Employee Ownership Helps Family-Owned Businesses Plan Ahead

Family-owned businesses don’t often stay family-owned for long. Not many businesses have a strong succession plan, and family-owned businesses are no exception. Most are unlikely to remain family-owned as a 2014 study found.

56 percent of family business owners are either unhappy with their succession plan or don’t have one at all, and 62 percent of owners believe it’s unlikely their business will remain family owned by the next generation.

Family business treeFortunately, there are several options for family-owned businesses and an upcoming panel hosted by the Institute for Family-Owned Business will address the ways that employee ownership can stabilize a family enterprise for generations to come. Options like employee stock ownership plans and worker cooperatives offer successful models for the transition. Employee ownership also offers other benefits, such as a potential tax break on the sale of the business. The presentation will include examples and methods for succession planning using employee ownership models. CDI’s Director of Business Ownership Solutions, Rob Brown, will join the panel of expert advisors on the morning of September 29, 2016. Susanne Ward, founder and owner of Rock City Roasters and Rock City Café, who received support from CDI during her company’s conversion, will share her experience. The event will be held on the Husson University Southern Campus in Westbrook, Maine. Those who can’t join in person can participate online.

The Institute for Family-Owned Business offered an overall programming theme for the year on “Succession Planning in the 21st Century:  A Bridge to Successful Transitions.” The series consisted of three seminars/workshops all at Husson University that all fall under the umbrella of Succession Planning. The first program was on Succession Planning 101: An Integrated Planning Model for the Family Business presented by Jane Hilburt-Davis and the second  covered Awareness, Communication & Conflict Resolution in Succession Planning:  The Game of Ten Played by Stephen Barton and Elizabeth Reuthe. This workshop on employee ownership is the final one in the series.