In family businesses, few ideas are as emotionally appealing—and as dangerous—as the belief that “equal is fair.” It sounds reasonable. It feels just. And in many families, it’s the default starting point for ownership, inheritance, and decision-making. But when you move from the dinner table to the boardroom, equal is rarely fair—and often destructive.
The Principle: Equal Is Not Fair
Let’s reframe the concept:
Fair means:
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Those who contribute more receive more
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Those who take on risk are compensated for it
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Those responsible for results have authority to make decisions
Equal means:
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Everyone gets the same, regardless of role
In a family business, those two ideas are fundamentally incompatible. Splitting things equally is one of the most common—and most damaging—decisions families make when structuring ownership. Because while equal feels fair, it often creates the exact outcome families are trying to avoid:
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Resentment
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Loss of control
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Broken trust
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And in many cases… a weakened or failing business
The Hidden Risk of “Equal”
For insights on this topic in an audio format, listen to Episode 202 of the Disruptive Successor Show, or watch it on YouTube:
Fair Isn’t Equal: Aligning Ownership, Merit, and Governance in Family Businesses with Maryann Bell
I was recently in a conversation with a family navigating a succession and trust structure that perfectly illustrates this tension. The family’s trust—created several decades ago—was designed with an “equal” mindset. Assets were treated broadly, ownership was divided evenly, and successor roles were assigned without considering future operating realities.
At the time, it probably felt like the right thing to do. Today, it’s a ticking time bomb.
At the time, it was designed with good intentions:
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Treat all children equally
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Keep things simple
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Avoid conflict
But today, that same structure is creating real risk. Here’s why:
When the trust names a non-operating family member as a successor trustee, the individual(s) actively running the business could lose operational control or be in partnership with someone who has little knowledge and unvested authority in the business.
If executed as written, the result is predictable:
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A non-operator becomes a decision-maker with authority
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Decision-making and authority become diluted
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Accountability breaks down or disappears; and
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Conflict becomes inevitable
This is the predictable outcome when equality ignores contribution: the person responsible for performance no longer controls outcomes. Ownership without responsibility creates entitlement. Responsibility without control creates frustration. Neither leads to a healthy business.
The Core Problem: Equality Ignores Reality
In family businesses, equal ownership between operators and non-operators creates a structural imbalance.
Because the reality is:
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Owner-operators are carrying the risk
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Owner-operators making daily decisions
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Owner-operators’ reputation and income are tied to performance
And the non-operator isn’t. Yet they’re treated the same. That’s not fairness. That’s misalignment. When one sibling is doing the heavy lifting (the operator) and another sibling, who is not involved in the business, inherits an “equal” ownership stake in the business, the result is:
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The operator feels under-rewarded
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The non-operator feels entitled
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Decision-making becomes strained
Eventually, resentment replaces trust. Not because the family didn’t care, but because the structure ignored contribution.
The Hidden Danger: Good Intentions
Most families don’t do this out of ignorance. They do it out of love. The parents’ original intent was likely simple: “Treat everyone equally so no one feels left out.”
Parents want:
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Harmony
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Simplicity
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To avoid “playing favorites.”
So, they default to equal. But here’s the hard truth: Equal ownership is often the fastest path to unequal conflict. Equal ownership between:
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An operator risking their career, income, and reputation
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And a non-operator with no day-to-day involvement
…is not fairness. It is an imbalance disguised as harmony. Fairness in a family business doesn’t come from equal shares—it comes from aligned roles, risks, and rewards.
What Fair Actually Looks Like
If equal isn’t fair, what is?
1. Concentrated Ownership for Operators
Those running the business need:
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Control
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Decision-making authority
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Economic upside aligned with performance
Without that, you don’t have leadership—you have gridlock.
2. Support for Non-Operators
Fairness doesn’t mean exclusion.
It means different forms of support, such as:
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Education funding
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A “financial bridge” to independence
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Gifting of assets outside the business
This respects family while protecting the business.
3. Separate the Business from Everything Else
Treating the business like a generic asset – a stock or real estate portfolio – is a fatal flaw. A business is:
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Dynamic
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Risk-driven
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Dependent on leadership
It needs its own structure—not a one-size-fits-all estate plan.
4. Align Authority with Accountability
This is the simplest test. The person responsible for results must have control over decisions. If not, you create frustration at best—and failure at worst.
The Role of the Advisor and a Common Problem that Persists
Another all-too-common complicating factor is when the advisor chosen by the founder to create the original trust doesn’t want to communicate with the next generation of family business leaders. S/he may do this to:
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Protect the status quo
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Avoid uncomfortable family conversations
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Focus on legal symmetry rather than business reality
But succession is not a legal exercise. It’s a leadership transition. In family business and estate planning, legal symmetry shows up as:
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Equal ownership percentages (e.g., 33/33/33)
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Identical voting rights
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Same trustee roles for multiple siblings
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Uniform inheritance structures across all children
It looks clean. It feels fair. And it’s easy for attorneys to draft.
The Problem: Paper Equality vs. Real-World Reality
Legal symmetry assumes: “If we treat everyone the same legally, everything will work out.”
But in a family business, people are not the same:
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One sibling may run the company full-time
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Another may have no involvement
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One may take financial risk
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Another may not
When you apply symmetrical legal structures to asymmetrical roles, you get:
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Decision-making gridlock
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Misaligned incentives
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Resentment on both sides
Simple Example
Legally symmetrical structure:
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Two siblings each own 50%
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Both have equal voting rights
Reality:
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One runs the business daily
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One is less involved, lives elsewhere or is uninvolved
Outcome:
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Operator needs approval from the non-operator
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Non-operator feels entitled to weigh in
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Frustration builds quickly
That’s legal symmetry creating operational dysfunction.
The Real Blocker: Who Makes the Case?
Here’s the difficult position a next-generation leader is in: S/he can’t walk into a family meeting and say: “I should have more ownership.”
Even if s/he’s right, it sounds self-serving. That’s why the role of an objective third-party advisor is so valuable.
Someone who can say:
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This isn’t about favoritism
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This is about sustainability
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This is what the business requires to survive
Timing Matters More Than You Think
Events in life are unpredictable but can have immediate and severe impacts. For example, without a plan, the death of a key person can cause a business to lose value overnight, while a disability can halt operations until recovery.
Of course, addressing each of the 5 Ds below, business owners can protect their legacy, ensure continuity, and maintain value even in the face of adversity. Here’s how to prepare for:
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Death: Establish a succession plan, buy-sell agreements, and key person insurance
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Disability: Secure disability insurance and cross-train staff.
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Divorce: Use legal agreements to protect assets and clarify ownership.
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Disagreement: Define roles, communication protocols, and conflict resolution strategies
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Distress: Develop contingency plans, maintain strong insurance coverage, and diversify revenue streams.
If you miss the window to prepare for any of the above and an outdated will or trust structure becomes active … once it does, unwinding it becomes exponentially harder—legally and emotionally.
A Simple Question Every Family Should Ask
If you’re in a family business, ask this: “If this weren’t our family … would we design it this way?”
If the answer is NO, then you’re likely choosing equal over fair.
Final Thought
Family businesses don’t fail because people don’t care. They fail because the structure doesn’t match reality. Equal feels good. Fair works.
And if you want both the business and the family to thrive…
Family Businesses Must Choose Merit Over Math meaning that family-owned companies should hire, promote, and compensate people based on their abilities, skills, and accomplishments (merit) rather than based on formulaic or unearned entitlements (math), such as bloodlines, seniority, or automatic ownership shares.
That’s what works.
