The Family Biz Show

Built To Last: Sustainable Success For Family-Owned Construction Businesses | The Family Biz Show Ep. 132

55 min · 14. maj 2026
episode Built To Last: Sustainable Success For Family-Owned Construction Businesses | The Family Biz Show Ep. 132 cover

Description

Growth can look like success from the outside. But inside a family-owned construction business, growth can also create pressure, confusion, and decisions the original business model was never designed to handle. "You built something successful, but why does it feel harder to run?" "Why is every decision still coming back to you?" "How do you pass the business forward without damaging the family?" "What happens when wealth grows faster than communication?" "Are your advisors solving separate problems, or helping you see the whole picture?" This conversation gives you the answer. In this episode, Michael Palumbos leads a powerful discussion on what it really takes to build sustainable success in family-owned construction businesses. The conversation explores why many construction companies outgrow the systems, leadership habits, and informal family assumptions that helped them succeed in the first place. You'll hear from Ricky Stellar, Roey Diefendorf, Jerry Aliberti, and Anthony DiTucci as they unpack the hidden pressures behind growth: owner dependency, unclear roles, siloed advisors, family expectations, succession tension, and the need for stronger governance. This is not just a conversation about revenue. It is a conversation about leadership, trust, communication, ownership, and the future of the family enterprise. Ricky Stellar brings the perspective of a wealth advisor helping families coordinate planning, ownership, taxes, and long-term financial decisions. Roey Diefendorf shares deep experience as a fourth-generation family business leader and advisor focused on preparing families, not just assets, for generational transition. Jerry Aliberti brings operational insight from his work with construction companies, helping leaders develop stronger teams, accountability systems, and scalable structures. Anthony DiTucci offers a practical view of what happens inside family-owned construction businesses when leadership, planning, and people systems are not clear enough to support the next stage of growth. At the heart of this episode is a simple but powerful idea: what got the business here may not be enough to carry it forward. The founder's hustle, instincts, and relationships may have built the company. But sustainable success requires a business that can operate through systems, leadership, communication, and shared alignment. You'll also hear why preparing heirs matters as much as preparing wealth, why the owner bottleneck can quietly limit growth, and why successful families need to coordinate the business, the wealth, and the family together. This episode gives you practical, real-world insight into how family-owned construction companies can move from reactive pressure to intentional planning. You'll learn how to spot the warning signs before they become crises, how to think about succession with more clarity, and how to build a company that can last beyond one person. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why growth changes more than the business itself * How the owner bottleneck limits sustainable construction business growth * Why family-owned construction companies need clearer roles and stronger leadership systems * How siloed advisors can create risk for successful business-owning families * Why succession planning must address emotions, communication, and family expectations * How preparing heirs helps protect both wealth and relationships * Why governance matters for multi-generational family businesses * How coordinated planning supports long-term family business continuity * Why employees need clarity during leadership transitions * How to start thinking about the business, wealth, and family as connected systems If your family-owned construction business is growing, transitioning, or preparing the next generation, this episode will help you see the pressure more clearly. And once you can see it clearly, you can start building something stronger. Not just a successful business. A family enterprise built to last. For more conversations on family business growth, succession, leadership, and legacy, explore more episodes here: https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast [https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast]

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132 episodes

episode The #1 Mistake That Could Cost You MILLIONS When Selling Your Business | The Family Biz Show Ep. 133 artwork

The #1 Mistake That Could Cost You MILLIONS When Selling Your Business | The Family Biz Show Ep. 133

Ready to sell your business? What if one mistake could cost you millions before negotiations even begin? "Am I really getting the best price?" "What if my business isn't worth what I think?" "Should I accept the first offer?" "How do buyers actually value my company?" "What if I'm not as prepared as I thought?" This conversation gives you the answer. In this episode of The Family Biz Show, Michael Palumbos sits down with Cameron Bishop, Partner and Managing Director at Raincatcher, to uncover the costly mistakes business owners make before selling their companies. From owner dependency and financial reporting to competitive bidding and succession planning, Cameron explains what buyers are really looking for—and why preparing years in advance can dramatically increase business value. With decades of experience leading acquisitions, integrating companies, and advising business owners through successful exits, Cameron shares practical insights from both the buyer's and seller's perspectives. One of the biggest revelations? Having one interested buyer doesn't necessarily mean you've received the best offer. Creating competition can dramatically change both valuation and deal terms. This episode is packed with practical advice to help you build a stronger, more valuable business—whether you're selling next year or a decade from now. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why owner dependency reduces business value. * How poor financial reporting can kill a deal. * Why one buyer is rarely enough to determine your company's true market value. * How investment bankers help maximize business value and negotiate stronger deals. * Why exit planning should begin years before retirement. * How to prepare emotionally for life after selling your business. If you want to protect your legacy, maximize your business value, and make smarter decisions before selling, this conversation is an essential resource. 🎧 Listen to more conversations that help family business owners grow, transition, and preserve their legacy: https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast [https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast]

6. juli 202651 min
episode Built To Last: Sustainable Success For Family-Owned Construction Businesses | The Family Biz Show Ep. 132 artwork

Built To Last: Sustainable Success For Family-Owned Construction Businesses | The Family Biz Show Ep. 132

Growth can look like success from the outside. But inside a family-owned construction business, growth can also create pressure, confusion, and decisions the original business model was never designed to handle. "You built something successful, but why does it feel harder to run?" "Why is every decision still coming back to you?" "How do you pass the business forward without damaging the family?" "What happens when wealth grows faster than communication?" "Are your advisors solving separate problems, or helping you see the whole picture?" This conversation gives you the answer. In this episode, Michael Palumbos leads a powerful discussion on what it really takes to build sustainable success in family-owned construction businesses. The conversation explores why many construction companies outgrow the systems, leadership habits, and informal family assumptions that helped them succeed in the first place. You'll hear from Ricky Stellar, Roey Diefendorf, Jerry Aliberti, and Anthony DiTucci as they unpack the hidden pressures behind growth: owner dependency, unclear roles, siloed advisors, family expectations, succession tension, and the need for stronger governance. This is not just a conversation about revenue. It is a conversation about leadership, trust, communication, ownership, and the future of the family enterprise. Ricky Stellar brings the perspective of a wealth advisor helping families coordinate planning, ownership, taxes, and long-term financial decisions. Roey Diefendorf shares deep experience as a fourth-generation family business leader and advisor focused on preparing families, not just assets, for generational transition. Jerry Aliberti brings operational insight from his work with construction companies, helping leaders develop stronger teams, accountability systems, and scalable structures. Anthony DiTucci offers a practical view of what happens inside family-owned construction businesses when leadership, planning, and people systems are not clear enough to support the next stage of growth. At the heart of this episode is a simple but powerful idea: what got the business here may not be enough to carry it forward. The founder's hustle, instincts, and relationships may have built the company. But sustainable success requires a business that can operate through systems, leadership, communication, and shared alignment. You'll also hear why preparing heirs matters as much as preparing wealth, why the owner bottleneck can quietly limit growth, and why successful families need to coordinate the business, the wealth, and the family together. This episode gives you practical, real-world insight into how family-owned construction companies can move from reactive pressure to intentional planning. You'll learn how to spot the warning signs before they become crises, how to think about succession with more clarity, and how to build a company that can last beyond one person. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why growth changes more than the business itself * How the owner bottleneck limits sustainable construction business growth * Why family-owned construction companies need clearer roles and stronger leadership systems * How siloed advisors can create risk for successful business-owning families * Why succession planning must address emotions, communication, and family expectations * How preparing heirs helps protect both wealth and relationships * Why governance matters for multi-generational family businesses * How coordinated planning supports long-term family business continuity * Why employees need clarity during leadership transitions * How to start thinking about the business, wealth, and family as connected systems If your family-owned construction business is growing, transitioning, or preparing the next generation, this episode will help you see the pressure more clearly. And once you can see it clearly, you can start building something stronger. Not just a successful business. A family enterprise built to last. For more conversations on family business growth, succession, leadership, and legacy, explore more episodes here: https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast [https://www.familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast]

14. maj 202655 min
episode What Wealthy Parents Must Teach Their Children Early | The Family Biz Show Ep. 131 artwork

What Wealthy Parents Must Teach Their Children Early | The Family Biz Show Ep. 131

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 episode of The Family Biz Show, Michael Palumbos speaks with Jeff Savlov of Blum & Savlov about how wealthy parents and family business leaders can raise children with responsibility, gratitude, and character. Jeff explains that children can understand more than adults often assume, especially when parents use simple, age-appropriate stories to connect wealth with work, values, fairness, and purpose. Jeff Savlov is a family dynamics and family wealth coach who works with families navigating wealth, communication, parenting, and legacy. In this conversation, he shares practical examples of how parents can begin shaping a child's understanding of money long before trusts, inheritances, or financial statements enter the conversation. The core insight is simple but powerful: a parent's job is not to remove every challenge from a child's life. It is to give them the right amount of responsibility, struggle, and support so they can build resilience. When wealth makes life too easy, children can miss the everyday lessons that create confidence, accountability, and emotional maturity. You'll hear how small actions — cleaning up toys, caring for a plant, contributing to family chores, paying for part of a car, or understanding the story behind a family business — can teach children where money comes from and why responsibility matters. Jeff also shares a memorable example of how to explain family wealth to a young child through the story of a grandmother who built a cookie company from her kitchen. It is a clear reminder that children do not need complex financial details. They need stories that help them understand work, fairness, gratitude, and stewardship. In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why wealthy parents should start teaching responsibility earlier than they think * How to explain family wealth to young children without overwhelming them * Why making life too easy can weaken resilience and motivation * How chores, small jobs, and everyday expectations build character * Why children need to connect money with work, values, and gratitude * How family business parents can enjoy wealth while still raising grounded kids * Why parents must understand their own money stories before shaping the next generation * How trusted relationships help children talk honestly about difficult topics Wealth does not have to create entitlement. With intention, honesty, and the right kind of challenge, parents can help children grow into grounded, capable, and responsible people who understand both the privilege and the purpose of what they have been given. Learn more about The Family Biz Show and explore additional family business resources here: https://familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast/the-family-biz-show [https://familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast/the-family-biz-show]

5. maj 202647 min
episode The $84 Trillion Opportunity Most Family Businesses Are Missing | The Family Biz Show Ep. 130 artwork

The $84 Trillion Opportunity Most Family Businesses Are Missing | The Family Biz Show Ep. 130

You can build a successful business… and still lose the family along the way. Most family business transitions don't fail because of one catastrophic mistake. They fail because of small conversations that never happened. Because leadership wasn't prepared. Because expectations were never aligned. Because no one wanted to ask the hard questions. "What happens when I step away?" "What if my kids don't want the business?" "How do we protect both the company and the relationships?" "Why does every conversation about succession become emotional?" This conversation gives you the answer. In this episode, Michael Palumbos brings together the Family Business Flywheel team for a powerful discussion on the $84 trillion generational wealth transfer now underway — and why family businesses face far more than a financial transition. This conversation explores the hidden risks that threaten multi-generational family businesses: communication breakdowns, leadership gaps, governance failures, liquidity challenges, and unresolved family dynamics. The panel shares real-world stories of successful businesses that struggled during transition — and examples of families who created clarity, alignment, and continuity across generations. Featuring insights from wealth strategist Dianna Parker, family dynamics expert Shawn Barberis, transition advisor Dan Prisciotta, and family business strategist Richard Bryant, this episode blends practical business strategy with the emotional realities of family enterprise leadership. You'll hear why succession planning is not a one-time event… but an ongoing process of preparing both the business and the family for long-term success. More importantly, you'll learn why communication is often the single biggest factor separating thriving family enterprises from those that break apart during transition. This episode also explores: * Why many founders struggle emotionally with letting go * How governance creates stability during leadership transitions * Why next-generation leaders need accountability and development * How family businesses can preserve both enterprise value and family relationships * Why unresolved communication becomes a long-term business risk In This Episode, You'll Learn: * Why most family business transitions fail long before ownership changes * How communication impacts succession planning outcomes * Why leadership readiness matters more than timing alone * How governance structures reduce family conflict * Why founders often struggle with identity during transition * How successful families prepare rising-generation leaders * Why family alignment is critical for long-term continuity * How to think about succession as enterprise growth, not exit planning The families who navigate transition successfully don't simply transfer wealth. They transfer clarity, purpose, communication, leadership, and trust. And that changes everything. Learn more about The Family Biz Show and explore additional family business resources here: https://familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast/the-family-biz-show [https://familybusinessflywheel.com/podcast/the-family-biz-show]

20. apr. 20261 h 1 min
episode The Family Business Problems Legacy Can Solve | The Family Biz Show Ep. 129 artwork

The Family Business Problems Legacy Can Solve | The Family Biz Show Ep. 129

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 meaningful over decades—but have never learned how to express that value in a way the market understands. This shift in perspective changes everything. The Hidden Nature of Family Business Problems One of the most important insights from this conversation is that family business problems often hide in plain sight. Leaders assume their challenges are tied to strategy, execution, or market conditions. But in many cases, the real issue is far more foundational. Family businesses frequently undersell themselves. They describe their legacy in ways that feel meaningful internally—but fail to build trust externally. Saying "we've been around since 1946" may feel like a strength. But to a modern buyer, it doesn't answer the only question that matters: Why should I trust you today? This is where many family business problems begin. Not because the business lacks capability—but because it lacks clarity in how that capability is communicated. Why Legacy Creates—and Solves—Family Business Problems Legacy is one of the most powerful assets a family enterprise has. It represents consistency, trust, relationships, and accumulated experience. Yet when poorly framed, that same legacy can become the source of family business problems. Ed shares a simple but powerful example. Instead of leading with how long a company has existed, he reframes the conversation around proof—what the company has actually done over time. In one case, a business shifted from saying "since 1946" to highlighting that it had produced over 24,000 custom components. That change transformed perception instantly. This is the paradox: legacy can either create family business problems or solve them—depending on how it is positioned. When legacy is translated into proof, it becomes a growth driver. When it remains abstract, it becomes invisible. The Real Gap Behind Family Business Problems As the conversation unfolds, a deeper pattern emerges. Many family business problems are not rooted in poor performance. They are rooted in a disconnect between how the business sees itself and how the market sees it. Inside the business, everything feels normal. Processes are routine. Capabilities are expected. Standards are simply "how we do things." But from the outside, those same behaviors often represent a significant competitive advantage. The problem is not that family businesses lack differentiation. The problem is that they fail to recognize—and articulate—it. This is why so many family business problems show up as stalled growth, missed opportunities, or difficulty attracting the next generation of customers. The value exists. It's just not being communicated effectively. The Role of Transition in Amplifying Family Business Problems Generational transition is one of the most critical moments in any family enterprise—and one of the most common times for family business problems to surface. As leadership changes, so does the environment around the business: * New buyers enter the market * Expectations shift * Communication channels evolve If the brand and messaging do not evolve alongside leadership, the business creates friction for itself. Ed describes this as a form of drag—a business moving forward operationally while its identity remains stuck in the past. This is why many family business problems intensify during succession. The next generation is ready to lead. The business may even be strong. But if the story hasn't evolved, the market struggles to connect with what the company has become. Why Family Businesses Still Hold the Advantage Despite these challenges, family enterprises possess advantages that many other organizations cannot replicate. Their long-term perspective, deep relationships, and values-driven approach create a foundation of trust that is difficult to match. In fact, these strengths are exactly what private equity firms are increasingly drawn to. But those advantages only matter if they are visible. When properly articulated, they solve many family business problems: * They accelerate trust * They strengthen positioning * They create continuity across generations Without that articulation, they remain hidden—and the same family business problems persist. A Better Way to Think About Family Business Problems One of the most practical frameworks from this episode is deceptively simple: Every initiative—especially in marketing and growth—should answer one question: Will this deepen an existing relationship, or create a new one? If the answer isn't clear, the initiative is unlikely to solve real family business problems. This principle reinforces a broader truth: family businesses are not just operating companies. They are relationship-driven enterprises. And most family business problems arise when that reality is overlooked. The Path Forward: Translating Legacy Into Growth At its core, this episode is about reframing how leaders think about family business problems. The instinct is often to fix, optimize, or restructure. But in many cases, the solution is simpler—and more strategic: * Clarify what makes the business truly different * Translate legacy into tangible proof * Allow the next generation to express that story in a modern way When those elements align, many family business problems begin to resolve naturally. Because the business was never the issue. It was how the business was being understood. Final Thought Most family business problems are not rooted in weakness. They are rooted in untapped strength. Legacy, when left unexpressed, creates confusion. But legacy, when clearly articulated, becomes one of the most powerful tools a family business has—not just to preserve what was built, but to drive what comes next.

30. mar. 202657 min