Nine Succession Planning Mistakes Small Businesses Should Avoid

1. Attempt Succession Planning Without Other Strategic Plans. Succession plans define a company's business heirs, but what will they inherit? They will inherit a company with no vision, no strategy to deal with the competition, and no plans for changing the way it does business, if the current owners spend too little time planning for the future. Every firm should have strategic plans to increase its market value.

2. Fail to Create a Market the Company. Too many small and medium-sized business owners operate under the myth that when it comes time to retire, they will simply sell the business, monetize their equity in the company, and retire with a bundle of cash. But that is more of a myth than a reality. Each year thousands of business are listed for sale, and there are no buyers. The current owners need to market their companies and "create demand" for owning the firm. Otherwise, they may not have any choice in selecting successors or a new management team.

3. Procrastinate. There are a variety of reasons firms procrastinate about developing succession plans: too many pressing matters at hand, thinking about passing the company on to a new generation is depressing, there is plenty of time, and the current owners will be around for a long time. Ironically, firms prepare for unexpected expenses by maintaining cash reserves, but most small and medium-sized businesses fail to appreciate that accidents can happen to owners as well.

4. No goals. If firms do not have an end goal in mind, then they are unlikely to achieve it through succession planning. The end goal should address such issues as when is it time to sell or transfer power, what will the current owners do after the transfer, what percentage of the purchase price can be financed, what type of buyer would be good and what type would be bad for the future of the firm, how should the transfer be executed to minimize the tax burden. It is scary to think about succession planning when these key issues have not been addressed.

5. No Independent Valuation of the Firm. It will be hard to attract good buyers or successors unless agreement on a realistic value of the business can be reached. Sometimes the current owners are unpleasantly surprised that the business they have developed and the capital they have acquired is valued much less in the market than they personally value it. The value of the firm may also depend on external events beyond the control of the current owners, and thus contingency valuations may be required.

6. Sell to an Insider Who has Little Funding. For sentimental reasons, many business owners prefer to transfer ownership to a trusted employee who has been with the firm for years. But generally these employees have little funding to acquire a business. In that case, the current owner will want to prepare a deferred compensation plan that will not leave him exiting the firm with no cash.

7. Ignore Training. Many small business fall into the trap of thinking they have to accept their successors as they find them with their existing endowment of skills and experience, take it or leave it. But if key skills and responsibilities are missing from the background of a likely internal successor, then succession planning will enable the firm to train and develop that successor into a better and more qualified person. Training does not require a person to attend formal classes and be tested on comprehension with exams. On-the-job training may be just as valuable, e.g., where a person is given responsibility for the firm's finances or marketing efforts prior to succession. Leadership training courses are rarely worthwhile. The one-size-fits-all, generic leadership training courses are the worst of all. If people have natural leadership skills, these tend to emerge in the course of their daily interactions with people.

8. Keep Succession Plans a Secret. When the staff is left in a vacuum as to who will succeed in running the firm, it creates the impression that the firm has no succession plans. Those eventually who become new owners will be treated with suspicion. Keeping the succession plans secret hinders existing managers and employees from identifying themselves as possible successors. Without a firm commitment or expectation about the future, key personnel may leave the firm.

9. Develop a Succession Plan Once. Some businesses make the mistake of believing a succession plan is the equivalent of writing a will. Once it is written, there is allegedly no need to revise it. But succession planning is a dynamic process that involves training, hiring, internal development, and external marketing. Succession plans will grow stale if they are not periodically updated and revised to address changes in the market place that the firm is currently facing and will face in the future.

Dr. Michael A. S. Guth, Ph.D., J.D., is a risk management consultant and practicing attorney at law based in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. In addition, Dr. Guth is a financial quant and former investment banker, having worked for Credit Suisse First Boston and Deutsche Bank in London and Frankfurt. He specializes in developing investment strategies and strategic plans for small and medium-sized companies, as well as mergers and acquisitions for large corporate clients. For five years, he consulted to the electric power and gas industry in the USA, and even managed the Middle Office (financial risk control) groups for two trading floors.

Dr. Guth has taught over 30 courses on-line at the undergraduate and graduate level on topics ranging from Managerial Economics to Strategic Management to Business Law. He can be reached through web page http://riskmgmt.biz/succession2.htm

In The News:


pen paper and inkwell


cat break through


Do You Really Need a Business Plan?

"I don't need a business plan."Neither did Alice in Wonderland."Would... Read More

A Rough Cut on Feasibility

A piano tuner recently moved to Buffalo, NY, and would... Read More

The Accountability/Alignment Process: Three Steps to an Accountable Organization

The Accountability/Alignment Process: Three Steps to an Accountable Organization Generating... Read More

Art of Succession Planning

Succession planning, like any business acumen, is both an art... Read More

Offense: Beat the Odds

When in doubt, cut that out! Yeah, yea, doubting Thomas... Read More

Leverage - A Small Step For You /A Big Change For Your Career

Cassy was an employee of a nonprofit who had been... Read More

How to Write a Business Plan Market Analysis

Writing a business plan is an essential part of the... Read More

8 Ways to Earn More Without Working Harder

Conventional wisdom has it that there are only three ways... Read More

Take A Systems View To Ensure Your Business Stays Healthy

How are you feeling today? Good, not so good, great?... Read More

The Top Ten Rules of Effective Networking

Many of us are discouraged by the networking events that... Read More

Do You Have A Customer Identity Crisis?

The trick is to determine what uniquely identifies your best... Read More

The Chasm of Change---- Restructuring ----- The Goliath

Richard L. Daft one of the country's recognized academic leadership... Read More

Why Six Sigma Will Work in Healthcare

If ever there were an industry where we want zero... Read More

Becoming Wise - Wild & Free - Writing A Successful Business Plan - Part 2 - Do It In Steps

So you've decided to write your own business plan because... Read More

SWOT Analysis Is No Magic 8 Ball

Q: A key investor in my business has suggested that... Read More

Will and Vision

Remember Chux? The disposable diaper that took the market by... Read More

Writing Your Business Plan is Actually Storytelling

Storytelling and writing a business plan actually go hand in... Read More

SWOT Analysis

If you've ever listened to Warren Buffett talk about investing,... Read More

The Top Five Reasons Strategic Plans Fail

"Most great plans aren't. They are just nice, high-level ideas."That's... Read More

Have You Identified the Enemy?

One of the most powerful driving forces in human nature... Read More

What is a Shared Vision?

So what makes a vision successful? Everyday companies try to... Read More

Succession Planning for Business - 10 Key Points You Must Know

By cranking up others development to meet your business needs,... Read More

Consolidation in the Software Industry is Hardly New: Obsess About It or Risk Losing it All

Some analysts credit [Larry] Ellison with anticipating the consolidation in... Read More

Describing Intellectual Property in Your Business Plan

Most companies that are worthy of raising venture capital have... Read More

Why Create an Annual Plan?

Can you imagine going on a road trip without knowing... Read More

Who is Responsible?

While writing an article recently on effective ways to bridge... Read More

Creating a Vision That Achieves Results

How important is a vision statement to your company or... Read More

Microsoft Great Plains in Advertising & Publishing ? implementation highlights

Microsoft Great Plains, former Great Plains Dynamics is excellent fit... Read More

Idaho Market for Automotive Businesses; Doing it Right

Anyone who has been watching the Idaho Market Carefully for... Read More

Could You Be Setting Your Business Plan Up For Failure?

David E. Gumpert, author of Burn Your Business Plan, often... Read More

Corporate Contingency Planning

Part 1A few weeks ago I attended a seminar sponsored... Read More

Restaurant Startup - Part 1: Market Research ? What are Potential Competitors Doing?

The first step in starting a restaurant is proper planning.... Read More

Strategic Planning Consulting

Strategic planning and consulting is the strategy roadmap to manage... Read More