Winter cropping is in full swing across much of Australia, graziers are gradually re-stocking and there’s renewed optimism enabling many farming families to refocus their succession intentions. With 2020 hopefully marking the end of, what was for many, a multi-year drought, Rabobank succession planning facilitator Kim Lee said there was both pressure to — and opportunity in — reassessing strategic direction. “It’s an exciting time for the industry, there’s been a turn in the season and agriculture has retained its strength during COVID-19 — there's a positive outlook for Australian agriculture regenerating interest in the family farming business among younger family members,” Ms Lee said.
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The Rabobank podcast, titled Farming Families and Success in Succession, aims to help farming families navigate successful succession, ideally by beginning the conversation early using well-structured, healthy communication, shared equally by all participants. “When the next generation is included in discussions regarding responsibility and accountability early, when the time for succession does arrive, families don't even realise they've stepped into that space,” Ms Lee said.
“Clarity around retirement for the older generation is crucial, particularly their financial and housing requirements, involvement in ongoing farm risk, involvement in the community and off-farm activities — all considerations which some couples approaching retirement may disagree on.As a family, Ms Lee said it was also necessary to talk about goals surrounding fairness — establishing what was fair, and how a family viewed asset transfer when distribution was not equal. While financial security and farm viability were often front-of-mind when negotiating succession planning, Ms Lee said maintaining family harmony was the ultimate goal.
“Fairness is largely subjective, so negotiating what fairness looks like can be tricky,” she said.
“Succession planning involves give and take, which can challenge family harmony.”Ms Lee said the unique culture of individual families also contributed significantly to succession planning success. “There is no silver bullet when it comes to succession planning, every family business is different, and planning needs to be driven by a family, together — not led by what a neighbour is doing, or a culture set by past generations. “Often, what has happened in the past forms a family’s cultural foundation for the future, and drives succession.“Some families expect their succession will happen organically, in a will or as it played out for the older generations — but it’s crucial to understand whether that perceived path is something that is a positive or a negative.”The podcast explores a number of other common succession concerns arising during the process, including introducing spouses, or even new partners, into the conversation, and the importance of families understanding their business. Part one of Rabobank’s Farming Families and Success in Succession is available at: https://research.rabobank.com/far/en/sectors/regional-food-agri/RaboResearch-Podcasts.html with a second instalment in the series due in early June.