Most advisors hear the same statistic over and over:
“Only a small percentage of advisors have a succession plan.”

It’s usually presented as a warning, something to worry about, something you’re behind on.

But here’s a different perspective:

Not having a succession plan doesn’t always mean you’re unprepared. Sometimes it means you still have leverage.

Why a “Plan” Isn’t Always a Strength

Many so-called succession plans are internal successions built years in advance. They often depend on a single person, a junior advisor or associate, eventually stepping into ownership.

That may feel secure. It’s familiar. It’s convenient.

But it also comes with risks:

When your entire plan depends on one outcome, you’re no longer in control of your timing or your choices.

Optionality Is Real Strength

Advisors who haven’t committed to a single succession path often have something extremely valuable: flexibility.

Flexibility to:

Optionality keeps leverage on your side of the table.

Focus on What You Can Control

The strongest position in succession doesn’t come from grooming a person. It comes from building a transferable practice.

That means:

When a practice is built this way, buyers notice and opportunities multiply.

A Simple Check for This Week

Ask yourself three questions:

If the answer to these questions is yes, you may already be in a stronger position than you think.

Closing Thought

A succession plan isn’t just a document.

It’s the result of building a practice strong enough to attract the right successor at the right time, on the right terms.

“Leave your clients in the best hands possible.”
“Your Legacy. Our Mandate.”