Passing the Torch: What It Really Takes To Transition a Gulf Coast Family Business

Preparing for the future means getting three things right before the moment arrives. 

by Wills Moore

Headshot of Wills Moore
Moore

One of the most common conversations I have with family business owners in the Mobile-Baldwin region starts with good news: The business is growing, customers are happy and the owner has spent decades building something of real value. But when the conversation turns to what happens next, the answer is usually some version of: “I haven’t really thought about it yet.”

That response is more costly than most owners realize.

A February 2026 McKinsey Institute study puts the stakes in sharp focus.1 By 2035, an estimated six million small and medium-sized businesses will face ownership transitions as baby boomer owners retire. More than one million of these companies are viable candidates for sale or transfer. Yet the most common exit outcome today isn’t a successful transfer. It’s closure. Not because the business lacked value, but because the systems needed to transfer it were never built.

That national story plays out right here, as well. Using U.S. Census data, I estimate between 10,000 and 15,000 family businesses operate across Mobile and Baldwin counties. Baldwin County’s rapid growth, roughly 7,000 new residents per year, likely makes that number conservative. These businesses have real value. The real question isn’t whether they are worth preserving, but whether they’re ready to be led by someone other than the person who built them.

In my work with owners across the region, successful transitions come down to three things that rarely get addressed together: organizational readiness, financial readiness and leadership continuity. The owners who navigate this well share one thing in common: They started early.

1. A Business Built Around One Person Isn’t Ready To Transfer

Many family businesses are deeply dependent on the owner. The owner holds the key relationships, makes the critical calls and, in most cases, represents the institutional memory of the company.

That’s not a flaw. It’s the natural result of how successful founders lead. But it creates a real problem when the time comes to hand things off. McKinsey’s research is clear on this: Businesses that fail to transfer often don’t fail because of weak financials. They fail because the organization wasn’t built to run without the founder. What looks healthy from the outside can be fragile on the inside.

Two questions to ask are “What is my business worth?” and “Can this business perform without me?” Getting there means developing leaders who can make decisions on their own, writing down the processes that live in the owner’s head and building clear accountability across the team. None of this happens in the final months before a sale. It takes years and makes the business worth more in the process.

2. Financial Clarity Is the Foundation of a Transferable Business

A prospective buyer isn’t just evaluating revenue; they are also evaluating risk. The biggest risk factor in any small business deal is concentration: customer concentration, revenue concentration and owner concentration. When the business leans too hard on any one of those, the valuation suffers.

The businesses that have defined this community deserve a future beyond their founders, and the ones most likely to achieve it are the ones whose owners start asking hard questions before they must.

What buyers want to see is predictability. Clean financials. Consistent performance. Cash flows tied to the business model, not to the owner’s personal relationships. That kind of financial infrastructure takes time to build. And most family-owned businesses haven’t built it yet.

For multi-generational firms, this is often the widest gap. Owners who have run lean, informal operations for decades find themselves unprepared when a real opportunity to sell or transfer arises. The good news is that these issues are fixable. But they take time. Waiting until a transition is imminent is the most expensive mistake an owner can make.

3. The Transition Nobody Plans For

There’s a third dimension that shapes whether transitions work, which is leadership continuity. The next generation of leadership inherits more than customers and revenue. It inherits the trust, relationships, unwritten rules and culture that helped make the business successful in the first place. Without a deliberate effort to transfer that knowledge, it often walks out the door with the previous generation.

McKinsey found that support for new owners after the deal closes is nearly nonexistent in small business transfers. New owners step in and face complexity with no structured help. Many transitions stall right when they should be gaining momentum. The ones that work share one thing in common: The outgoing owner prepared the organization — not just the paperwork — for the handoff.

The businesses that have defined this community deserve a future beyond their founders, and the ones most likely to achieve it are the ones whose owners start asking hard questions before they must.

Building that future means getting three things right before the moment arrives: an organization that doesn’t depend on one person, finances that can withstand scrutiny and a leadership pipeline ready to carry the business forward.

Reference

1 mckinsey.com/institute-for-economic-mobility/our-insights/the-great-ownership-transfer-a-new-era-of-business-stewardship

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