How To Get Succession Right In A Family Business

Fifteen years after inheriting our family business at 29, I'm learning the harder lesson of leadership: Letting go is far more difficult than taking hold.
Close up hand set baton from hand to hand on sky background.
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On Friday, I was a regional sales representative. By Monday, I was the president of a $30 million company.

I was 29 years old. Three of my brothers worked in the business, and my father, the founder, unexpectedly handed me the keys to our family company over the course of a single weekend. No runway. No carefully architected succession strategy. No phased transition. Just immediate responsibility.

At the time, it felt disorienting. Looking back 15 years later, after helping grow the company from roughly $30 million to more than $230 million in annual revenue, and the team from about 50 people to more than 400 globally,  I see something I couldn’t see at 29. What initially looked abrupt may have created the clarity that protected the organization.

Today, I find myself in a very different season. Over the past three years, I’ve slowly been releasing the baton of leadership myself, officially transitioning this year from president to advisor and leadership coach. Not walking away. Not disappearing. But loosening my grip, shifting responsibilities and creating space for the next generation of leadership to emerge.

And I’m realizing something I didn’t fully understand when I was 29: For some leaders, letting go is far harder than taking hold.

The Part Nobody Prepares You For

Every leader understands the first half of the relay race. Take the baton. Run hard. Build something meaningful. But eventually leadership asks something entirely different of us: loosen your grip and release the baton.

Most succession conversations in family businesses focus almost entirely on strategy. Who’s ready to take over? What’s the timeline? How much overlap should there be? How do we transition responsibilities without creating confusion? Those questions matter. But the real battle is often as emotional and relational as it is strategic.

I’ve seen this play out in family businesses across industries, and the numbers tell the same story. Fewer than a third of family businesses make it to a second generation. Only about one in eight survive to a third. The strategy gaps get most of the attention. The deeper, quieter cause rarely does.

Succession is not simply about transferring authority. It is about surrendering centrality.

Surrendering Centrality

That’s why letting go is so difficult, not because leaders are selfish or controlling, or because they believe themselves irreplaceable. The deeper reality is that many of us have spent decades carrying responsibilities that shaped our identity so deeply we no longer know where the role ends and the rest of our personhood begins.

For many founders, owners and long-term executives, the organization becomes more than a company. It becomes purpose. Relevance. Community. And ultimately, a piece of legacy.

When my father handed me responsibility over the course of that weekend, I mostly saw the opportunity and pressure sitting in front of me. I didn’t fully appreciate what it likely cost him emotionally to release it. Now I do. When you’ve poured your life into building something meaningful, stepping back can feel profoundly disorienting. Suddenly the questions start surfacing. If the organization thrives with less of my involvement, does that diminish my relevance? If it struggles without me, did I fail to develop people properly? What becomes of my purpose when I’m no longer carrying the responsibility that shaped so much of my life?

I’ve watched leaders hold on too long. Not because they lacked capable successors, but because they struggled to imagine themselves apart from the role itself. Meanwhile, ambiguity creeps into the business. Emerging leaders hesitate because authority has technically shifted but not fully released. Teams become uncertain about who is actually leading. Decision-making slows. Innovation stalls. Everyone feels the tension, even when nobody names it.

When Successors Lead Differently

There’s another trap that catches even well-intentioned leaders: judging successors by similarity rather than effectiveness.

Successors rarely lead exactly like their predecessors. They see different opportunities. Communicate differently. Carry different strengths. Move at different speeds. The instincts that built the company in the first place—control, protection, intensity, vigilance, the need to stay involved in everything—are often necessary in early stages. But eventually, healthy leadership requires a different kind of strength. The strength to trust. The strength to release. The strength to let others lead differently than you would have.

“Would I have done it that way?” is the wrong question. The better question, the one that’s harder to ask honestly, is whether the organization is healthy, growing, and positioned well for the future. Leadership maturity means recognizing that stewardship matters more than sameness.

What I’d Tell My Younger Self

If I could go back and talk to my 29-year-old self at the beginning of that strange weekend, or, more honestly, talk to the version of myself who is doing the releasing now, I’d offer a few things I’ve come to believe.

  1. Start the inner work long before the org chart catches up. Identity transitions take longer than role transitions. Years longer. Begin earlier than feels necessary.
  2. Build a second chapter before the first one ends. Leaders who have something meaningful to step into release more cleanly than those who only have something to step away from.
  3. Judge successors by where they’re taking the organization, not by how closely they resemble you. Different is not wrong. Different is often what’s needed next.
  4. Don’t leave authority in the in-between. Half-shifted leadership is more damaging than either holding on or fully letting go. Be honest about which decisions are still yours and which are not.
  5. Tell your team what’s changing. Silence about your new role leaves space for the wrong story. Clarity is its own form of generosity.

Letting go is not a single decision. It’s a process, one that requires humility, trust, emotional honesty and the willingness to redefine your role before circumstances force it upon you.

Leadership is stewardship, not ownership. We were never meant to hold the baton forever. The leaders who run the third leg of the race well—handing it off with humility—are the ones who build organizations capable of lasting far beyond themselves.

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