
Business Succession Planning
If you own a business, your estate plan isn’t complete until the business is addressed. Without a clear succession plan, families and stakeholders can be left dealing with uncertainty at the exact moment the business needs stability.
What Can Happen Without a Plan
Without succession planning, families often face:
- uncertainty about who controls decisions
- disputes among heirs, partners, or key stakeholders
- difficulty paying taxes, expenses, or payroll during transition
- forced sales under pressure or at a discount
- operational disruption that harms value and momentum
What a Strong Succession Plan Answers
- Who can run the business if you’re incapacitated?
- Who can sign contracts, manage accounts, and make operational decisions?
- What authority exists immediately (without court intervention)?
- Who owns what upon death (and on what terms)?
- What happens if heirs do not want to run the business?
- How is value preserved and liquidity created?
How Succession Planning Intersects With Your Legal Documents
Succession planning is often a coordination project. The best plan aligns business documents with your estate plan so authority and ownership transition smoothly. Depending on your situation, this may involve:
Clarifying decision-making authority, voting rights, management succession, and restrictions on transfer. This is often the foundation of continuity planning.
Setting clear rules for what happens on death, disability, or retirement—often including valuation mechanics and purchase terms.
In many plans, life insurance plays a practical role in creating liquidity and funding buyouts without destabilizing the business.
Trusts can be used to transfer ownership with structure, protect beneficiaries, and keep the business interest coordinated with the broader estate plan.
What the Process Typically Looks Like
While each business is different, a clear succession plan often follows a straightforward path:
Identify who should control decisions, who should benefit economically, and what a “successful transition” looks like.
Coordinate operating agreements, buy-sell terms, and trust/estate documents to eliminate gaps and contradictions.
Address taxes, expenses, and buyout funding so your family and the business are not forced into a pressure sale.
Tell Us About Your Situation
Use our contact form to share a few details about your business, family, ownership structure, or succession planning goals. Our office will review your message and follow up regarding appropriate next steps.
This page is provided by Manikas PLC for educational purposes only and is not legal advice. For guidance tailored to your business and ownership structure, please consult our office directly.
