Most financial advisors who have dedicated their careers to cultivating client relationships and building strong advisory practices eventually want to retire. It’s natural for advisors to feel nervous about this transition. It’s also normal to be nervous about the prospect of stopping work sooner than you’d planned.
If you share these concerns, you’re not alone. Nearly 40% of advisors anticipate retiring in the next ten years. This puts roughly $11 trillion in assets under management in motion, and one in four of these advisors are unsure of their business transition strategy.1
As an advisory practice owner, the good news is, you can increase the likelihood of a successful transition by being strategic and creating a well-crafted continuity and succession plan.
Your continuity and succession plan can be a powerful tool to help:
There is value in starting to lay groundwork for your transition as soon as possible.
As an advisory practice owner, embracing clarity and discipline in your business continuity and succession planning will serve you well. Doing so empowers you to consider opportunity costs, which can help guide you towards more profitable decision-making.
Clarity and discipline are important elements of business plans that incorporate vision, strategy, and tactics. A comprehensive plan can help you address practice viability from multiple perspectives, including that of a:
In today's market, there are numerous options available for transitioning a practice, including: internal succession, pursuing a direct sale, aiming for a merger or acquisition, or combining elements of multiple approaches. And different transition options offer varying degrees of opportunity and control, each with pros and cons.
Internal succession, an organic growth strategy, involves transitioning equity to an individual or group within your practice. Considerations include:
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A direct sale involves the divestment of the practice, where advisory owners sell all equity to a buyer. The buyer is usually another advisor, advisory team, or a financial institution like a bank or trust company. After the deal closes, all client relationships are transitioned. Considerations include:
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Merger and acquisition (M&A), an inorganic growth strategy, entails expanding the business, often designed to boost market share and scale. Considerations include:
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Advisory owners face a series of decisions that require introspection and careful consideration of the potential tradeoffs. A proactive approach can help minimize client experience disruptions when unplanned scenarios arise and also help avoid sacrifices to personal timelines.
Here are five key guidelines to consider as you create your succession plan:
Continuity and succession planning often extend beyond retirement. Careful planning provides clarity for the future and helps you safeguard the business you’ve diligently built. Enhance your chances of a successful transition by establishing and maintaining a robust plan for continuity and succession.
For more succession insights, including risk mitigation strategies and advice to conduct a self-assessment, download “Succession, Scale, Capabilities, or a Combination? Evaluating Succession Opportunities.”