How Strong Is Your Leadership, Governance, and Succession System?
Most family businesses don’t struggle because of one issue.
They struggle when small gaps across leadership, governance, communication, and expectations start to connect.
This diagnostic helps you see those gaps clearly.
It won’t give you a score to impress anyone.
It will show you where things are strong and where attention is needed.
How to Use This Diagnostic
Read each statement and rate your agreement:
1 = Not true
2 = Occasionally true
3 = Mostly true
4 = Consistently true
Answer honestly. This works best when you resist the urge to give the “right” answer.
Section 1: Leadership Clarity
- Everyone in the business understands who has final decision authority
- Leaders make decisions without needing constant validation from others
- Founders consistently support leadership decisions publicly
- Leadership roles are clear and not influenced by informal family dynamics
- Successors demonstrate confidence in decision-making under pressure
Section 2: Governance Structure
- We have clear forums for decisions, such as board, management, and family discussions
- Each forum has a defined purpose and does not overlap with others
- Governance structures guide decisions instead of personalities
- Independent perspectives exist within leadership or governance
- Disagreements follow a clear process rather than becoming personal
Section 3: Succession Readiness
- We have identified future leaders and are actively developing them
- Leadership development includes real responsibility and accountability
- Founders are gradually stepping back from decision-making
- Expectations around leadership transition are clear
- Succession discussions happen openly, not just privately
Section 4: Communication and Expectations
- Important decisions are explained clearly, including the reasoning behind them
- Family members understand how decisions are made
- Expectations around roles, opportunity, and compensation are discussed openly
- Communication happens in the right forums, not through side conversations
- People feel heard, even when they disagree with outcomes
Section 5: Family Dynamics and Trust
- Disagreements stay focused on issues rather than becoming personal
- Family members address concerns directly rather than indirectly
- Respect is visible in how people speak and listen to each other
- Conflict leads to better decisions instead of lingering tension
- Trust remains strong even during periods of change
Section 6: Fairness and Alignment
- Decisions reflect contribution, responsibility, and role clarity
- Family members understand how fairness is defined within the business
- Compensation and ownership structures feel aligned with involvement
- Expectations are revisited as roles and circumstances change
- Decisions are explained in a way that builds understanding
Section 7: Leadership Continuity
- The business can operate effectively without relying on one individual
- Leadership transitions do not disrupt momentum
- Culture remains consistent even as leadership evolves
- Leaders reinforce expectations through consistent behavior
- The system supports leadership, rather than depending on personality
Scoring Your Results
Add your total score:
- 120–140: Strong alignment
- 90–119: Stable but with emerging gaps
- 60–89: Misalignment that will surface under pressure
- Below 60: Structural risk to leadership and continuity
What Your Score Means
120–140: Strong Alignment
You’ve built clarity into your system. Leadership, governance, and communication reinforce each other. The focus now is maintaining discipline as the business grows and evolves.
90–119: Stable with Gaps
Most things work well, but pressure will expose weak spots. These gaps often show up during succession, conflict, or rapid growth.
60–89: Misalignment Under the Surface
The business likely functions, but tension exists. You may see repeated issues around decision-making, expectations, or communication. These problems will intensify without attention.
Below 60: Structural Risk
The system relies heavily on individuals rather than structure. Leadership transitions, conflict, or growth will create instability. This is the point where families often seek outside guidance.
What to Do Next
This diagnostic does not point to a single fix.
It points to a system that needs attention.
Start by asking:
- Where did we score lowest
- What patterns show up across sections
- Which issues connect to each other
Improvement does not require fixing everything at once. It requires choosing one area where clarity will create momentum.
Optional Call to Action (Lead Capture Use)
Want a deeper breakdown?
I offer a Family Business Alignment Review where we:
- Walk through your diagnostic results
- Identify the highest-leverage gaps
- Outline practical next steps tailored to your business
This is not a generic report. It is a working conversation focused on clarity and forward movement.
Positioning Note (For You)
This diagnostic:
- Naturally leads into consulting, workshops, and speaking
- Can be delivered as:
- PDF lead magnet
- Interactive Typeform / Google Form
- Workshop opening exercise
- Creates self-diagnosis before you ever sell
Return to Fairness vs Equality in a Family Business.
Assess the fairness in your company with the Fairness Alignment Diagnostic.