Succession planning or sell-side prep — or both?

For many mid-market business owners, a pivotal question looms as they look ahead: Should I prepare to pass the business on or prepare to sell it? In reality, these aren’t mutually exclusive paths — and in today’s climate of economic uncertainty and rising M&A activity, they’re more connected than ever.
The best-prepared companies are building optionality. They’re creating the conditions for a successful internal succession or an external sale — because they know the right opportunity or challenge might appear at any time.
So, if you’re navigating leadership transition or contemplating your exit strategy, the real question isn’t which path, but how do you build a business that’s ready for either?
Pressure is mounting — and decisions are being made without a plan
In uncertain times, succession and sell-side decisions can be forced rather than planned. Owners may accelerate timelines due to health issues, burnout, capital needs or outside interest. Other times, a strong successor might emerge organically — but there’s no roadmap to make the transition stick.
We’re seeing this across the mid-market. Longtime founders are asking:
- Can my next generation lead the business through the next wave of growth?
- Should I sell while valuations are still strong?
- Am I too essential to step back — and what would a buyer think about that?
- What if I want to stay involved but reduce day-to-day responsibility?
These aren’t easy questions — and they often blur the line between succession planning and sell-side preparation. But that’s exactly why you need a strategy that incorporates both.
How succession planning and sell-side prep intersect
At first glance, internal succession and external sale seem like divergent paths. One passes leadership to the next generation or management team; the other transfers ownership through a transaction. But under the surface, these strategies share core elements:
1. Talent development and leadership readiness
Whether you’re grooming a successor or positioning for a sale, your leadership bench strength matters. Buyers want to see continuity — just like a board does when evaluating internal candidates.
2. Risk reduction and dependency removal
A company that can’t function without its owner is risky — to successors or buyers. Both strategies require a business that operates independently of its founder.
3. Clear financial visibility and performance story
Buyers look for clean financials, recurring revenue and margin strength. Succession requires those same attributes to sustain operations and build confidence in new leadership.
4. Culture, reputation and employee retention
Transition moments test your organizational culture. Whether you’re transitioning to a family member or an investor group, how your people respond will shape the outcome.
5. Strategic clarity and documentation
Having a written succession plan, org chart and governance model is just as critical for a family handoff as it is for a private equity buyer reviewing due diligence.
Done right, preparing for either path positions you for both — and helps you avoid a scramble if market conditions or life circumstances shift your plan.
Why uncertainty makes dual-path planning smart strategy
Mid-market leaders are operating in a landscape where timing is more variable than ever. Interest rates, valuations, buyer appetite, generational readiness and burnout cycles all add pressure.
In this environment, building a company that’s succession-ready and sale-ready protects your downside and keeps doors open. You don’t have to make a final decision today — but you do need to start preparing for both outcomes.
Here’s how that plays out in practice.
Step 1: Clarify your personal goals — then pressure test them
Your exit path should support your personal vision for life after ownership. Start by asking:
- Do I want to stay involved as a board member or advisor?
- Am I open to partial sale or outside capital while retaining control?
- Do I want the business to stay in the family or community?
- What lifestyle or financial goals does my plan need to support?
Then pressure test those goals against real-world conditions. Is there a qualified successor? Is your valuation where it needs to be? Would a buyer be comfortable with your continued involvement?
This clarity helps set realistic timelines and surfaces gaps in your plan.
Step 2: Build leadership capacity now — even if you’re not stepping back
The most common obstacle to succession or sale? Owner dependency.
If customers, employees and key decisions all funnel through one person, the business lacks agility — and perceived value.
Begin by:
- Delegating core responsibilities to senior leaders.
- Formalizing decision rights and communication structures.
- Investing in training, coaching or role definition for successors.
- Ensuring at least one leader can step in if you’re unavailable.
This doesn’t require a full exit — it simply gives your business more stability and future flexibility.
Step 3: Tighten operations and financial transparency
Both successors and buyers will scrutinize how well the business is run. That includes:
- Clean, audited financials.
- Consistent reporting on KPIs and trends.
- Documented processes and controls.
- Updated legal and tax structures.
If you haven’t done a quality of earnings (QoE) assessment, consider it. It’s a valuable exercise for sale prep — and provides visibility into EBITDA drivers, margin performance and deal readiness even if you’re leaning toward succession.
In a market defined by cautious capital and limited attention spans, showing your business runs smoothly under any future state is a competitive edge.
Step 4: Communicate your intent — and your flexibility
One of the most powerful things a founder can do is speak openly about succession and sale readiness — without locking into one path too soon.
Let your leadership team know you’re committed to preparing them for the future. At the same time, make it clear that you're evaluating options to protect the business, maximize value and create continuity.
This transparency reduces anxiety and invites collaboration. It also ensures you’re not limiting interest from potential buyers — or from internal leaders — because they think a decision has already been made.
Step 5: Revisit your plan annually — not once
Succession and sale decisions are too important to revisit every five years. The market will change. Your team will change. Your goals will change.
Set a rhythm:
- Re-evaluate your exit timeline and key milestones each year.
- Update your financials and valuation analysis.
- Meet with advisors to assess M&A market conditions.
- Reconnect with internal successors about their readiness and commitment.
Treat this like any strategic planning process — iterative, intentional and responsive to uncertainty.
Final thought: Optionality is the new readiness
Succession planning or sell-side prep isn’t a binary choice. In today’s unpredictable environment, the smartest mid-market leaders are building toward both — creating pathways for internal transition and external value realization.
By preparing your business to function without you, perform under pressure and communicate clearly, you increase your leverage. You get to choose your future instead of having it chosen for you.
At Wipfli, we help mid-market companies prepare for what's next — whether that’s a handoff to the next generation or a strategic transaction. If you’re unsure which path is right, we’ll help you build a plan that keeps all your options open — and your business thriving no matter what.
To learn more, check out our transaction services sell-side page. Or see how we’re helping mid-market leaders take advantage of today’s landscape in our uncertainty resource hub.