Founder's Perspectives
Founder's Perspectives
Earlier today, I had the privilege of meeting one of the most respected Carnatic musicians of our time at his residence. As these conversations often do, it began with music and then, without forcing it, moved into something quieter and deeper, philosophy, tradition, and how one is meant to live.
At one point he mentioned an old Tamil framework, followed by a community known for excelling in three essential facets of life. It was not delivered as a theory. It was said almost casually, like something that had been carried for centuries because it works.
The three words were simple.
As I drove back, I kept returning to how clean it felt. Three words that cover the full arc of wealth across generations, without modern jargon or modern anxiety, and they also explain why so many families succeed in one phase and struggle in another.

India has always shown strength in eetal. Across generations, wealth has been created through education, enterprise, trade, and professional excellence. Founders and first-generation entrepreneurs worked with an intensity that many people only understand once they have lived it, the long hours, the personal sacrifices, and the years when comfort is postponed because the enterprise must survive.
In a family business, eetal is often founder-led. Decision-making is centralised. Clarity is high. Accountability sits with one or two individuals. Wealth accumulation is purposeful and is usually driven by long-term intent rather than instant gratification.
Yet Indian business history also shows us something sobering: wealth creation alone does not ensure continuity. In fact, families can be extraordinarily strong at eetal and still lose what was created because the next phases were not addressed with the same seriousness.

Where complexity truly begins is vaguthal.
As families grow, so do expectations, roles, responsibilities, and interpretations. Wealth that was once owned and controlled by a single founder eventually needs to be divided among family members in ways that are equitable and well thought through. Vaguthal is not arithmetic. It is not simply splitting assets. It is fairness, transparency, and clarity of intent.
Many Indian family businesses have faltered here, not because there was a lack of wealth, but because there was ambiguity. When beneficiaries are not clearly identified, when ownership is not separated from management, or when expectations are left undocumented, friction becomes almost inevitable.
I have seen families where siblings worked together harmoniously for years, and then the next generation inherited not only assets but unanswered questions. I have also seen cases where the operating business survived, but personal wealth outside the business became a source of conflict because succession planning was delayed or absent.
What makes vaguthal difficult is not the paperwork. It is the human layer. People do not fight only over money. They fight over perceived fairness, recognition, old hurt, and the fear of being sidelined.
This is why I often say, quietly, that the cost of postponing vaguthal is rarely financial alone. The bill arrives as tension, distance, and conversations that become hard to reverse.
The role of the family office in vaguthal
This is where the role of a family office becomes meaningful.
A family office helps families approach vaguthal with both sensitivity and structure. It helps them have the conversations early, when trust is still intact, and when decisions can be made without urgency.
It helps families identify beneficiaries clearly, design allocations that are equitable, not necessarily equal, separate business ownership from family entitlements, and create transparent succession and estate plans.
The objective is not to make families “corporate.” The objective is to ensure that division on paper does not become division in relationships.

Once wealth has been earned and equitably divided, the final responsibility is kaathal.
Kaathal is the discipline of safeguarding wealth for the long term through robust structures, governance mechanisms, and legal frameworks. In practical terms, this includes trusts, wills, holding structures, and family constitutions that preserve both capital and intent.
Indian families that have endured across generations have recognised that safeguarding wealth is as much about protecting family harmony as it is about protecting assets. These structures are not created out of mistrust. They are created out of foresight, because families evolve, memories fade, and what feels “understood” today can become contested tomorrow.
Kaathal ensures that wealth remains a source of security and purpose, not conflict.
From founder control to institutional stewardship
The most resilient Indian families have consciously moved from founder-centric control to institution-led governance. They recognise that families change, businesses mature, and wealth must be held with care beyond individual lifetimes.
When families honour eetal, practice vaguthal with clarity, and commit to kaathal through structure, wealth stops being only a personal achievement and begins to function as a multigenerational legacy.
A closing reflection
What struck me most about the musician’s insight was how effortlessly ancient wisdom named modern problems.
Ignoring any one of the three weakens the whole.
In a world that is increasingly complex, this old Tamil framework feels like a reminder that wise wealth is not only about accumulation. It is also about intention, fairness, and stewardship.
Perhaps our traditions understood something fundamental: that wealth, when handled thoughtfully, can bind families across generations rather than pull them apart.

Understanding Family Wealth Goes Beyond Numbers Before you can guide wealth, you must understand the people who created it. Working with business families, I have learnt that every family enterprise has its own rhythm. It comes from unspoken values, decision-making styles, shared history, and the hard work that the world never sees. This is why […]
When the family first approached us, there was a sense of hesitation. A mix of curiosity and apprehension. The first meeting was initiated by the daughter who heard about Entrust from a friend of hers, and convinced her father to be an audience when the Entrust team visited their office. Father was looking for a […]
Warren Buffett spent years preparing the handover. The market still flinched. What that tells us about the gap between planning a succession and people actually accepting one. On the first of January 2026, Warren Edward Buffett stepped down as Chief Executive of Berkshire Hathaway after sixty years in the role. Greg Abel, who had been […]
signup for updates
