Sponsor Blog: No One Gets Everything They Want in a Successful Family Ownership Transition
We carefully vet and select our?Sponsors?based on their competence, experience and understanding of our?5 MOUNTAIN? Process?as we strongly recommend you work with a multi-disciplinary advisory team to navigate family and business complexity.?Mario outlines in his blog some important considerations as you plan for transitioning ownership of your family business.?Thank you, Mario!
?Family ownership transitions are complex, both financially and emotionally. These transactions are executed best when everyone is on the same page regarding the goals of the transition.
Generally, we try to accomplish the following in a family transaction:
Since family transactions are not based on a valuation or structure from an external third party, the family has to reach an agreement in a fair and reasonable manner. Coming to an agreement requires everyone to give a little and accept that no one will get everything they want or view as fair. This is because fairness is a judgment call and a matter of the point of view of the parties involved. I have been in deep discussions with families working on a
transition and it is not uncommon for there to be disagreements about what is fair. These disputes are caused by the fact that oftentimes everyone’s point of view is valid and correct.
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These issues related to fairness normally show up in the economics where the senior generation may feel they are not being paid enough to give up control and the next generation feels that they are paying too much. Depending on the specific facts, both are often somewhat right.
Since these transactions are “cooperative,” everyone involved needs to reasonably cooperate with each other and keep the big picture goal in mind – the long-term health and future of the business. When everyone has their eyes on the big picture goals rather than their own interests, the transaction can go smoothly. If everyone is solely focused on what they want, things get messy.
At the outset of any transaction, we advise that the ground rules include the following:
Starting with these basic assumptions will give your family transition a much better likelihood of success.
Mario O. Vicari?is a director at?Kreischer Miller?and a specialist for the Center for Private Company Excellence. Contact him at?[email protected].