NASHVILLE, Tenn. (RFD NEWS) — A farm can lose valuable operating knowledge quickly when a manager, family member, or key employee leaves without a transition plan. Pinion says succession planning helps agricultural businesses protect continuity before retirement, illness, or an unexpected departure creates disruption.
The advisory firm reports that only 35 percent of organizations have succession plans for critical roles. For farms and agribusinesses, those roles may include ownership, production management, finances, marketing, equipment oversight, or employee supervision.
A workable plan begins by identifying essential positions, possible successors, and the training each person needs. Pinion recommends beginning 12 to 24 months before an anticipated handoff to allow time for mentoring, shadowing, and gradual changes in responsibility.
Operations should also prepare for unplanned exits by recording processes, contacts, and decision responsibilities. An interim leadership plan can help keep planting, harvest, livestock care, payroll, and marketing decisions moving when a sudden vacancy occurs.
The goal is not a perfect transfer on day one. Regular feedback, documented milestones, and updated readiness measures can help farm families build leadership depth while protecting the business they intend to carry forward.