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April 30, 2020

ACEC/FMI Ownership Transition Study Finds Gap Between Knowledge and Intent

ACEC/FMI Ownership Transition Study Finds Gap Between Knowledge and Intent

Engineering firm owners think they are better prepared for ownership transition and management succession (OTMS) than they actually are, according to a survey by the ACEC Research Institute and FMI Capital Advisors.

“With the accelerating retirement of the Baby Boom and engineering firms’ vital need to attract younger engineers into management and ownership ranks, this study serves as both a wake-up call and a guide for firm owners,” said ACEC Research Institute Executive Director Daphne Bryant.

In the survey of 186 owners of firms, with annual revenues ranging from less than $2 million to more than $1 billion, less than two-thirds of respondents (62 percent) have an ownership plan in place and barely half (51 percent) have a clearly defined set of ownership criteria. Almost a third of firm owners responded that they do not clearly understand valuation and economic tradeoffs among the various ownership transfer options for their firm.

“Without a clear understanding of the valuation, tax and other financial implications of all available OT options, owners are less likely to optimize the benefits for all stakeholders,” said ACEC Research Institute Chair John Carrato, president and CEO of Benesch, Inc. in Chicago.

Two other key takeaways from the survey are that firm size has a significant impact on OTMS preparedness and management succession planning appears to be a blind spot for many firms.

Among firms with 200 or more employees, 89 percent of respondents have formal ownership transfer plans, but among firms with fewer than 50 employees, just half (51 percent) have a formal plan.

“While smaller A&E firms might not be as complex as their larger counterparts, they must also address ownership transfer and identify new leaders,” said FMI Capital Advisors Managing Director Greg Powell. “It appears, however, that smaller A&E firms have less clarity around what they want to do with the business or how they want to grow it.”

While 84 percent of respondents said that management succession planning is important, only 58 percent have formal succession plans in place for key roles in the company. Additionally, while just over half (53 percent) say they are prepared to transition the president/CEO role, only 13 percent of firms have formal succession plans for key mid-level employees.

“While companies predictably prioritize management succession planning for the top of the organizational chart,” said Powell, “the best-run firms also focus on developing a deep bench so they can successfully backfill at all management levels as employees move up in the ranks.”

Click here to view the executive summary of the survey.


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Date

April 30, 2020

Category

INDUSTRY NEWS / INDUSTRY STATISTICS

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