broken up in 1995 and the family members went their separate ways when it came to business, but in the case of David Smorgon, who many in Melbourne would know was the president of the Western Bulldogs Football Club from 1997 to 2012, a legacy of more than 30 years working in a family business led to a wealth of knowledge that he now passes on as the chief executive of Pointmade, a Melbourne-based family advisory firm.

He and his fellow advisers counsel family businesses across a variety of issues, and in the latest Lap of Caulfield Park podcast, he tells Ashley Browne that communication issues often run at the heart of conflicts in family businesses.

“Are you really calling a spade a spade? Are you really getting to the core of issues when you’re relaying messages to other members of the family or are you playing around the boundary line rather than being in the centre square,” he said.

In a wide-ranging conversation, Smorgon discusses:

  • The need for open, honest and transparent discussion between family members, without boundaries.
  • Succession planning and how elderly family patriarchs and matriarchs can be convinced to finally cede control
  • Where the Smorgon family sometimes got it wrong
  • Some case studies where independent mediation has helped solve family business issues
  • The need for regular family business health checks?
  • Succession, the TV series and how many people in family business watch it religiously
  • His beloved Western Bulldogs and their prospects for 2022.

A Lap of Caulfield Park is presented by Plus 61J Media and is available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and your favourite podcast provider.

About the author

Dashiel Lawrence

Dr Dashiel Lawrence is the Executive Director of TJI. A graduate of the Jewish Studies program at the University of Melbourne, he has been writing about Australia's Jewish diaspora for 15 years. His books include Australia and Israel: A Diasporic, Political and Cultural Relationship (2015) and People of the Boot: The Triumphs and Tragedy of Australian Jews in Sport (2018).

The Jewish Independent acknowledges Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Owners and Custodians of Country throughout Australia. We pay our respects to Elders past and present, and strive to honour their rich history of storytelling in our work and mission.

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