Roof Top Planning in New York City
by Leigh Riley · Filed Under: Business Exit Plan · family business succession
To reward myself for my hard earnt new qualification at Chicago, I took a quick trip to New York City where I made some amazing new business contacts and book sales too, but I found myself attracting people that were hungry for guidance about succession planning.
On the roof top of the apartment I rented at Hell’s Kitchen, I struck up a conversation an American executive (I’ll call him Ritchie) who seemed a bit troubled and open to discussion about his business problems. To protect his privacy I can’t reveal too much detail about the compnay details, but I can tell you we ended up having a 2 hour discussion (virtually a consultation) as he poured out his anguish around the succession of his father.
View from my roof top in NYC
Family Succession Suffering
Ritchie had been his father’s succession plan and since his dad’s departure, the company had entered troubled waters. Ritchie had a Harvard Education so he felt he was well qualified to make business decisions. As a teenager, Ritchie had worked in the company performing menial tasks and his father had wisely insisted that Ritchie must gain some experience with a competitor before allowing him to work in a management position with his own firm.
The trouble for Ritchie was that his father did not adequately prepare him to fill his shoes of as the CEO. The succession handover was rapid and this did not provide Ritchie with adequate time to win the respect of the staff. Despite his education and work experience in another company, the staff treated Ritchie as if he was a spoiled boy of priviledge and undermined every decision he ever made.
Ritchie was feeling quite down about the situation which was amplified by the fact that he was going to have to downsize and cut staff to maintain a competitive company position. He felt this decision would further decrease his popularity in the company and that he may never gain the respect of his co-workers. When he sought his father’s advice as a mentor, his dad categorically refused to provide any guidance whatsoever.
Lessons for Family Business Succession
The lesson is significant for all of us with Ritchie’s situation:
- Statistics show that only one third of family businesses handed to the next generation will survive.
- The statistics worsen to one in seven survival for 3rd generational family companies.
- Preparation for family successors needs to start early.
- Education alone is not enough to support the next generation, and experience with another similar company may be of help, but nothing substitutes the gradual responsibility and succession handover so necessary to assist the next generation.
- If your family business is important to you, preparation should commence as early as possible.
Family business can be the most difficult succession plans to arrange because of the family dynamics, which are sometimes too soft on successors and other times to hard on successors. It can make or break and be the difference between successful continuity of a business built over a lifetime. Don’t delay, take action on your business succession plan as early as possible! Family Business needs just as much time to prepare it’s successors as any business.
Here’s to your Profitable Exit Strategy!
Leigh Riley M Bus, Certified Exit Planning Advisor® (CEPA®), DFP, Cert IV A & WT
Consultant Business Succession Strategist, Author, Speaker, Trainer
