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The most trusted business is...
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Family businesses are one of the most trusted types of businesses in the United States. Here's why that's so important. - photo by Herb Scribner
Good news for families that run a business youre one of the most successful and trusted business types out there, according to a new report from Ernst & Young, a business management company.

Family businesses and their leaders are the ultimate entrepreneurs, said Carrie Hall, the family business leader at E&Y. They must continually innovate to grow and pass on a thriving business from one generation to the next. Our survey demonstrates how this entrepreneurial thinking across generations results in business success and strong family ties.

The report, which surveyed 25 of the largest family businesses from across the world, found that 76 percent of family owned businesses market their company as family owned because they want to establish trust with the consumer.

And apparently its working. The Harvard Business Review reported that family businesses are still the most trusted type of business across the world because the family business marketing moniker helps the company identify, differentiate, and build trust with customers and employees.

HBR cited a report from Family Business Magazine that said 60 percent of Americans prefer to buy products from family owned businesses.

This isnt always the case, though, as distrust for family businesses has crept up in recent years. For example, developing countries across the world have grown a distrust for newer family businesses over concerns about their lack of history and credibility, HBR reported.

Companies in younger economies generally do not yet have a storied legacy on which to draw, HBR reported.

Thats why its important for family owned businesses to establish trust from the beginning. The University of Massachusetts Amhersts Family Business Center recommends that family businesses be honest from the beginning about the realities of their company when theyre working with a new client, even if that means the client may not stick with the business.

Some of the tools for trust building are honesty even when that means airing a troublesome and potentially dangerous issue-inquiry and curiosity, coping with difficult interactions, and caring about both parties in the discussion looking for the win/win instead of the win/lose outcome, Shel Horowitz wrote for UMass.

Family members who work together in a family owned business should also trust each other, which will show customers that trustworthiness is a valued quality by the business, according to columnist Chuck Gremillion of the International Reprographic Association.

Family members can build that trust by sharing ideas, opinions and plans with each other to create that trusting bond, Gremillion wrote.

Family businesses start with an inherent advantage because family members typically know and trust one another, he wrote. The key becomes to build upon that trust and never breach it.
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Record April boosts Savannah's container trade at port
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The Port of Savannah moved 356,700 20-foot equivalent container units in April, an increase of 7.1 percent. - photo by Provided

The Georgia Ports Authority's busiest April ever pushed its fiscal year-to-date totals to more than 3.4 million 20-foot equivalent container units (TEUs), an increase of 8.8 percent, or 280,000 TEUs, compared to the first 10 months of fiscal 2017.

"We're on track to move more than 300,000 TEUs in every month of the fiscal year, which will be a first for the authority," said GPA Executive Director Griff Lynch. "We're also anticipating this to be the first fiscal year for the Port of Savannah to handle more than 4 million TEUs."

April volumes reached 356,700 20-foot equivalent container units, up 7.1 percent or 23,700 units. As the fastest growing containerport in the nation, the Port of Savannah has achieved a compound annual growth rate of more than 5 percent a year over the past decade.

"As reported in the recent economic impact study by UGA's Terry College of Business, trade through Georgia's deepwater ports translates into jobs, higher incomes and greater productivity," said GPA Board Chairman Jimmy Allgood. "In every region of Georgia, employers rely on the ports of Savannah and Brunswick to help them become more competitive on the global stage."

To strengthen the Port of Savannah's ability to support the state's future economic growth, the GPA Board approved $66 million in terminal upgrades, including $24 million for the purchase of 10 additional rubber-tired gantry cranes.  

"The authority is committed to building additional capacity ahead of demand to ensure the Port of Savannah remains a trusted link in the supply chain serving Georgia and the Southeast," Lynch said.

The crane purchase will bring the fleet at Garden City Terminal to 156 RTGs. The new cranes will support three new container rows, which the board approved in March. The additional container rows will increase annual capacity at the Port of Savannah by 150,000 TEUs.

The RTGs will work over stacks that are five containers high and six deep, with a truck lane running alongside the stacks. Capable of running on electricity, the cranes will have a lift capacity of 50 metric tons.

The cranes will arrive in two batches of five in the first and second quarters of calendar year 2019.

 Also at Monday's meeting, the GPA Board elected its officers, with Jimmy Allgood as chairman, Will McKnight taking the position of vice chairman and Joel Wooten elected as the next secretary/treasurer.

For more information, visit gaports.com, or contact GPA Senior Director of Corporate Communications Robert Morris at (912) 964-3855 or rmorris@gaports.com.

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