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Succession Planning for Construction Companies

Document Type: Guide
Version: 1.0
Last Updated: February 2026
Distribute To: Owners, Board, Key Executives


Purpose

Provide a framework for succession planning to ensure business continuity and maximize value.


Why Succession Planning Matters

Statistics:

  • 70% of construction companies don't survive to 2nd generation
  • Average owner age in construction is 55+
  • Many owners have no formal succession plan
  • Key person risk is significant in construction

Benefits of Planning:

  • Business continuity
  • Value maximization
  • Employee retention
  • Client confidence
  • Reduced risk

Succession Options

1. Internal Succession

Family Transfer:

  • Next generation takes over
  • Gradual transition
  • Family dynamics to manage
  • May require outside capital

Management Buyout (MBO):

  • Key employees purchase company
  • Often seller-financed
  • Employees know the business
  • May lack capital/experience

ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan):

  • Employees become owners
  • Tax advantages
  • Motivation tool
  • Complex to administer

2. External Sale

Strategic Buyer:

  • Larger competitor or PE firm
  • Often highest value
  • Quick transition
  • May change culture

Financial Buyer:

  • Private equity
  • Growth capital
  • Management often stays
  • Exit expected in 5-7 years

Merger:

  • Combine with peer
  • Shared ownership
  • Expanded capabilities
  • Cultural integration

3. Liquidation

Wind Down:

  • Complete existing work
  • Don't pursue new work
  • Distribute assets
  • Last resort option

Succession Planning Timeline

10+ Years Out:

  • Identify potential successors
  • Begin development
  • Document processes
  • Build transferable value

5-10 Years Out:

  • Formalize succession plan
  • Develop successors actively
  • Reduce owner dependence
  • Build management team

3-5 Years Out:

  • Commit to exit path
  • Engage advisors
  • Financial preparation
  • Transition responsibilities

1-3 Years Out:

  • Execute transition
  • Client relationship transfer
  • Financial structuring
  • Legal documentation

Post-Transition:

  • Support successor
  • Consulting role (if desired)
  • Monitor earnouts
  • Enjoy retirement

Building Transferable Value

What Buyers/Successors Value:

FactorLow ValueHigh Value
RevenueDecliningGrowing
ProfitabilityBelow marketAbove market
BacklogShort12+ months
Client concentrationover 30% one clientDiversified
Key personOwner-dependentStrong team
SystemsPaper-basedTechnology-enabled
ReputationUnknownStrong brand
SafetyPoor EMRExcellent EMR

Building Value:

Reduce Owner Dependence:

  • Delegate client relationships
  • Empower management decisions
  • Document processes
  • Systematize operations

Strengthen Management:

  • Develop leaders
  • Create accountability
  • Incentive alignment
  • Retention strategies

Improve Financials:

  • Consistent profitability
  • Clean financial statements
  • Strong working capital
  • Appropriate owner compensation

Document Everything:

  • Written procedures
  • Technology systems
  • Client information in CRM
  • Institutional knowledge captured

Successor Development

Internal Successor Criteria:

AttributeAssessment
Technical competenceCan do the work
Leadership abilityCan lead others
Business acumenUnderstands financials
Client relationshipsTrusted by clients
Industry respectKnown in community
DesireWants the responsibility
CapitalCan fund acquisition

Development Plan:

Successor: _____________________________________

Current Role: __________________________________

Target Role: ___________________________________

Timeline: ______________________________________

Development Areas:
1. ____________________________________________
2. ____________________________________________
3. ____________________________________________

Experiences Needed:
☐ P&L responsibility
☐ Client management
☐ Banking/surety relationships
☐ Employee management
☐ Strategic planning

Mentoring Plan:
_______________________________________________

Review Frequency: ______________________________

Financial Considerations

Valuation Factors:

Construction companies typically valued at:

  • 2-5× EBITDA (varies widely)
  • Premium for recurring revenue
  • Premium for strong backlog
  • Discount for concentration risk
  • Discount for owner dependence

Deal Structures:

StructureDescriptionUse When
Cash at closeFull paymentStrong buyer, clean deal
Seller financingPayments over timeBuyer needs help
EarnoutBased on future performanceBridge valuation gap
Equity rolloverRetain ownership stakeStrategic buyer, growth
Installment saleTax-deferred paymentsTax planning

Tax Considerations:

  • Asset vs. stock sale
  • Capital gains vs. ordinary income
  • Installment sale benefits
  • ESOP tax advantages
  • State tax implications

Consult tax advisors for specific situations


Key Person Planning

Identify Key People:

Beyond owner, who is critical?

  • Lead estimator
  • Top superintendent
  • Key project managers
  • Controller/CFO
  • Business developer

For Each Key Person:

  • Document their knowledge
  • Cross-train others
  • Retention strategy
  • Backup identified
  • Key person insurance

Advisor Team

Succession Planning Team:

RolePurpose
CPATax planning, valuation
AttorneyLegal structure, contracts
Financial AdvisorWealth management
Business Broker/M&AIf selling externally
Insurance AdvisorKey person, buyout funding
SuretyTransition planning
BankFinancing relationships

Common Mistakes

MistakeImpactPrevention
Starting too lateLimited optionsPlan early
No successor developmentNo internal optionInvest in people
Owner too involvedNot transferableDelegate
Poor financialsLow valueClean up early
No documentationKnowledge lostSystematize
Family conflictBusiness suffersAddress early

  • Business Planning
  • Financial Management
  • Key Person Risk
  • Management Development

Template provided by support.construction. Plan your exit before you need it.