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Planning for catastrophe
What happens to a family business when the founder dies
unexpectedly?
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by Joan
Hennessy
for Virginia Business
September 2006
One Friday evening two years ago, Sue Chewning-Bartlett
told her boss about the death of a friend. She planned
to attend the funeral the next day, making her late for
the company picnic.
Her boss, P.J. Gaier, told her he understood. But as
he left the office, he made a comment that would come
back to haunt her.
“
He said, ‘Live every day like it’s your last,’” Chewning-Bartlett
remembers.
The next day, Gaier, an exercise enthusiast who competed
in marathons and triathlons, was riding his bicycle home
after a training session when he suffered a heart attack
and died. He was 41 years old.
Gaier was the founder and emotional
center of BEX Logistics and Driver Leasing Inc. in Richmond.
He had started
the company as a messenger service in the 1980s when
he owned
little more than a bicycle and a white Honda Civic.
Since then, BEX had grown into an up-and-coming enterprise
with 80 employees, a fleet of trucks and a Midwest
office
in Ohio, manned by Gaier’s brother, Tim.
“
It was a stunner. Shock. Disbelief. You pick the adjective,
and that’s how it hit us,” says Tim Gaier,
remembering his brother’s death on July 31, 2004.
Dark days, weeks and months followed. “It was
a punch in the gut.”
BEX Logistics survived, largely because
P.J. Gaier believed in planning. In fact, the Gaier brothers
and
Chewning-Bartlett,
the firm’s vice president, were mapping out goals
when P.J. Gaier died. Unlike many entrepreneurs, he
realized the necessity of planning for the future as
a hedge against
catastrophe, such as his own death.
Many family businesses aren’t as prepared. With
no clear leadership plan, a sudden death can threaten
a company’s ability to survive. “Small businesses
are risky in the best of places. They need constant care
and attention,” says Ben English, a partner with
Richmond law firm Hirschler Fleischer. If a company
founder dies suddenly, taking to the grave most of
the institutional
knowledge, trouble can erupt even with a will in place.
“
I think many businesses, once they are established … all
they want to do is get their money and get their product
and get their sales up,” says David Woods, president
of the Life and Health Insurance Foundation for Education,
based in Washington, D.C. “Somewhere five, seven,
10 years in, most business owners begin to think” about
succession planning, he says.
There is an evolutionary awareness
of questions about a company’s future, he says:
What happens when I die? Who is going to run the business?
Can it maintain
its value?
In a sense, these are micro matters — questions
pondered at scores of mom-and-pop businesses nationwide.
But small businesses have a major impact on the national
economy.
Family businesses account for an estimated 80 to 90 percent
of all business enterprises in North America, according
to the Family Business Review, a publication of the Family
Firm Institute in Boston. These businesses contribute
about $5.9 trillion to the national gross domestic product
and employ 62 percent of the U.S. work force.
But some entrepreneurs find themselves
with no family member interested in carrying on the business.
Others
simply don’t make plans to pass the business
on, leaving survivors to haggle over the details. Only
a
third of all family-owned businesses survive into the
second generation, according to the Family Business
Review.
“
You have to treat succession as a process. It is something
you are working on,” says Chuck Gallagher, director
of the Virginia Family & Private Business Forum at
Virginia Commonwealth University. “Family businesses
that go from one generation to the next have a written
strategic plan; an outside board of directors or advisers,
which gives the company objectivity; and have, on a
regular basis, family meetings. They are communicating
with each
other, discussing what the expectations are for the
business and sharing views on the ownership of the
business.”
In some respects, it is like making
a will, English says. “The
whole estate planning process goes hand-in-hand when
you are talking about a family business.”
Yet it is also more complex than making
a will. “It’s
about tax planning; it’s about management issues
for the company,” English observes. “We
view ourselves as the quarterback that coordinates
that process.”
Smooth sailing
The strategic plan is important, Gallagher says. “What
you are doing is setting the course for the future of
that company. You are establishing goals in terms of
profits and sales. You are talking to everyone involved. … It’s
a vision, and it’s in writing. Everyone knows
who is going to be in charge.”
Identifying a leader is essential, says Beau Price,
a Virginia Beach consultant whose firm is called
Family Business Advisors. “Pass it on to someone who wants
to run it and is capable of running it and not the three
other brothers or sisters off painting pictures. You’ve
got to go with the best leadership you have. If you divide
control, it’s almost assured that the business
could get into trouble easily.”
There may be examples of democracy
in one generation of a business, Price says. But he adds
that eventually “somebody
has to run the dadgum thing.”
Franco Ambrogi is considering long-term plans for
his company, Franco’s Fine Clothier in Richmond. A
tailor, Ambrogi left Italy in 1956, coming to Richmond
to live with an uncle. He was only 16, but he was ambitious.
By the 1970s, he and his wife had opened a clothing store,
which eventually expanded to three locations. “I
do not want to retire,” says Ambrogi, now 66 years
old. “But I would like to turn over my business
to the next generation probably within the next couple
of years.”
His family is deciding the best course
of action. “Basically,
whoever takes over the business changes it to their own
style. You have to do that,” says Ambrogi, who
has a daughter and two sons. “But you should
not forget the fundamentals that made the business
great.
Give the service and the quality and time and talent
to the business that needs to be given.”
Along with setting priorities and forming a strategic
plan, business owners may want to consider insurance
policies aimed at helping businesses survive.
Family business owners with partners should study
a possible buy-sell agreement, says Woods of the
Life
and Health
Insurance Foundation for Education. The first step
is that the two partners must come to an agreement. “I
say, if something happens to you, I will buy your interest,” Woods
says.
Often, attorneys are involved in hammering
that agreement out. It may be that the partner’s spouse or next-of-kin
doesn’t want the business. “With groups of
physicians or attorneys, their spouses aren’t [in
most cases] licensed physicians or attorneys. They can’t
have an ownership interest. They are not licensed,” points
out Rod K. Sutherland, an attorney in Virginia Beach
whose practice includes business succession consultation,
estate planning and business planning. “The
practice needs a buy-sell agreement in place.”
The next question is: How can the partner afford
to do that? That’s where insurance comes in.
The partners in the business get insurance policies.
When
one dies,
the others will use the money to pay heirs for their
share.
Similarly, entrepreneurs should consider plans for
covering disability.
“Typically, a disability agreement
would say that if the business owner can’t return
to work in a meaningful way within a year, or sometimes
two years, the buy-sell agreement would be triggered,” Woods
says.
If there are many owners, they may
decide it is too cumbersome for each owner to purchase
policies on
the others, Sutherland
says. So they might set up a separate trust or partnership
to purchase the insurance policies and hold the proceeds.
These proceeds are used to purchase the departing
owner’s
interest, he explains.
In handling these issues, shareholders
have to understand the role of the company’s attorney. “If we
are legal advisers for the company, I can outline buy-sell
agreements for the shareholders. I can help them analyze
it and reach a mutual agreement and understanding of
what they want to do,” English says. “But
I’m not an advocate for any one shareholder.”
In most cases, he says, succession
planning is an amicable process. “It depends on what cards the players
hold around the table. In family situations, if you’ve
got sibling rivalries, it can become acrimonious,” he
says. “Reasonable people reach reasonable agreements,
and they are able to come to terms with each other.”
Working and mourning
Preparation is everything. And in the case of BEX
Logistics, the subject of succession had been broached.
P.J. Gaier liked to take adventurous
vacations. Chewning-Bartlett remembers one in which he
planned to climb Mount
Whitney, the highest mountain in the
contiguous
48 states. Before the trip, she grilled her boss. “What if you fall off
that mountain?” she asked. Gaier explained he had taken care of that
eventuality.
In fact, soon after his mother died
in 2001, Gaier made a will. “When he
handed me the legal papers, he said, ‘We won’t need these for another
45 years,’” recalls Tim Gaier.
Still, “He was smart enough to realize that things can happen. [P.J.] was
the kind of leader who did not just bark out orders. He was like a teacher. He
showed you how to do things,” his brother says.
The weeks following the executive’s death were rocky nonetheless. A death
can bring out the best in people — and the worst, too. “We had a
customer or two that tried to take advantage of the situation, to say they had
a verbal deal with P.J. that was different than what was in the written contract,” Tim
Gaier remembers. “We knew that wasn’t true. That wasn’t
the way [P.J.] worked.”
There were also solicitations, Gaier
says. “I must have had 12 calls from
real estate people trying to sell [P.J.’s] house.”
Gossip-hungry business types jumped
online and traded e-mails speculating the company would
tank. The list-serve that they were using included
P.J. Gaier’s
e-mail address. “They said [P.J.] probably didn’t have things in
proper order,” Chewning-Bartlett remembers. “They didn’t realize
that I was getting P.J.’s e-mail.”
Tackier still were the callers offering
to take gifts and prized possessions that P.J. kept in
his office — a St. Louis Rams
football or a picture of a basketball game.
Today, P.J. Gaier’s office remains exactly as he left it. “I have
his ashes here. I have his pictures. I have his bookshelf, his awards. I still
have the calendar of the year and date he had hanging,” Chewning-Bartlett
says, admitting, “It’s hard. …We won’t
let go.”
There was a time when Tim Gaier and
Chewning-Bartlett wondered if they would continue the
business. “I will admit that for the first few months I said
to myself, ‘I don’t think I can do this. It’s too hard, too
painful. There are too many memories.’ After a time I realized that the
best way to honor P.J. was to carry on,” says Tim Gaier. Still, he adds, “It’s
easier to say that in hindsight.”
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