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Do you remember the first business advice that you received? For me, I can remember my father telling me, "You cant get rich working for someone else." Unfortunately, like nearly all of the advice that my father has given me over the years, I have completely ignored it for the first 40 years of my life.
But, the longer I work in the estate planning field, the more it becomes clear to me–my father was correct on that piece of guidance. I have certainly found that many people who need estate planning services are owners of a small business.
Think about your best estate-planning clients. How do they earn their money? How many of them are the primary shareholder or a significant shareholder in a closely held business? For such clients, it makes no sense to distinguish between estate planning and business planning. After all, their business is the primary asset in their estate. In some cases, they consider the long-term success of their business as important as the financial security of their family. In fact, many such people assume that the long-term success of their business will provide long-term security for their family.
However, over and over again, I see the same thing occurring–insurance professionals not talking to their estate-planning clients about their business insurance needs. Some advisors feel that business uses of life insurance are complicated. These professionals have practices that focus on income replacement and estate planning. Business insurance is out of their comfort zone. If you are one of these professionals, you are missing a golden opportunity. And, worse yet, you are doing your clients a disservice.
While it might surprise insurance professionals who have focused their practices primarily on estate planning, business insurance is not complicated. In fact, it may be easier than estate planning. The following are several of the key facts that insurance professionals need to know about business uses of life insurance.
Buy-Sell Agreements
All closely-held businesses should have a fully-funded buy-sell agreement. Despite what you may have heard from Washington over the past year, it is not the estate tax that ordinarily causes closely held businesses to fail after the death of a significant owner. Rather, such businesses often fail because the owners have failed to plan for the succession of the business.
Succession planning should begin with a buy-sell agreement, a simple planning concept that is easy for your clients to understand. The corporation (or the other owners) purchases life insurance on the life of the owner, in order to buy out the owners interest in the event of untimely death.
Permanent life insurance is a perfect funding solution for a buy-sell arrangement because the tax-deferred cash value can be used to fund a buyout at retirement or upon the disability of an owner. The death benefit can be used to fund a buyout at death.
Recruiting, Rewarding, and Retaining Key Employees
Non-qualified executive benefits are a key to the long-term success of a closely held business. Recruiting, rewarding, and retaining key employees is the lifeblood of any organization. Without a competitive compensation package, key employees will be picked off by competitors. Business owners often find that it takes years to fully train a replacement after the departure of a key employee–assuming that a qualified candidate can be found. Not surprisingly, the employer will often pay the replacement more than the key employee was making before he or she left.
A key employee who has a compensation package that is enhanced with non-qualified executive benefits is much less likely to jump to a competitor than one who does not. After all, that is why non-qualified benefits are sometimes referred to as a "golden handcuffs." Unlike qualified benefit plans, non-qualified plans can be made available to "select" employees. Such plans can be selective and specifically structured to meet the needs of the business and the individual key employees.
The Key to an Effective Retirement Plan is Tax-Deferred Savings. Deferred compensation can provide considerable benefits to owners of small businesses. Obviously, an owner does not need to worry about retaining himself or herself. However, basic financial realities make deferred compensation a powerful tool to the owners of the business. In effect, this is as easy as realizing that there is more advantage to save for retirement on a pre-tax basis. Example 1 (page 12) demonstrates the power of non-qualified deferred compensation to a business owner.
Qualified Plans Subject Highly-Paid Employees to Reverse Discrimination. Despite receiving some relief in the recently passed tax bill, highly-compensated employees are subject to qualified plan limitations that may cause their qualified plan retirement income to be less of a percentage of final salary than rank-and-file employees. Generally, if an employee earns more than $200,000, his or her qualified retirement benefits will not reflect the additional compensation.
Additionally, defined benefit plans limit annual benefits to the lesser of $160,000 or salary, and defined contribution plans limit an employees annual contribution to the lesser of $40,000 or 25% of salary. Example 2 (this page) demonstrates the impact of "reverse discrimination."
The primary types of non-qualified executive benefit programs are the Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan (SERP) and the Salary Deferral Plan (i.e., Deferred Compensation).