Winding River Consulting | Blog of Industry Thought Leaders

Succession Planning Beyond the Next Partner: Why Continuity Depends on Developing Leaders at Every Level

Written by Rachel Anevski, DBA, PHR, SHRM-CP | Jul 13, 2026

Most succession plans in professional services firms are too narrow. They focus on replacing the next partner, managing retirement timelines, or satisfying a governance requirement.

But in an environment shaped by rapid growth, AI disruption, ownership changes, and generational turnover, succession is a system, not an event. Systems that prepare only one layer inevitably fail. To ensure long-term stability, a much more intentional approach is required.

Succession Extends Beyond Senior Leadership

Traditional succession planning assumes stability: slow transitions, predictable exits, deep benches. Today, firm’s face a much more volatile environment:

  • Mid-level leaders burning out or departing
  • Managers promoted without judgment readiness
  • Cultural fractures during growth or integration
  • Knowledge walking out the door long before retirement
  • Making sound decisions consistently
  • Handling pressure with composure
  • Developing others deliberately
  • Acting in alignment with stated values
  • Identify leadership capabilities early in careers
  • Expose developing leaders to real responsibility gradually
  • Normalize decision-making and accountability before promotion
  • Make development visible, intentional, and expected

When succession planning concentrates only at the top, firms miss the layers where continuity actually erodes.

Trust as the Hidden Variable

Succession failures rarely stem from competence alone. They stem from trust: trust from staff, clients, and peers that leadership transitions will not destabilize the firm.

Trust forms long before titles change. It develops when people observe leaders:

If these behaviors are not visible before succession, no announcement will establish them afterward.

Building a Multi-Level Succession System

Our research reinforces that leadership readiness must be cultivated at multiple points in the organization. Effective succession systems:

This requires firms to stop treating development as optional or episodic. Succession must be designed into how work is assigned, how feedback is delivered, and how leaders are evaluated.

Culture Operates on the Longest Timeline

Titles change quickly. Culture does not. When firms fail to prepare leaders who understand and embody the firm's culture, continuity erodes even when technical excellence remains intact. This risk intensifies during mergers, private equity investment, or rapid expansion, when cultural drift accelerates.

Reframing How You Look at Succession Planning

If three key leaders left tomorrow, who would people trust to lead, and why? This subtle reframe transforms how firms looking at succession planning, positioning leadership development as risk management, culture preservation, and long-term viability.

Succession planning beyond the next partner is not about preparing replacements: its about ensuring the firm can endure regardless of who holds the title next.

Winding River Consulting helps firms build succession systems that extend beyond the partnership level. Through leadership development programs and strategic consulting, we support firms in making continuity structural. Get in touch.