Video: UH Regent Mike Miyahira gives public talk at UH Hilo on the challenges for family-owned businesses

The talk, “Best Practices for Family Business Owners,” is part of UH Hilo’s Kuleana and Community Weekly Talk Story gatherings happening this semester.

Title info for Mike Miyahira's talk, "Best Practices for Family Business Owners," UH Hilo, Kuleana and Community Weekly Talk Story: Building Community Through Conversation. Videotaped Nov. 1, 2024. Includes business portrait of Mike.

Businessman and University of Hawaiʻi Regent Michael Miyahira gave a public talk Nov. 1 at UH Hilo about the challenges facing family business owners in Hawaiʻi. Miyahira provides consulting services to family owned businesses across the state, focusing on succession planning, family business governance issues, and strategic planning.

The talk, “Best Practices for Family Business Owners,” is part of a series of weekly gatherings held this semester at UH Hilo where students, faculty, staff, university retirees, and members of the local community get together in a safe and welcoming environment to share their thoughts around a common topic.

The goal of the series, named Kuleana and Community Weekly Talk Story: Building Community Through Conversation, is to strengthen the university’s connections to the local community through conversation. Topics cover Maunakea stewardship, mental health, better communication, houselessness in Hawaiʻi, entrepreneurship, and more. Following a short talk by a featured guest, attendees break out into discussion groups and then share their manaʻo (thoughts) with everyone.

In addition to running his consulting business and being a UH regent, Miyahira is on the board of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce, the Island of Hawaiʻi YMCA, and the Japanese Community Association of Hawaiʻi. He also represents Hawaiʻi Island on the board of the UH Mānoa Shidler College of Business’s Shidler Family Business Center of Hawaiʻi.

The talk was held at the Kilohana Student Success Center located in Edwin Mookini Library, UH Hilo.

The Kuleana and Community series is sponsored by the UH Hilo Office of the Chancellor, Kīpuka Native Hawaiian Student Center, Kilohana Academic Success Center, Center for Global Education and Exchange, and Assistant Professor of Communication Colby Miyose and Associate Professor of Sociology Alton Okinaka.

Don’t miss the complete Kuleana and Community series

UPDATED with links to video recordings of each talk:

Aug. 30: Colby Miyose, “Communicating with Empathy” (this presentation was not recorded)
Sept. 6: Gerald DeMello, Historic Preservation Advocate, “Preserving Hawaiʻi’s History”
Sept. 13: Charmaine Higa, UH Hilo Professor of Psychology, “Small Shoulders, Big Worries: Understanding Childhood Anxiety in a Post-Pandemic World”
Sept. 20: Randy Kurohara, Executive Director, Community First, “Kuleana Health: Our Responsibility for Health”
Sept. 27: Clifton Sankofa, Educator, “Reclaiming Health Through Food”
Oct. 4: Kaleo Pilago, Education and Outreach Coordinator, Center for Maunakea Stewardship, “Maunakea Stewardship”
Oct. 11: Beverly Tese, Community Activist, Prizma Hawaiʻi LGBTQ Center, “Representation”
Oct. 18: Carla Kuo, Executive Officer, Hawaiʻi Island Chamber of Commerce, “Supporting Local”
Oct. 25: Brandee Menino, Chief Executive Office, HOPE Services Hawaiʻi, “Empowering Our Community: Exploring Services That Strengthen Us”
Nov. 1: Mike Miyahira, UH Regent and Business Owner, “Best Practices for Family Business Owners”
Nov. 8: Julie Mitchell, Executive Director, Kuʻikahi Mediation Center, “Conflict Prevention and Resolution”
Nov. 15: Sue Lee Loy, Hawaiʻi County Council Member and State Representative-Elect, “UH Hilo’s Role in the Community”

See all posts on the series.

Share this story