How Successful Business Owners Turn Wealth Into Generational Control
- John McDonough
- 6 days ago
- 2 min read
Successful business owners often reach a point where their net worth grows rapidly, but their
liquidity does not. As valuations climb, the real challenge becomes preserving control, not just for today, but for the next generation.
This article summarizes key insights from a recent webinar hosted in partnership with Pinney Insurance and Inszone Insurance, with the full video available below.
The Liquidity Gap Most Business Owners Don’t See Coming
For many ultra-high-net-worth families, the issue isn’t insufficient assets, it’s that most assets
are tied up in businesses, real estate, and long term holdings. When an unexpected event
occurs, especially the passing of an owner, the IRS requires estate taxes to be paid:
In cash
Within nine months
Without extensions or negotiation
This is where even highly successful families experience forced asset sales, unfavorable timing,
and avoidable conflict. The underlying cause isn’t lack of wealth—it’s lack of engineered liquidity.
ILIT Planning: A Proven Tool for Strategic Liquidity
One of the most effective ways to create on-demand liquidity is through an Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT) paired with properly structured life insurance.
When designed correctly, an ILIT:
Sits outside the taxable estate
Owns the life insurance policy
Receives the death benefit income-tax free
Provides immediate liquidity exactly when the estate needs it
Families have used this structure for more than a century to:
Pay estate taxes without selling the business
Equalize inheritances between active and inactive heirs
Support buy–sell agreements
Preserve ownership inside the family line
Maintain stability during generational transitions
With an ILIT in place, liquidity becomes intentional—not accidental.
Case Example: Avoiding a Forced Sale of a $40M Business
A recent case illustrates the difference liquidity planning can make:
A couple owned a $40M business with no liquidity to cover a projected $4M estate tax bill.
Without planning, their heirs would have faced a fire sale to raise cash.
With an ILIT funded by a survivorship policy, the estate taxes were covered, the business stayed with the active heir, and the non-active heir received equivalent value.
This is the outcome proper planning is designed to create: control, continuity, and fairness.
Who Benefits Most From Strategic Liquidity Planning
This approach is ideal for:
Founders of closely held businesses
Owners with high enterprise value relative to liquid assets
Families expecting to exceed federal estate tax exemptions
Business partners needing coordinated succession strategies
If most of your wealth is not easily converted into cash, this planning is essential.
Next Steps and What to Watch For
This webinar is part of a six-part series on strategic planning for business owners.
The next session will break down Planning for What You Love, Not Just What You Leave—how to design a transition on your terms rather than the markets.
Watch the full session below, and stay tuned for the next installment.



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