The Importance of Estate Planning for Business Owners

It is not uncommon for the business to be the largest asset in a business owner's estate, while also being the primary source of income for their family.  As estate planning is essentially taking control of how property is managed during life and distributed and transferred at death, a business owner cannot do exit planning without estate planning, or estate planning without exit planning.  Exit goals, such as transferring a business to children, always impact an owner's family and estate.

An example of where an owner's estate and exit plans intersect would be in the area of business continuity.  Sarah, a widow of five years, owned a large women's apparel retail store.  She started the business twenty-five years ago and remained as sole owner as the business continued to grow and realize success.  Sarah's daughter Sue graduated from college three years ago with a degree in design, and both she and Sarah had a vision for Sue eventually taking over the business. Sarah's son Jack, and another daughter April, have no involvement in the business.  

Tragically, Sarah passed away suddenly a year ago causing great distress to her children.  The fact that she passed without having finalized her estate plan resulted in even more hardship for her family.  It was one of those things that she knew she needed to do, but just never could "get around to it" due to the day-to-day trials of running a thriving business.  She had a will but it hadn't been reviewed in over fifteen years.  

The consequences of not having designed and coordinated an estate and exit plan, Sue did not end up owning the business as both she and her Mom desired, the business was sold at a deep discount due to uncertainty among employees and customers, other assets also had to be sold to pay high taxes and estate settlement costs, and there was resulting tension between the siblings due to a disorderly distribution of assets.  This is a shortlist of the potential consequences of the deficient and disjointed estate and exit planning for a business owner.  

Like our fictional character Sarah, most business owners lead busy and full lives.  They can understand that estate and exit planning are important, but it can be difficult to plan the time to make it happen as it represents even more work.  So, it can be very easy to procrastinate.  

The focus of an impactful estate plan is not simply death but also the arrangement of assets (ownership and utilization) in ways that will help estate holders achieve financial goals in a tax-efficient manner during life while providing for survivors’ needs and the disposition of property at death. A successfully implemented estate plan can:

  • Minimize estate taxes and estate settlement costs

  • Ensure that cash is available to pay estate taxes and costs

  • Provide for an orderly transfer of assets that meets the estate owner’s objectives and intentions

  • Preserve assets during life

  • Protect business and ensure its successful transfer or sale

  • Provide peace of mind and family harmony

A well-thought-out and executed estate plan, as part of a comprehensive exit plan, will be instrumental in ensuring that the right person takes over a business when the current owner dies. Other issues that would be addressed in a comprehensive estate plan would include the appropriate business valuation, equitable estate distribution among children, a properly drafted buy-sell agreement, tax, and philanthropic planning.

As a business owner, it is wise to regularly review your estate plan to ensure that it represents your current desires and goals for your personal and business asset distribution. Please contact us if we can be of service to you in the review of your estate plan.

Invest 12-15 minutes in the FREE ExitMap® Assessment and get a 12-page report scoring you in four key exit planning areas: Finance, Planning, Revenue/Profit, and Operations.

Successful Business Owners Have Great Impact

In our work, we are constantly aware of the incredible influence and good that result from the efforts of a successful business owner and their business.  Just a few of the good works include:

  • Quality services and products.

  • Empowerment of others.

  • Creativity and innovation.

  • Wealth and value creation.

  • Peace, flourishing, and prosperity for communities.

  • Charity and philanthropy.

And then there are common characteristics and principles often demonstrated by high-impact business owners in building a successful business:

  • Integrity.

  • Responsibility.

  • Excellence.

  • Diligence.

  • Service to others.

  • Building and leaving a legacy.

Successful business owners who embody such characteristics have a huge impact on many "stakeholders" when they responsibly and diligently build and sustain a successful business.  Impact on their family, employees, customers, suppliers, economy, and community.

As a business owner, will you have as great an impact when you leave the business as you have in building it?  Will your legacy as a business owner, and family legacy, be your desired legacy?  Are you being as responsible and diligent in planning your exit as you have been in building your business?  Will there be flourishing and peace for your many stakeholders as you leave?  

All of the tremendous good produced by you and your business are at stake when (and how) you leave your business.  The more time you have or take to plan for this most significant and impactful event, the greater potential for success and attainment of your goals and desires.  

Design and implement a plan to have a great (or greater) impact when you leave as you have in building the business.  

Contact us today for an exploratory conversation about your impact when exiting.

email@ennislp.com | 301-859-0860

You could also get started with our FREE Exit Readiness Assessment.

Business Valuations and Buy-Sell Agreements

Buy‐Sell agreements, in some situations, can create as many questions, problems, and conflicts as they seek to address.  A primary benefit of having this agreement is to avoid having to make decisions that could lead to disagreements at an inopportune time.  Unanswered questions, outdated agreement language that no longer represents the goals of the owner(s), an agreement that it is not comprehensive, too simplistic or was poorly implemented can render the buy‐sell agreement ineffective and more problematic than helpful.

One of the most important elements of a relevant Buy-Sell Agreement is the issue of assigning value to the business at a “trigger event” (i.e., death, disability, lifetime transfer, divorce, bankruptcy, etc.). Following are some of the questions pertaining to business valuation that business owners should answer with assistance from their Advisor Team in creating their agreement:

  • The type of valuation that will be required — Will you choose book value, fair value, fair market value, investment value, historical value, agreed-upon value?

  • The method to be used in calculating value — Will you use a formula-based method, a formal valuation conducted by valuation specialist, or a fixed-price?

  • The timing of the valuation — Will you value the business on the date of a trigger event, as of the last valuation, each year with a formal valuation, or at some other point?

  • The entire business or partial ownership interest — Should the entire business be valued or a partial ownership interest when there are multiple owners? Should discounts (i.e, minority, lack of control, lack of marketability) be applied?

  • Valuation perspective — From what perspective will the business be valued…a hypothetical buyer, the majority owner’s perspective, other perspective?

  • The method of funding the Buy-Sell Agreement — Owner buy-outs can be funded in various ways including insurance proceeds, debt proceeds, and cash flow of the business. Should the chosen funding method be considered in the business valuation?

Too often Buy-Sell Agreements are written without these questions and others being adequately addressed with the assistance of experienced advisors (valuation specialist, business attorney, CPA, exit planning advisor) and result in poor execution and relational conflict requiring extensive investments of time and finances.

In addition, your Buy-Sell Agreement should be drafted in light of your financial and estate plans which requires a coordination and collaboration of corporate and personal advisors. For example, your financial planning “number” you need for financial security at a trigger event should be coordinated with possible estate planning goals of tax minimization and transfer of your business interest to family members. NOTE: The role of an Exit Planner could be likened to that of a Project Manager or General Contractor, coordinating the planning efforts of experts in the design and implementation of an owner’s plan. And, this might be a plan for Business Continuity which includes the drafting of a Buy-Sell Agreement and/or a Comprehensive Exit Plan.

Contact us today for a comprehensive review of your Buy-Sell Agreement and a copy of our Business Continuity Instructions.

Invest 12-15 minutes in the FREE ExitMap® Assessment and get a 12-page report scoring you in four key exit planning areas: Finance, Planning, Revenue/Profit, and Operations.

email@ennislp.com | 301-859-0860




How Long Does It Take to Prepare a Successor?

It’s an important question to answer. The company’s future, the successor’s success, and the ability to make buyout payments depends on it.

When it comes to learning the business and the industry, an owner probably knows best as to how long that will take. Generally, this will take anywhere from 3-15 years. However, learning the mechanics of a business does not necessarily make someone a good leader nor a good owner. (After all, most successors have only been an employee.)

Clearly, some people are more natural at leading than others, but one thing is sure. We're not very good at self-assessment (especially when it comes to leadership). Assuming a successor understands the business, their effectiveness as a leader and as an owner needs to be objectively assessed and their weaknesses improved.

A leadership assessment followed by a program of executive coaching will accomplish this. After 20 years of developing leaders, I can say that the process generally takes about 6-12 months.

But a major challenge can arise. What if that successor turns out not to be competent as a leader and an owner? By way of example, years ago I had a client who kept bringing on potential successors (without my help, by the way...), only to have each of them fail. One after another (three in total), each failed and either left the company or had to be fired. Before they found a suitable successor, almost 4 years had transpired.

The bottom line is that it's better to start the leadership development process sooner than later. Don't hand over the keys to your business before your successor's competence is assessed, their weaknesses addressed, and their leadership and judgment demonstrated.

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Michael Beck is an executive coach, business strategist, author, and president of Eliciting Excellence.  His 20 years as a professional executive coach has helped leaders improve interpersonal skills, sharpen strategic thinking, and enhance judgment.  He has worked domestically and internationally with a wide range of clients from diverse industries including technology, manufacturing, professional services, healthcare, financial services, and not-for-profit.  Michael has held executive positions ranging from CEO to  VP of Business Development and has a background in engineering (BS, MS – University of Pennsylvania) and finance (MBA – Wharton School of Business). Michael is the author of the book “Eliciting Excellence”, has a Black Belt in self-defense,  and is a competitive dart player.