What is The Key to Family Business Management Succession Planning?

When it comes to family business management succession planning, and farm succession planning for that matter, there are lots of “keys” – virtually all of then claim to be the most important one. The truth is that there really is only one most important key to succession planning and it is not what you are probably thinking.

Some may say it is getting good advice, or taking advantage of planning strategies, or figuring out what others are doing successfully, or slipping through some clever business management succession loophole. Or maybe it’s having a conflict free atmosphere at the plant or developing better relationships at work.

Well, you’d be wrong.

The key to success during the family business management succession process is enlightened self-interest. In other words being able to set aside whatever petty feelings you have about the incompetence of your brother, dad, or uncle because you are savvy enough to realize that they aren’t going anyplace, they are not going to change, and if you want to succeed you will need their help to do so.

Not only that, they need your help and all of you must share one thing and one thing only, a commitment to right action. A commitment to investing the time to uncover what’s important to each of you, to the business, and to any other stakeholders – then making a commitment to work toward the goals you share.

It does not mean you will ever be buddies, coach one another’s kids, or go on vacations together – you can if you want but it is not required to be successful today or tomorrow.

Everything that happens in your business takes you closer to or farther away from your goals.

Internal problems, often personality problems or feelings of entitlement, can reduce the effectiveness of decisions you or one of the others make until you are all willing to set aside what’s wrong with the ideas of ‘others’ and look at what’s right with them.

You and I know that most of the conflict that undermines well considered decisions is not based on facts – it is the result of people wanting their way because they want their own way.

Lots of experts talk about how to build better relationships at work, saying that it’s important to success. There are books on the subject as if that makes it true.

But if your brother is a jerk and your sister is a spoiled brat (in your opinion) there is very little likelihood that any of the lessons in getting along are going to have any long term effect – for any of you.

Let’s take a look at the situation from a different perspective.

What if you and your siblings could work together effectively, make more money (so you could all take longer vacations away from each other) without sitting around the campfire singing “We are the world” and holding hands?

Your family business doesn’t have to look like a Norman Rockwell painting to be successful. It has to identify what’s important, create strategies that will move you toward that end and execute those strategies relentlessly.

There are lots of people out there who would tell you, in confidence of course, that making more money, being an industry leader, and having the respect of your peers outside the business goes a long way to make up for the fact that their brother and sister and them do not like each other very much.

Let’s say that each one of you aligns yourself with a group of successful peers, people you know, like, trust, and respect – where your ideas will be heard by others with an open mind. The members of your group will offer you continual, unbiased knowledge and feedback because they have no axe to grind, no advice to protect ,and they are not likely to feel diminished by your success – rather that’s what they are there for.

They are not your employees, your managers, your board or your family – so they will consider your ideas and offer insights that will help you test your assumptions in private, with additional decades of experience to validate them.

The result ¬ fully developed, well considered, actionable ideas and tactics that you can take to your family members and company managers as clearly though out solutions to pressing problems and exciting opportunities.

Instead of spending your time sniping at one another you and your family members can create a management succession plan that combines the best thoughts from many experts in your industry. Each of you will have peers and mentors rooting for the success of these combined strategies.

Instead of being one of the vast majority of successful companies that fail to successfully emerge from the business management succession process, yours will be one that is a model for the industry.

The only thing you’ll have to agree on, if the stage is small, is which one of you will accept your industry’s company of the year award!

Technorati Tags: , ,

Management Succession Planning IS Success For the Family Business

Decades of statistics illustrate that most successful businesses ultimately fail.

In fact only 35% of successful family businesses (and virtually all small businesses are family owned) survive through the second generation, and of those only 20% survive through the third.

The reasons are typically straightforward and the excuses have been the same, from my personal experience, for over a quarter of a century.

How do I define failure when taking about these successful businesses? Why do I say these business fail?

What are the options available to a successful family business owner when the founder or senior generation of owners come to the end of their careers?

The business can be sold, or can it, as a going concern – but that rarely works out since the owners have to trust in the buyer’s ability to run the place successfully enough to pay their own salaries and still have enough left over to pay the note. Ask your accountant to illustrate this for you.

Or the company can be broken up and sold for the value of its assets – as in an auction. That’s unlikely to be satisfactory, certainly not to the employees who lose their jobs – and the depreciated value of the businesses assets are unlikely be to large enough to provide the stream of income required for the retiring generation let alone having anything left for their heirs. That’s pretty pitiful results for a lifetime of work, huh?

That leaves the only real possibility – the continuous operation of the company in the hands of the next generation through a process of succession that does not require a sale or other taxable event that diminishes the assets and the resulting income stream from the business.

Business owners who have put in twenty or more years building their companies know that succession is their only hope. They have all seen folks try the clever strategies to do otherwise and then ended up with very little to show for their life’s work.

Why do these otherwise successful business owners fail to take the steps necessary to insure that succession happens?

Business advisors know that a seamless succession process is the only way their client can exit the company satisfactorily but can’t seem to get their message across to them.

Everybody knows that business succession planning is the systematic process of ownership transition, and it is no simple task. Maybe that’s the problem, it’s too complicated for business owners to understand?

Iif you have been around a while, you know that business succession planning is not a one-shot event, but requires everyone’s commitment to review and revise. What, did you get bored thinking you could sign a paper and keep on with business as usual?

Needless to say, business succession planning can bring about peace of mind and it also protects unprepared family members from decisions connected with owning, selling and managing the family business – so what’s the problem, why don’t you do anything about it before the good options are taken away from you?

I have learned over the last thirty years helping successful family owned companies re-design themselves for the future beyond the current generation, that business owners already know 80-90% of what they need to know in order to have a successful transition to the next generation.

Advisors often fail to serve them either because they refuse to acknowledge the most productive role they can play, providing the tools and tactics available to help make the business owner’s dreams come true, or they assume the “not invented here” position and refuse to listen to the other members of their client’s advisory team.

Too often, estate and business succession planning is done with an eye toward the tax and financial aspects only, ignoring the very important impact of family dynamics – maybe because nobody asked the business owner specifically what he or she wanted to happen.

This invariably leads to plans that collapse since the unspoken desires of family members will serve to undermine not only the tax and financial objectives but also may destroy the family harmony.

Why don’t advisors address the emotional issues that are keys to moving forward with transition planning instead of simply concentrating on the legal issues, tax issues, insurance issues, and management issues.

What’s holding these business owners back? Isn’t it because nobody has asked them to describe what they want the business to look like? They have not asked them who is going to run the place and what plans they would like to see in force for their spouses and those offspring who are not involved in the business – where their entire net worth is tied up?

Does anyone ask the business owner their opinion, what’s possible given the abilities of the members of the next generation? Maybe if their advisors would ask and then listen to the dreams and goals of the business owners and their families they could create plans that everyone will buy into?

If the business owner knows 80% of what he or she needs to know in order to create a successful succession strategy – who are they gonna call to help them uncover them? Who’s going to ask them “what’s important” over and over again across a range of issues to help them surface for themselves their desired results?

As a business owner don’t you think that if someone could help you articulate your desires – that you could take them to your advisors so they can set it up?

If you are a lawyer, accountant, or life insurance professional doing business with business owners wouldn’t you welcome the insights of a professional business coach who has helped your client convert their deeply held feelings into words on paper you can use to create the documents?

Or are you afraid that the coach is going to encroach on your propriety turf? What’s more important to you – being in charge of the process and keeping all others at bay, or taking all the help you can get to insure that the resulting business succession plan achieves the desires of the business owner?

And finally, if you are a business owner you are the one with the power, the authority, and the responsibility to yourself, your employees, and your family for the ultimate success or failure of your succession plan and the financial future of your family. If your advisors won’t actively seek help of others, if they are determined to do “it” their way and you don’t fire them, the possible tragedies to follow are your responsibility.

You can blame whoever you want but that won’t change the fact that it is your responsibility.

Will the future be the time you’ll be happy with the decisions you make today, or not?

Who’s in charge of your business succession process?

Who is going to have to live with the outcome?

You know the answer, now it’s time for you to do something about it.

Technorati Tags: , ,


2006 CITT Evolving Goods Movement Solutions Part1

Duration : 0:8:23

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Leave farm to brother or wife?

QUESTION: I am a farmer who lives in country New South Wales. I recently had an accident whilst driving my wheat header. Although I wasn’t hurt too badly, I certainly could have been. This has made me start to wonder what would happen to my farm if something happened to me.

I assume my brother, who I run the farm with, would automatically take it over. But I wouldn’t want my wife and kids to end up with nothing. Is this a common problem? I have been searching the internet to try and find some information but I am not really sure what I am looking for. Should I just put a note in my Will? Do I need to go and see a lawyer? I have left everything in my Will to my wife.

ANSWER: You are right to be concerned about what would happen to your farm. Presumably, your farm is registered as a business in the names of both you and your brother as tenants in common. If so, your interest in the farm goes to your wife should anything happen to you. Your brother would have to run the farm with your wife or buy out her share of the farm at great expense.

Likewise, if anything happened to your brother his interest would pass to his wife or children. You would find yourself trying to run a business (the farm) with someone else who is not necessarily up to the challenge. The worst-case scenario is that you may have to sell the farm. Many carefully nurtured businesses have disintegrated under similar circumstances.

There is a solution. The requirements of a farm are basically the same as for any other business. What you need is something called a Business Succession Plan (BSP). Most astute business-owners have one in place (although plenty of poorly run businesses don’t).

A BSP is an agreement between business partners or owners. It details what happens to the business in the case of certain events. Those events generally include:

Death;
Total and Permanent Disability;
Trauma Event (heart attack, cancer)
Retirement; and
Bankruptcy.
Generally, a ‘Put/Call option’ is used. This agreement allows your remaining partners to buy your interest in the business. Alternatively, your wife can demand that your interest be bought by the remaining partners. This is all backed up by insurance policies that mean the cost of the buy-out is not crippling.

If you want more information, LawCentral www.lawcentral.com.au has an online manual, “Business Succession — Insurance, Tax and Facts”. It contains everything you need to know. In just 6-11 minutes, you will get a document that details Business Succession planning strategies as well as their tax implications.

Duration : 0:2:45

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

6/2/09: White House Press Briefing

White House Press Briefings are conducted most weekdays from the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room in the West Wing. (public domain)

Duration : 0:40:28

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Family Business Growth Strategy

http://www.shamrockgrowth.com Consultant Neil Gillespie Talks about Family Business Growth Strategy including family values, strategy, succession planning, estate planning, executive leadership in the family business

Duration : 0:9:59

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

Why do I need a succession plan?

Selling a Business 20:
You can increase the value on sale by setting up a succession plan which will assure the buyer that corporate knowledge will be transferred with the business.

Duration : 0:3:48

Read the rest of this entry »

Technorati Tags: , , , , , , ,

Business|Business Class Essential Etiquette Success Work|Business Small Story Success|Business Home Story Success
Business Record Success|Business Hoovers Original Success Thinking Vision|Home Business Guaranteed MLM Success
Business Success Vending| Business In Machiavelli Management Prescription Success|Business New Online Success
Business Business Success|Business Rate Small Success|Business Factor Management Process Success|Family Owned Business