Over the last two weeks, I have been immensely happy with the turnout of our Family Governance Masterclasses. Iloilo was a major success, with leaders flying in from Mindanao despite difficult weather. Our Cebu Masterclass over the weekend was equally energizing — a full room of founders and next generation leaders finally confronting governance issues they had postponed for years. As we prepare for the last leg of my governance initiative on November 29 at the Makati Sports Club, we are almost full and ready to close the year with clarity and renewed commitment to continuity.

If you are a business leader between the ages of 60 and 65, you now enter the most decisive stage of your leadership journey. These years determine whether your business survives another decade or endures a century. You still possess wisdom, credibility, and influence, but time is no longer unlimited. This is when a founder must shift from operator to architect, from leader to legacy builder. 

When you pass away, your memory will fade a month after your memorial service. Your business may be sold due to inaction. Your children — still grieving — may move on, even blaming you for not addressing issues you recognized but avoided. When you’re dead, you’re dead. But what happens to your business, your people, and your name is another story.

At this stage, you still stand at the height of influence. Yet this is the moment to prepare your business, your family, and your governance structures for a future without you. These are the years of preparation, clarity, and alignment.

1. Face the “What Ifs”
Governance begins with courage — the courage to confront what you have avoided. What if you die suddenly? What if your heirs cannot agree? What if creditors call your loans? What if your children want different directions for the business? These conversations are uncomfortable, but they form the foundation of continuity. Avoiding them does not preserve harmony; it delays conflict and amplifies it.

2. Build a Shared Purpose
Before structure comes Shared Purpose — the unifying reason your family stays together in business. It defines what you stand for beyond profit. Families that articulate shared purpose early build stronger alignment; without it, structures collapse under emotional strain. Hold a Strategic Planning retreat with family and key executives. Discuss values, goals, roles, and expectations. Begin identifying future leaders and possible ownership arrangements.

3. Establish the Governance Framework
Intent must become structure. Start with:
• A Family Constitution documenting values, vision, and rules of engagement
• A Family Council addressing family-related matters
• A Board of Directors
These pillars form the governance triangle — separating emotion from management, ownership from leadership, and family from business.

4. Create a Clear Compensation Plan and Succession Path
Fairness must be transparent. Establish a Family Compensation Plan separating dividends (ownership rewards) from salaries (employment compensation). This reduces entitlement and protects professionalism. At the same time, design your Succession Plan. Identify successors — family or non-family — and involve them in real decision-making. Succession is not an event; it is a long, deliberate process of readiness.

5. Inventory and Safeguard Assets
Many families lose value because no one knows where the assets are. Document all properties, loans, and investments. Digitize titles and secure them under a Family Office or trusted custodian. Prevent confusion, delays, and unnecessary losses during transition.

6. Institutionalize Alignment
Governance without alignment is paper without purpose. Meet quarterly as a Family Council to reinforce values and monitor participation. Meet annually with your Board for strategic alignment — clarifying direction, capital allocation, and leadership milestones.

The Unprepared Patriarch
In Manila, a 65-year-old founder died with no plans. His children fought over leadership. Creditors withdrew. Suppliers lost confidence. Employees resigned. Within a year, the business was sold at half its value. He was remembered fondly — but briefly.

Final Reflection
Governance is not control — it is clarity, continuity, and love. Begin the difficult conversations, create alignment, and institutionalize shared purpose. Preparation today is the greatest act of love you can leave tomorrow — for your family and your legacy. 


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Join our Family Governance Masterclass — a results-driven session that helps founders shift from operator to architect and turn leadership into legacy.
Learn how to navigate “What If” scenarios, define Shared Purpose, and build the governance pillars that preserve unity, fairness, and continuity.

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Manila – Nov 29, Venue TBA

Registration closing soon.

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 0917-3247216 | service@wbadvisoryasia.com (Look for Julia)

Preparation is the deepest expression of love — continuity never happens by chance.