Coming 15th July 2026 · A New Book by Ayeman Elias
The Dynasty Dilemma is the governance playbook for family enterprises that intend to endure — built on the world’s great surviving dynasties and the hard lessons of those that didn’t.
For Launch List Members
The foundational chapter of The Dynasty Dilemma — delivered as a PDF attached to your welcome email the moment you sign up.
25 questions across the five governance pillars. Unlock the interactive assessment below by registering above.
List members receive a discounted price the day the book goes live on Amazon KDP and Ingram Spark.
Who This Book Is For
Founders and sitting executives wondering whether what they’ve built will outlast them and what governance will take to ensure it does.
Heirs preparing to inherit ownership, leadership, or both who want to understand what they are stepping into before they step in.
Professional managers navigating the distinctive politics of a family enterprise and trying to serve it well from the outside.
Lawyers, consultants, investors, and independent directors who work with family-owned companies and want a shared governance language.
Free Interactive Tool
Sign up to instantly access all 25 questions across the five governance pillars.
Score each statement 1 to 5 where 1 means not true of us at all and 5 means fully true and well established. Answer as your enterprise actually is today. For the most revealing results, have several family members complete it independently then compare.
1. We have a clear, written shareholders agreement that governs how shares may be transferred.
2. There is a fair, agreed mechanism for valuing and buying out a family member who wishes to exit.
3. Ownership is structured to resist fragmentation across generations.
4. We have a clear, predictable dividend policy rather than ad hoc year-by-year decisions.
5. Minority and non-working family shareholders are protected and receive regular information.
6. We have a real board that meets regularly, not just an informal family gathering.
7. At least one genuinely independent director with no family or employment ties sits on our board.
8. The board monitors management performance, including the performance of family executives.
9. Family members direct the enterprise through the board, not through individual instructions.
10. Our financial statements are independently audited by a reputable external firm.
11. We have a written succession plan for our most senior leadership roles.
12. If our leader were lost tomorrow, we know who would lead and how the transition would work.
13. The next generation is being deliberately developed, educated, and prepared, not left to chance.
14. Family members must gain outside experience and meet clear criteria before joining the business.
15. Succession decisions are made on merit through a process seen by the family as fair.
16. We have a family constitution or charter that articulates our shared values and rules.
17. We have a functioning family council or assembly that meets and does real work.
18. There is a clear policy on how and on what terms family members may work in the business.
19. We have agreed in advance how we will resolve disputes, short of going to court.
20. The roles of family, owner, and manager are kept distinct rather than blurred together.
21. Family members communicate openly and trust that they are treated fairly.
22. We have identified the key risks to the enterprise, including family-specific risks.
23. We are prepared for a crisis such as a sudden loss, a financial shock, or a serious conflict.
24. Our governance is reviewed and renewed periodically, not built once and forgotten.
25. The rising generation sees the enterprise as a trust to steward, not just wealth to enjoy.
About the Book & Author
“For two years I studied one question: why do so few family enterprises reach the third generation, and what do the rare century-old dynasties do differently? The answer, almost every time, is governance — and governance can be built.”
Ayeman Elias Ayeman Elias is an entrepreneurial C-level executive, commercial strategist, and business transformation leader with more than twenty years of experience inside the family businesses of the GCC and the broader Middle East.
His fascination with family business dynamics began as a practitioner navigating the intersection of ambition, legacy, and growth, and matured into the subject of his MBA dissertation on corporate governance in family firms — the foundation from which this book grew.
He holds an Executive MBA from the University of Northampton and a Masters degree in Supply Chain Management. He is based in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.
Available From 1st July 2026
Launching 15th July 2026
Available worldwide on Amazon KDP and through Ingram Spark bookstores.
Links activate the moment they go live.
Links activate automatically once the book is published. Join the list to be notified first.
Be the first to read it. Get Chapter One today and receive your members-only price on 15th July 2026.