Insights for Business Advisors

Exit Planning Blog

From Exit Planning and value growth strategies to Owner Based Planning frameworks and case studies, these expert articles from BEI help business advisors lead with confidence and better serve business owner clients.

How Advisors Are Confidently Adding Exit Planning to Their Practice

Advisors who move beyond transactional work and begin guiding business owners through long-term transition planning quickly become the advisors clients rely on most. Exit Planning doesn’t replace your core services, it elevates them. It deepens relationships, creates new revenue opportunities, and positions you as the strategic partner owners trust with their life’s work. If you’ve considered Exit Planning but weren’t sure how to begin, you’re not alone, many advisors feel that way until they see how simple it can be with the right structure. With the right tools and process, Exit Planning becomes a seamless extension of what you already do every day. Why Advisors Should Consider Exit Planning Many advisors hear the term “Exit Planning” and imagine a complicated, time-intensive process. In reality, Exit Planning is simply a structured way to help owners plan for a successful future one that aligns their personal, financial, and business goals. Exit Planning Advisors: Whether you’re a CPA, financial advisor, insurance professional, banker, or consultant, Exit Planning fits naturally into your existing services. You don’t need to reinvent your practice, you just need a framework that connects what you’re already doing into one coordinated plan owners understand and appreciate. Small Adjustments That Drive Big Results Exit Planning isn’t a stand-alone specialty you learn from scratch. It’s an enhanced, more strategic version of work you already deliver. Here’s how it connects directly to your strengths: Minimizing Taxes Tax planning shapes the outcome of nearly every exit. Advisors with tax expertise can help owners evaluate strategies years in advance—often saving them substantial money. Clarifying Financial Needs and Gaps Owners routinely misjudge the value of their business and what they’ll need to maintain their lifestyle after transitioning. Financial advisors help them set realistic goals, evaluate resources, and close the gap. Developing Capable Management Whether an owner sells internally, externally, or keeps the business in the family, strong management is essential. Consultants can support hiring, development, and incentive strategies that protect continuity and build value. Planning for the Unexpected Unexpected life events can jeopardize even the strongest companies. Insurance advisors help strengthen Buy-Sell Agreements and continuity plans that safeguard the business and the owner’s family. These are services you may already provide, Exit Planning simply brings them together with a structured path and purpose. How Exit Planning Elevates Your Practice Adding Exit Planning often unlocks meaningful benefits for advisors, including: 1. Natural Revenue Growth Exit Planning reveals additional planning needs, tax, legal, financial, or operational that drive new engagements within your core services. 2. Clear Differentiation Most advisors engage too late in the transition process. Advisors who proactively guide owners early stand out immediately. 3. Better Referral Flow Exit Planning requires collaboration. When other professionals see your process in action, they confidently refer clients who need comprehensive planning. 4. Stronger, More Enduring Client Relationships Exit Planning is personal. It opens deeper conversations about goals, family, finances, and legacy transforming your role from service provider to trusted partner. Advisors who integrate Exit Planning consistently report that clients stay longer, refer more often, and view them as the central figure in their advisory team. Start Exit Planning With Clarity — Not Complexity You don’t need to become an exit expert overnight. What you need is: We provide all of that so you can get started quickly, offer value immediately, and deepen client trust without disrupting your existing practice. What Are You Waiting For? Take the First Step Today If you’re ready to explore Exit Planning and discover how it can strengthen your practice and your client relationships, we’re here to help you get started. Book a demo when you’re ready, and we’ll show you how to integrate Exit Planning into your practice simply, confidently, and effectively so you become the advisor your clients trust with their most important decisions.

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Exit Planning advisor discusses options with business owner client.

Maximize Business Value with Owner Based Planning

In today’s dynamic business environment, strategic planning is more critical than ever. Owner Based Planning provides a robust framework that guides clients toward sustainable success. This approach focuses not only on immediate gains but also on building a resilient foundation that can withstand future uncertainties. By prioritizing value creation, risk mitigation, and continuity planning, Owner Based Planning empowers advisors to offer a comprehensive service that addresses the unique needs of business owners. Owner Based Planning offers a structured process that enables advisors to deeply understand their clients’ objectives and craft personalized recommendations. It positions advisors as trusted partners, facilitating growth and stability for businesses at every stage of development. There are three core areas to Owner Based Planning:   1. Building Business Value: Strategies for Growth The cornerstone of Owner Based Planning is the ability to enhance business value. This involves implementing strategies that boost profitability, streamline operations, and foster leadership development. Advisors can utilize this framework to identify key areas for improvement and provide tailored solutions that drive growth. Whether through cash flow optimization, management development, or strategic investments, the goal is to establish a thriving business environment that can sustain itself over time. Moreover, Owner Based Planning encourages advisors to think beyond traditional growth metrics. It emphasizes the significance of developing a robust management structure that can adapt to change and seize new opportunities. By concentrating on leadership development and succession planning, advisors can assist business owners in ensuring that their growth is not only rapid but also sustainable, paving the way for future success. 2. Mitigating Risks: Protecting Your Business Future Business risks are inevitable; however, with the right planning, they can be managed effectively. Owner Based Planning equips advisors with the tools to help clients identify and mitigate potential risks. This includes safeguarding against financial, legal, and operational vulnerabilities that could jeopardize a business’s stability. Through comprehensive risk assessments and tailored insurance solutions, advisors can protect their clients’ interests and provide peace of mind. Key risk mitigation strategies involve developing personal financial plans, securing key person insurance, and establishing effective asset protection measures. By addressing these critical areas, advisors can help business owners minimize the impact of unforeseen events and maintain operational continuity. This proactive approach not only safeguards the business but also supports its long-term objectives, ensuring that it can thrive in any environment. 3. Ensuring Continuity: Planning for Longevity and Success Ensuring business continuity is a vital aspect of Owner Based Planning. Advisors are responsible for developing strategies that secure the future of their clients’ businesses, enabling seamless transitions and long-term sustainability. This involves creating continuity plans that consider potential leadership changes, ownership transfers, and market shifts that could impact the business’s trajectory. By focusing on continuity planning, advisors can help business owners prepare for the future, whether through buy-sell agreements, continuity bonus programs, or structured buy-out deals. These strategies are designed to maintain the business’s operational integrity and ensure ongoing competitiveness in the marketplace. By planning for longevity, advisors empower business owners to leave a lasting legacy and achieve their long-term goals. Transforming Your Practice with Owner Based Planning For business advisors looking to differentiate themselves in a competitive market, Owner-Based Planning offers a transformative opportunity. By adopting this strategic approach, advisors can expand their service offerings and add more value to their clients. It allows them to move beyond transactional relationships and establish lasting partnerships. Discover what Owner Based Planning can do for your practice.  

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Business advisors help owners balance emotion and rationality.

Exit Planning Is a Whole-Person Journey

How to recognize and respond to the emotional roadblocks owners face when planning their exits. Most advisors know this moment well: a business owner says they want to exit on their terms, yet months (or years) pass with no meaningful action. You’ve shared financial models, talked timelines, and outlined next steps—only to be met with hesitation or silence. It’s not that they don’t understand the plan. It’s that they’re not emotionally ready to follow it. It’s Not Just Business—It’s Personal Most owners have spent decades pouring their energy, identity, and purpose into their businesses. When you bring up the idea of selling or stepping away, you’re not just introducing a transaction. You’re introducing a life change. As Steven Furtado, Co-Founder of Savoir Wealth and a former business owner himself, explains: “The idea of selling their business is both daunting and bittersweet. After all, businesses are built with immense pride, sacrifice and an investment of time, energy and resources… There is a deep emotional attachment to the business, and the thought of letting go often feels like letting go of a part of themselves.” From Planning Your Business Exit: A Professional And Personal Perspective, via Forbes How to Spot Emotional Resistance Here are a few signs you’re dealing with emotional—rather than rational—resistance: These aren’t signs of disinterest. They’re signals of emotional hesitation. How to Navigate Exit Planning Emotion with Clients Here are three ways you can support your clients through the emotional side of Exit Planning: 1. Name What’s Normal “You’ve built something meaningful—it’s completely understandable that this isn’t easy.” A simple statement like this validates their emotions and builds trust. It also helps reframe inaction as something human, not a flaw. 2. Ask Questions That Invite Reflection Try: These kinds of questions shift the conversation from logistics to legacy—and can open up new motivation for action. 3. Reframe the Exit as a Transition Like Steven Furtado advises, encourage owners to view the exit as a gateway rather than an end. Many owners wrongly associate Exit Planning with walking away entirely, when in reality, most plans allow for phased transitions, reduced hours, or advisory roles. You can say: “Exit Planning doesn’t mean walking out tomorrow. It means setting you up to have more choice—on your terms.” That emotional shift—from loss to possibility—is often the breakthrough moment. Don’t Wait for a Wake-Up Call Furtado notes that many owners don’t take action until something external forces their hand—a health scare, burnout, or a life change. But those moments often reduce options and value. As advisors, we can do better for our clients. We can help them plan when the business is still thriving, so they can exit from a place of strength—not reaction. A More Effective Exit Planning Conversation The most effective Exit Planning conversations are human-first. They combine business logic with emotional intelligence. They build a plan, yes—but they also build confidence and clarity. So the next time you meet an owner who “agrees but delays,” don’t double down on numbers. Pause. Ask. Listen. Then help them move forward—not just as an owner, but as a whole person preparing for their next chapter. Need help bringing the emotional side into your Exit Planning process? Let’s talk. Contact us at 303‑321‑2242 or email us to learn how to support your clients more effectively.  

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Business advisor holding a map.

Advisor’s Guide to Entering the Exit Planning Marketplace

Core Insights Breaking Through: How to Overcome Barriers in the Exit Planning Market Last week, we explored the common roadblocks advisors face when introducing business owners to the Exit Planning process. Many owners believe they can wait until they’re ready to exit or assume they don’t have the time right now to begin planning. But as experienced advisors know, the only way to exit on your terms—your timing, your buyer, your value—is to start planning today. So, Where Do You Begin in the Exit Planning Market? You may be looping in your head, wondering: Who should I be talking to? How do I start a conversation? Will they even listen to me? Reach the Right Business Owners: Leverage Your Professional Network Start by connecting with other professionals who already serve business owners—accountants, attorneys, bankers, consultants. These individuals can be invaluable allies. When you demonstrate how Exit Planning benefits their clients and creates new opportunities for their firm, you lay the foundation for a mutually beneficial relationship. Focus on how collaboration helps everyone win—especially the business owner. Start the Conversation: Lead with Education, Not Sales Education is the most powerful, cost-effective tool at your disposal. Business owners don’t want to be sold to—they want insights, solutions, and clarity. Use storytelling, client success examples, and practical tips to communicate the value of early planning. You’re not alone in educating clients about the urgency of planning. Experts like Douglas R. Batts Sr. are making national headlines calling on Baby Boomer business owners to start Exit Planning now—before it’s too late. Sharing insights like this can reinforce your message and help overcome skepticism. Consistent, educational outreach—like a well-crafted newsletter with links to content like the article above—keeps you top of mind when owners are ready to act. It also positions you as a trusted resource rather than just another service provider. Get Business Owners’ Attention: Build Your Exit Planning Thought Leadership Establish your credibility across multiple channels—articles, blogs, webinars, speaking engagements, podcasts, and yes, even social media. While business owners might not follow you directly, their inner circle does. When your content resonates with someone they trust, it’s more likely to be shared—and remembered. Be sure to: Make it easy for people to access your content—and for new Exit Planning or Owner Based Planning opportunities to find you. What Comes Next? Turn Exit Planning Clients into Advocates Your first few Exit Planning clients are your strongest advocates. As you deliver real value and build trusted relationships, referrals will follow. Over time, your network grows—and so does your influence.

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Insurance advisors

The Strategic Role of Insurance Advisors in Owner Based Business Planning

Using Insurance to Protect and Grow Business Value Insurance professionals may not always be seen as the first stop for business owners seeking long-term guidance—but their deep, ongoing client relationships uniquely position them to lead impactful conversations. Through business planning, insurance advisors can go beyond product placement and begin uncovering business owners’ personal, financial, and strategic goals. By using frameworks like Owner Based Planning, insurance professionals can identify planning gaps, initiate value-building strategies, and align their services with both business continuity and future growth. With Owner Based Planning, insurance advisors can shift from product-centric service to strategic partnership—helping owners align business performance with personal and financial priorities, while laying the groundwork for future success and continuity. Three Core Responsibilities of the Insurance Advisor As part of the business owner’s advisory team, insurance professionals bring critical value by: Owner Based Planning empowers insurance professionals to lead with questions about the owner’s vision for the business—rather than waiting for retirement or transition planning to emerge. Step One: Understanding Owner Goals Begin by helping the owner define income needs—during their lifetime, at retirement, and in the event of disability or death. These discussions are foundational in OBP, which emphasizes planning around the owner’s values and future aspirations. Step Two: Evaluating Business Value and Risk in Insurance Advisor-Led Business Planning Support the valuation process for insurance, estate, or gifting purposes. Identify income deficiencies and coverage gaps that could impact the owner’s family or business in unforeseen circumstances. This risk-based insight adds immediate value, even if a transition isn’t on the horizon. Step Three: Preserving, Protecting & Promoting Value Insurance advisors play a direct role in strengthening business value through protection strategies. This includes: Key person coverage is especially critical when a business’s value is tied to the contributions of specific individuals. It ensures that the business can absorb the financial impact of losing a key employee, fund temporary leadership, or support recruiting efforts—helping the company maintain momentum during a difficult transition. Carriers like Pacific Life offer a range of planning solutions, advanced markets support, and executive benefit solutions that empower insurance professionals to deliver more value through business planning. These resources can enhance your ability to support owners with strategies like deferred compensation, key person coverage, and retirement income planning. Step Four: Preparing for Future Liquidity Events Even if a sale or succession is years away—or uncertain—insurance professionals can help assess whether the business is on track to meet the owner’s eventual financial goals. Owner Based Planning encourages earlier, broader conversations that focus on readiness, not timelines. Step Five: Planning for Business Transitions with Advisor-Led Insurance Solutions In insider transitions (e.g., to children, co-owners, or key employees), insurance professionals help: More Owner Based Planning recommendation examples. This level of planning ensures that if anything happens to a future owner or the current one, the business remains stable and the owner’s financial goals stay on track. Step Six: Insurance Advisor-Led Business Continuity & Contingency Planning Help review and update Buy-Sell Agreements, recommend Stay Bonuses for key employees, and ensure contingency plans are consistent with the owner’s broader goals. These strategies are vital for both single-owner businesses and multi-owner enterprises—and often overlooked until it’s too late. Step Seven: Family Wealth and Estate Planning Review the owner’s estate plan to ensure it aligns with current business structures, valuation realities, and personal goals. Insurance funding can help cover estate taxes, enable wealth transfer, and ensure financial security for future generations. Connecting Insurance Advisor Strategy to Business Owner Goals Through Owner Based Planning, insurance professionals become more than policy providers—they become trusted guides in long-term planning, value creation, and legacy protection. You don’t have to wait for an owner to ask about leaving the business. By leading with thoughtful questions and strategic insight, you help them build a stronger business today—and a more secure future tomorrow. Learn how to bring Owner Based Planning into your insurance advisory approach.

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Advisor discussing Exit Planning options with business owner client.

Why Business Owners Delay Exit Planning

The Real Reason Owners Delay Exit Planning—and How to Break Through Many owners assume that planning for their exit begins once they’ve decided to leave. But the reality is that effective planning starts well before that decision. By engaging owners early and reinforcing the value of growth-focused strategies, advisors can ensure a smoother transition and more favorable outcomes for all involved. “I’ll plan my exit when I’m ready to leave.” This common mindset among business owners is one of the biggest challenges advisors face. But overcoming this misperception doesn’t require magic—it requires clear, consistent communication that educates and empowers. At BEI, we regularly hear from advisors looking for a reliable way to engage reluctant business owners in planning their exits. While we have proven tools to help convert hesitation into action, the first step is understanding why so many owners delay planning in the first place. Why Exit Planning Can’t Wait: The Risk of an Unprepared Business Most business owners know their companies aren’t ready to run without them—yet many still postpone planning. Why? Because they assume they’ll have time to prepare when the moment to exit finally arrives. But experienced advisors know better: preparing a business for a successful exit takes years, not months. The earlier owners start, the more control they have over the outcome. Closing the Communication Gap At the end of the day, owner inaction isn’t about unwillingness—it’s about unfamiliarity. Advisors who succeed are those who make Exit Planning familiar, relevant, and urgent through ongoing education and encouragement. If you want to help business owners act, keep showing up with valuable information, insights, and motivation. Because when owners understand the stakes—and see the benefits—they’ll start planning with purpose.

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