From Basement Startup to Legacy : A Family CRM Succession | The Family Biz Show Ep. 122
Release Date: 12/02/2025
The Family Biz Show
If you are raising children in a wealthy family, you may wonder how to give them opportunity without taking away their drive. This conversation helps you understand what children need to learn early so wealth becomes a source of responsibility, not entitlement. “I want my kids to appreciate what they have.” “I don’t want comfort to make them soft.” “How do I talk about money without saying too much?” “How do I raise grounded children when life is already easier for them?” “What if I’m accidentally making things too easy?” This conversation gives you the answer. In this...
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Most conversations about family business problems focus on what’s broken—conflict between generations, lack of succession clarity, or stalled growth. But what if many family business problems aren’t caused by dysfunction at all? What if they’re caused by something far less obvious—and far more fixable? In this episode of The Family Biz Show, Michael Palumbos sits down with second-generation owner Ed Delia to explore a different lens: many family business problems are not operational failures. They are translation failures. They come from businesses that have built something...
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Common Mistakes During Family Business Estate Planning Estate planning is technical. Family business estate planning is emotional. Because in a family enterprise, wealth is never just capital. It represents identity. Sacrifice. Legacy. Control. Protection. And when estate planning is driven by fear instead of preparation, families don’t just protect assets — they unintentionally weaken the people who must steward them. In this episode of The Family Biz Show, wealth psychologist Jim Grubman, co-author of Wealth 3.0, challenges the most common assumptions shaping multi-generational estate...
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What if succession didn’t need to be announced—because it had already happened? In this episode of The Family Biz Show, we sit down with Peter Roberti, third-generation leader of custom clothier Adrian Jules, to explore what family business governance looks like when it actually works—across generations, personalities, and pressure. Peter’s story isn’t about theory. It’s about lived governance: earned leadership, deeply rooted trust, and decisions made with legacy—not ego—in mind. 🔹 When Leadership Is Earned, Not Handed Down “The employee should say, ‘I thought he...
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What Makes a Family Business Last Across Generations Episode 125 of The Family Biz Show delivers one of the most grounded and insightful family business leadership stories in recent memory. Hosted by Michael Palumbos, a seasoned financial advisor for family business owners, this episode features Domenic Cortese of Cortese Construction Services—a second-generation leader actively transitioning a thriving company to the third generation. Through honest family business conversations, this episode explores the real mechanics behind longevity: trust, governance, wealth discipline, and intentional...
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Why Brand Can Make or Break Family Business Succession & Legacy In Episode 124 of The Family Biz Show, host Michael Palumbos welcomes back Megan Lynch of Six Point Strategy for a wide-ranging conversation that connects branding, trust, and reputation to the real drivers of Family business succession, Family business leadership, and long-term enterprise value. What makes this episode especially powerful is that Megan isn’t approaching brand as “marketing”—she approaches it as an essential part of family business strategy, Legacy planning, and Business continuity for families. Megan...
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In Episode 123 of the Family Biz Show, host Michael Palumbos welcomes Brad and Olivia Mountz of Mountz Incorporated for a powerful conversation that challenges traditional assumptions about family business succession and passing on the family business. This episode blends heartfelt storytelling with practical frameworks in family business leadership, legacy planning, and long-term business continuity for families. As Brad and Olivia share their journey—from working together across generations to ultimately choosing a strategic sale of the company—they offer deep insights that any Family...
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The Family Biz Show dives deep into the real-world journey of Family business succession through the story of SynAct, a Microsoft-partnered CRM consulting firm founded by Ken Compter and successfully transitioned to his daughter, Sarah Compter. The episode offers practical lessons in Family business leadership, Legacy planning, Business continuity for families, and the emotional intelligence required for Passing on the family business. With the strategic lens of a seasoned Family Business Advisor and the lived experience of a Family Business Consultant,...
info_outlineThe Family Biz Show dives deep into the real-world journey of Family business succession through the story of SynAct, a Microsoft-partnered CRM consulting firm founded by Ken Compter and successfully transitioned to his daughter, Sarah Compter. The episode offers practical lessons in Family business leadership, Legacy planning, Business continuity for families, and the emotional intelligence required for Passing on the family business. With the strategic lens of a seasoned Family Business Advisor and the lived experience of a Family Business Consultant, this episode uncovers how multigenerational entrepreneurs can strengthen their vision, protect family relationships, and build a future-ready business.
The Unexpected Birth of a Family Business
Ken’s entry into entrepreneurship began not with a grand plan, but with necessity after a corporate layoff. Working alone from his basement, he built an early CRM system inside Outlook—long before SaaS models were common. This foundation illustrates how many family companies begin: rooted in resilience, adaptability, and the desire to secure business continuity for families.
A Daughter Steps In—And Redefines the Future
After years in banking, Sarah joined SynAct and soon realized she needed true ownership to give the business her full energy. Her decisive “I’ll take this, but you need to step aside” moment highlights a critical truth in Family business succession: next-gen leaders must have both authority and autonomy. Ken’s willingness to let go allowed Sarah to fully activate her leadership.
Building a Microsoft-Partnered Competitive Edge
SynAct pivoted from its own CRM platform to Microsoft’s Dynamics ecosystem, gaining tremendous scalability. Under Sarah’s guidance, they created an all-inclusive recurring revenue model that bundled software with continuous service. This move positioned SynAct as a unique, service-driven partner—showcasing smart family office strategy and long-term value creation.
Emotional Intelligence: The Silent Strength Behind Success
Ken and Sarah seamlessly separated family emotions from business disagreements. Even intense conversations ended with “Love you”—a powerful example of healthy conflict management. Their story proves that strong Family business leadership requires clarity, trust, and the ability to protect the family bond while challenging each other professionally.
Financial Clarity: A Hidden Pillar of Seamless Succession
Ken’s retirement readiness came from years of spreadsheets, projections, and disciplined investing. Meanwhile, Sarah models multiple long-term scenarios with her financial team—including worst-case assumptions—to safeguard her future. This is Legacy planning in action: coordinated advisors, intentional modeling, and planning beyond optimistic assumptions.
When Only One Child Wants the Business
Ken emphasizes that passion—not obligation—should determine who enters the business. His son pursued a culinary career rather than technology, and the family embraced it. This is a crucial lesson for any Family Business Advisor: do not force successors. Support each family member in finding purpose, whether inside or outside the company.
The Power of External Partnerships for Growth
Instead of costly marketing channels, Sarah built a thriving referral network with complementary Microsoft partners and clients. Understanding where customers live—via market mapping—is a foundational strategy taught by seasoned Family Business Consultants and is key to scaling niche family enterprises.
Passing on the Family Business—With Clarity and Heart
The Compters demonstrate that Passing on the family business works best when founders know their retirement needs, successors know their vision, and both generations communicate transparently. Their transition is a model for families seeking both financial security and relational harmony.