What is Succession Planning?
Succession planning is the process of preparing for the future transition of a financial advisory practice, whether through sale, merger, internal transition, or unexpected events. For financial advisors, it involves identifying successors, valuing the business, structuring the transition, and ensuring client continuity.
Why Succession Planning Matters
- Average advisor age is 55+ years
- 40% of advisors plan to retire within 10 years
- Client relationships depend on smooth transitions
- Business value is at stake
Succession Options
1. Internal Succession
- Promote from within
- Gradual transition
- Maintains firm culture
- Requires capable successor
2. External Sale
- Sell to another advisor/firm
- Maximize value
- Clean exit
- Client retention risk
3. Merger
- Combine with complementary firm
- Shared resources
- Continued involvement
- Cultural integration challenges
4. Aggregator/Platform Sale
- Sell to RIA aggregator
- Operational support
- Potential earnout
- Loss of independence
Valuation Factors
| Factor | Impact on Value |
|---|---|
| Revenue/AUM | Primary driver |
| Client demographics | Younger = higher value |
| Revenue type | Recurring preferred |
| Client concentration | Diversified preferred |
| Growth trend | Growing preferred |
| Advisor age | Younger = smoother transition |
Typical Valuation Ranges
- 1. 5-2. 5x revenue for recurring fee-based practices
- 1. 0-2. 0x trailing 12-month revenue average
- Multiples vary by practice quality and structure
Key Planning Elements
- Documentation: Systematize processes and client information
- Client Contracts: Ensure proper assignment provisions
- Team Development: Prepare successors for transition
- Client Communication: Introduce successor gradually
- Legal Structure: Review buy-sell agreements and entity structure
