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Family Business Succession Failure Traced to Outgoing CEOs, McKinsey Finds

Analysis by Arthur Sterling | Ticker: 2026-05-22 at 13:58 | 2 MIN READ
Family Business Succession Failure Traced to Outgoing CEOs, McKinsey Finds
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Family Business Succession: Why the Outgoing CEO Matters

When a family‑owned firm replaces its chief executive, performance often stalls. McKinsey examined 200 transitions across 50 nations, finding a ↓ 5.7 points slide in shareholder returns and weaker revenue growth in the five years after the change. The pattern held whether the successor was a kin or an external hire, suggesting the root cause lies elsewhere.

Legacy Systems and Unfinished Business

Departing CEOs frequently walk out with unresolved disputes, legacy IT platforms and reporting lines built around their own authority. In some cases they linger behind the scenes, diluting the new leader’s mandate. The result: successors spend months fixing inherited flaws instead of setting strategic direction.

“The hardest part is stepping back after a lifetime of building,” says a former chairman of an Asian consumer‑goods group.

Three Practices That Turn the Tide

1. Build the succession architecture years ahead. The data shows an 8‑to‑15‑year horizon is typical, yet most families start only when the incumbent shows signs of fatigue. Early grooming, operational clean‑ups and conflict resolution are the only levers the outgoing CEO can wield effectively.2. Treat the exit as its own project. Top performers created a dedicated exit plan: phased hand‑offs, knowledge repositories and a transition council mixing family and independent voices. One European telecom director noted that this formal structure made the process feel institutional rather than emotional.3. Define a compelling next chapter. CEOs who secure board seats, mentorship roles or philanthropic leadership transition more smoothly. When they stay involved, clear boundaries—such as moving their office—signal the shift unmistakably.Financial upside is stark. The best‑performing firms added roughly ↑ 4% to earnings margins and saw shareholder returns jump ↑ 23% when a family heir succeeded. By contrast, poorly managed exits erode an estimated $1 trillion in global market value each year (see Reuters for related figures). The lesson is clear: a disciplined, forward‑looking exit protects both the business and the departing leader’s legacy.

Reported by: Arthur Sterling
Macroeconomics Editor
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