I know. That's not exactly the kind of topic that gets people excited over a morning cup of coffee. Most entrepreneurs are wired to think about tomorrow's opportunities, next month's revenue, or the next customer walking through the door. We aren't naturally wired to think about the day we won't be sitting behind a desk anymore. Yet every business owner eventually reaches that day. Some see it coming years in advance, while others have it arrive unexpectedly through illness, an accident, or simply the passage of time. The question isn't whether that day will come. The question is whether your business will still be thriving five years after you're gone.
Entrepreneurs Build Businesses. Few Build Successors.
One of the things I've always admired about entrepreneurs is that they're creators. They see possibilities where everyone else sees obstacles. They solve problems no one else notices. They invent products, build factories, open dealerships, hire employees, and somehow survive those terrifying first years when every payroll feels like a miracle.
During those early years, they become everything the business needs. They're the chief salesperson, customer service department, purchasing manager, accountant, marketing director, maintenance supervisor, and often the janitor. Wearing all those hats is usually what allows the business to survive.
The problem is that many entrepreneurs become so good at wearing every hat that they never teach anyone else how to wear even one. Without realizing it, they become the company's operating system. The business doesn't simply need them—it depends on them for nearly every important decision.
Succession Planning is Really Success Planning
The Most Dangerous Words an Entrepreneur Can Say
Over the years, I've heard one sentence repeated more times than I can count.
"I'll figure that out later."
Later becomes next year. Next year somehow becomes five years from now, and before they know it, twenty years have slipped away. Then one day "later" suddenly arrives. Maybe it's a health scare. Maybe it's a spouse asking what would happen if something were to happen to you. Maybe it's watching a longtime customer retire, or simply realizing one morning that you don't have the same energy you had twenty years ago.
Unfortunately, succession planning is one of those things that simply can't be rushed. Building a company may take decades, but preparing someone else to lead it usually takes years as well.
Family Doesn't Automatically Mean Successor
Many owners assume their children will naturally take over the business someday. Sometimes that works beautifully. Other times it doesn't.
Children grow up with dreams of their own. Some want nothing to do with manufacturing or construction. Others appreciate everything their parents built but have no interest in running it. Still others might have the desire but were never given the opportunity to learn the business because Mom or Dad kept making all the important decisions themselves.
Owning a business and leading one are two very different responsibilities. One can be inherited. The other has to be developed.
Your Successor May Already Work for You
Not every successful succession story stays within the family.
Sometimes the future leader is the operations manager who's quietly solved problems for fifteen years. Sometimes it's the salesperson who has earned the trust of every major customer. Sometimes it's a younger employee who asks thoughtful questions, accepts responsibility, and genuinely wants to learn.
The challenge is that many founders never allow those people to grow. They protect information rather than share it. They make every important decision because it's faster, easier, or simply the way they've always done it. Then they're surprised when no one is prepared to step into their shoes.
Leadership isn't transferred on the day someone retires. It's transferred little by little over many years.
The Greatest Asset Isn't on Your Balance Sheet
Every business has knowledge that never appears in a procedure manual.
Someone knows why one customer always receives special treatment. Someone understands which supplier will come through during a crisis. Someone remembers why a certain process exists or which employee can solve almost any production problem.
If you're honest with yourself, that "someone" is probably you.
That's wonderful while you're there, but it's dangerous when you're not. The most valuable asset in many businesses isn't equipment, inventory, or real estate. It's decades of experience sitting inside the owner's head.
If that knowledge leaves without ever being shared, the company starts over in ways no financial statement can measure.
Success Isn't Measured by How Long You Stay
I've met business owners in their seventies and eighties who proudly tell me they still come to work every day. There's absolutely nothing wrong with that if they still enjoy what they do.
But staying active isn't the same as having a succession plan.
Some of the healthiest businesses I've seen are led by founders who still show up every morning while gradually transferring responsibility to others. They mentor instead of micromanage. They coach instead of control. They allow future leaders to make decisions, solve problems, and yes, even make a few mistakes while the founder is still there to provide guidance.
Over time, those founders make an important transition. They stop being indispensable and become invaluable. That's a much healthier place for both the owner and the company.
Why Succession Planning Feels So Difficult
For many entrepreneurs, their business isn't simply a source of income. It's part of who they are.
They remember borrowing money when no bank believed in them. They remember worrying about payroll, celebrating the first profitable year, and wondering whether customers would ever give them a chance. Every milestone carries a personal story.
That's why succession planning often feels emotional. It can feel as though you're giving away part of yourself.
In reality, you're doing exactly the opposite. You're protecting everything you've spent your life building by making sure it has the best possible chance to succeed long after you're no longer making every decision.
Begin Before You Think You Need To
The best succession plans don't begin in an attorney's office. They begin with conversations.
They grow through mentoring, trust, shared responsibility, and gradually allowing someone else to lead. Whether that future leader is a family member, a business partner, a key employee, or even an outside buyer, the process should begin years before it's absolutely necessary.
Doing so gives everyone time to learn, to make mistakes, to gain confidence, and to understand not only how the business operates but why it operates that way.
Gary's Observation
If you'll allow me to get a little personal, this isn't an article I wrote because someone assigned it to me. It's one I've been thinking about for quite a while.
At this stage of my life, I find myself asking questions I never asked thirty or forty years ago. If something happened to me tomorrow, what would happen to the ideas I've spent decades developing? Would the websites continue? Would the conversations continue? Would the relationships I've built in this industry still be valuable to someone else? Or would everything slowly disappear because too much of it existed only inside my head?
Those questions aren't easy to ask, but I've come to believe they're among the most important questions any entrepreneur can face.
Maybe you're fifty years old. Maybe you're sixty-five. Maybe you're pushing eighty like I am. Your age really isn't the deciding factor. What matters is whether your business can continue to thrive without you. If every important relationship, every key decision, every customer connection, and every piece of institutional knowledge depends on one person, then the company's future is much more fragile than most owners want to admit.
Don't wait until retirement is staring you in the face. Don't wait until your doctor tells you it's time to slow down. Don't wait until your spouse asks what would happen if you weren't here next year.
Instead, begin today. Find someone with integrity and curiosity. Teach them what you've learned over the years. Share your successes, but also your mistakes. Explain not only how you make decisions, but why you make them. Introduce them to customers, suppliers, employees, and industry friends. Let them solve problems while you're still sitting across the desk, ready to offer advice when they need it.
One day someone else will hold the keys to the business you've spent your life building. My hope is that you'll hand those keys over with confidence, knowing you've prepared them well enough that your company won't merely survive—it will continue to grow because you cared enough to plan for a future you may never personally see.
To me, that's what a lasting legacy really looks like.



















