This book is going to challenge you and everything you think you know about succession planning.
For independent advisors, succession planning is quickly becoming the cornerstone to a strategic growth strategy designed to perpetuate their business and their income streams beyond their own lifetime, while providing a multi-generational service platform that attracts and rewards younger advisors. This makes succession planning one of the most, if not the most, important practice management tools in this industry today.
As an independent financial advisor, now is the time to address the question of what will happen to your practice and your clients after you "exit the building."Â In most cases, the answers are right in front of you. Thankfully, Succession Planning for Financial Advisors: Building an Enduring Business has arrived to transform today's practices into businesses designed to endure and prosper and serve generations of clients.
Learn how to create a "Lifestyle Succession Plan" that can provide a lifetime of income and benefits to the founder even as he/she gradually retires on the job
Unlock the power of equity management â the best planning and building tool an independent advisor owns
Learn how to attract and retain the best of the next generation to help you build a great business and to support your succession plans and care for your clients and their families
Determine precisely when to start a formal succession plan and related continuity plan so that your business can work for you when you need it most
Understand why succession planning and selling your business are completely different strategies, but how they can complement each other when used correctlyÂ
95% of independent financial service professionals are one owner practices. To the positive, these practices are among the most valuable professional service models in America. But almost all advisors are assembling their practices using the wrong tools â tools borrowed from historically successful, but vastly different models including wirehouses, broker-dealers, and even OSJ's and branch managers. Revenue sharing, commission splitting and other eat-what-you-kill compensation methods dominate the independent sector and virtually ensure that today's independent practices, if left unchanged, will not survive the end of their founder's career.  It is time to change course and this book provides the map and the details to help you do just that.Â
For independent practice owners and staff members, advisors who want to transition to independence, as well as accountants, attorneys, coaches and others involved in the financial services space, there are invaluable lessons to be learned from Succession Planning for Financial Advisors. Written by the leading succession planning expert in the financial services industry, former securities regulator, M&A specialist, and founder of the nationally recognized consulting and equity management firm, FP Transitions, David Grau Sr., JD, has created an unmatched resource that will have an enduring and resounding impact on an entire industry.
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As an industry, we have a problem to solve: 99 percent of todayâs independent financial services and advisory practices will not survive their founderâs retirement or the end of the founderâs individual career. When the advisor leaves, for whatever reason, itâs over. And that has to change.
In many professions and in most businesses, this is not a problem. You donât need a multigenerational dentist or dental firm, for instance. Who cares if your neighborhood hamburger stand has a succession plan? But in this industry, it is different. Wealth doesnât have a lifetime. Even so, clients have a clear expectation of advice tailored to the length of their lives, not to the length of their advisorâs career. Clients do have a choiceâthey can choose between a career-length practice (or possibly even shorter upon the death or disability of a single owner) and the multigenerational wirehouse (think Bank of America/Merrill Lynch, Wells Fargo, UBS). The independent industry seized the momentum from the wirehouses (at least in terms of popularity) over the course of the recession, but may well cede it back in years to come unless this problem is resolved.
So, specifically, who are we talking aboutâto whom does this â99 percentâ statement apply? The list certainly includes independent registered representatives and advisors, whether under an independent broker-dealer or custodian or insurance company. The list includes stand-alone Registered Investment Advisers (RIAs), as well as the investment advisor representatives (IARs) who work under someone elseâs RIA and own their own practices or books (in the pages that follow, we collectively refer to all these professionals as âadvisorsâ). The list also includes investment professionals who are fee-only, fee-based, or commission-based. The list includes the smallest of the lot with annual production or gross revenues of $100,000 to $150,000 a year, as well as the largest weâve worked with to date at around $20 million in annual production or gross revenues, and everything and everyone in between. The list includes new start-ups, as well as older, established businesses and firms whose tenures match their foundersâ many years in the industry. The list also includes most accountants, tax professionals, and estate planners who are licensed or authorized to provide investment advisory or other financial services. All are equally unprepared. All their practices are built to die or fade away after one generation of ownership.
While encompassed in the preceding list, it merits pointing out that all the investment professionals who call themselves or otherwise function as silos for practical purposes are the people weâre talking about as well (silo is the term many advisors use when referring to multiple owners/producers under one roof, with each servicing and owning oneâs own group of clients). More surprisingly, most ensembles are also included in that 99 percent group (the term ensemble refers to a formal team arrangement); rarely have we come across a group of advisors who call themselves an ensemble that has the ability and the enterprise strength as a business to turn the corner into the second generation of ownershipâand those who do are starting the process too late with no clue as to how long it takes to implement an internal ownership transition.
To be clear, weâre not saying for one minute that independent advisors canât make a very good living (they can and are doing so for the most part); theyâre just falling short of building an enduring business. Todayâs independent advisors are not failing in their work of providing professional and relevant and much-needed financial services and advice to their clients; they are failing to sustain a business beyond their own careers, leaving their clients to do that portion of the planning on their own, and advisors (and their broker-dealers, custodians, and insurance companies) are leaving an incredible amount of money on the table as a result for no good reason.
As an industry, weâve arrived at this point together and certainly not as a result of making a lot of mistakes. One of the reasons the independent sector has grown as fast as it has is through competition. Entrepreneurs are great competitors! In terms of number of advisors and annual revenue growth rates, the independent side of this industry just plain works. Whatâs missing is the endurance factorâbusinesses that can survive the founderâs retirement, death, or disabilityâand that will come from collaboration as much as competition. The idea of collaboration is woven throughout a formal succession plan.
What Exactly Is a Succession Plan?
In this industry, and in this book, a succession plan is best defined as a professional, written plan designed to build on top of an existing practice or business and to seamlessly and gradually transition ownership and leadership internally to the next generation of advisors. The business itself continues on, not just the life of many or some of its individual assets. To accomplish these goals, the business has to get stronger, and it has to grow, and that is why conquering this problem is such a tremendous opportunity for this young and evolving industry and everyone associated with it.
In the process of helping you figure out how best to consider and construct your succession plan, we would be remiss not to also cover the related concepts of exit planning and replacement planning, which provide some much-needed relief and realization of value to the late starters or the smaller practice owners who, for one reason or another, will not be building an enduring business. In fact, exit planning is where FP Transitions started back in 1999, and for many years we, like many of you, thought of selling your practice at the end of your career as the solution or at least as something almost as good as a formal succession plan. Based on the number of articles we read every month in the industry publications, it is clear that succession planning and selling are often thought of as one and the same; but they are not.
So we need to set the record straight and come clean on this point as well. Selling your practice to a larger, stronger, multigenerational business can be a good strategy, and for many of todayâs older and single-owner advisors, it is quite simply the best and fastest solution when the time comes. But for the rest of this industry, the thought of selling when youâre done working in your practice is not a planâit is a recipe for procrastination. One of the things weâve learned from you over the past 16 years is that entrepreneurs rarely sell. The idea of one day walking away and no longer being regulated or depended on by so many clients through the tough economic stretches is exhilarating, and tempting, especially on those bad days in the office. Thatâs understandable.
Too often, however, the concept of planning gets confused with merely an idea or some evolving thoughts over the years about what you could do when that time comes. In truth, absent a serious health condition or a new passion in your life, âthat timeâ never comes. The cash flow is too tempting and too rewarding to walk away from, the workweeks grow shorter, retirement is postponed, and then, one day, thereâs nothing of substantial value left to sell or plan with. We see it all the timeâso often, in fact, we have a name for it: attrition. The act of thinking about selling your practice one day in the future most often results in your taking no action steps to strengthen or grow your practice in the meantime, and it continually ends with one result: The practice dies on its own as you get older and spend less time, energy, and money running it. Attrition is the number one exit strategy in the independent industry today, by a wide margin, and is a leading contributor to the 99 percent death rate of independent practices after the first generation of ownership.
Together, we can do better. As we consider how to shift gears from a one-generational practice to an enduring and valuable business, you need to think about the first step in the processâjust one single step in the right direction. Itâs easy and it is powerful and it starts with a single word: planning. That might seem obvious, but too many advisors start with other words like selling or dying or slowing down or losing control. Those are powerful words, too, but they tend to prompt inaction and fear. Succession planning is about building and strengthening your practice or business; it is about retaining control over an enterprise, and, in time, it really is about working smarter and not harder, and it is about being financially rewarded for a career well spent for the rest of your life.
Planning is about taking stock of your situation. It is about surrounding yourself with the right people who can help you make smart decisions; it is about gathering facts and information and having a thorough understanding of your best choices and the costs and benefits of implementing each one. (Note that executing a buy-sell agreement is not a succession plan or a substitute for planningâmore on that later.) As your chosen and purposeful plan unfolds, be it a succession plan, an exit plan, or a replacement plan, you will be creating a pathway into the future that you control, a pathway that you can share and explain to your family and your staff and your clients. Planning is the critical first step, and it is so much more than just an idea.
Why You Need to Create a Succession Plan Now
For many independent advisors, succession planning is becoming the cornerstone to a strategic growth strategy designed to perpetuate their business and their income streams beyond their own lifetimes, and this makes succession planning one of the most important practice management tools, if not the most important one, in this industry today. But for many advisors who have not begun the process or remain unsure of embarking on this course there are three simple reasons why you need a succession plan and you need to start on it now:
It is the best way to realize the value of a lifetime of work.
It is the best way to recruit next-generation talent to grow your business.
It is the best way to preserve and protect what youâve built.
Succession planning is not an end-game strategy for your business; it is not about shutting things down and calling it a day. If anything, succession planning is about building a bigger, stronger business that can one day work for you. With a good plan, the right people, and enough time, every business can survive its founderâs retirement and many can even prosper. That might sound scary if youâve built an egocentric practice, but from your clientsâ perspective, it makes total sense.
Realizing the Value of a Lifetime of Work
For most independent financial services professionals and advisors, their practices are the single most valuable asset they own, always a six-figure proposition, and many times a seven-figure number or more at its peak. Regardless, it will have a major impact on your own retirement plans even if you hope to work forever. To be certain, it is the one asset you exert almost total control over.
There is little push-back from advisors we talk to regarding the role their business plays in their livesâit is an important asset. But some advisors consider the value of their practices to lie primarily in cash flow, the money they take home every month and year after year in exchange for the work that they do. If the practice is small enough and has no infrastructure around it, this might be true; but for most independent advisors, that approach is too limited. Independent financial services professionals enjoy a distinct and important advantage over captive advisorsâthey have two kinds of value to work with to reward themselves, to build with, and to use to attract and retain next-generation talent: cash flow + equity.
To build an enduring and transferable business, advisors must learn how to utilize both types of value simultaneously, and that is exactly what a well-constructed succession plan will do. Building a business around both cash flow and equity value is what separates a one-generational job or practice from a more valuable and enduring business. A properly designed succession plan can perpetuate income (cash flow) while gradually realizing equity value (at long-term capital gains rates) as next-generation advisors invest and buy into your business. Cash flow is what advisors work for; equity is what owners invest in.
Most advisors have heard the rules of thumb that a practice is worth about two times trailing 12 months recurring revenue. While thatâs in the ballpark, that is the number when selling to a larger, stronger buyer, quite likely a business. Building your own business and selling your stock or ownership interest very gradually to a team of next-generation advisors as the value continually grows is a far more lucrative propositionâif you give it the time it deserves by planning early enough. An internal ownership transition can provide a multiple of five to seven times the starting point (based on trailing 12 months revenue), not including wages and benefits over the course of the plan, which are significant in their own right.
You owe it to yourself and your family to realize the highest value from what you have built at the best possible tax rates. A carefully constructed succession plan will do just that.
Recruiting Next-Generation Talent to Grow Your Business
You have many choices to make as an independent owner. One is whether to focus on growing just your cash flow (think office of supervisory jurisdiction [OSJ], broker-dealer, or wirehouse model); another is growing your equity value prior to exiting. A succession plan will help you grow both cash flow and equity.
Succession plans depend on next-generation talent. If youâre growing a business, odds are you wonât be working on a replacement plan for yourself by finding âanother you,â but rather a plan that relies on a team of successorsâtwo, three, maybe fou...
Table of contents
Cover
Praise
Series
Titlepage
Copyright
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Succession Conundrum
Chapter 2: How to Start Creating Your Succession Plan
Chapter 3: Transforming Your Practice into a Business
Chapter 4: Creating Your Succession Team
Chapter 5: The First StepâA Continuity Plan
Chapter 6: Charting Your Succession Course
Chapter 7: Succession Planning Step-by-Step
Chapter 8: A Tale of Ownership
Chapter 9: Course Corrections
Conclusion
About the Companion Website
About the Author
Index
End User License Agreement
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