The Columbus Dispatch

Boomer business retirement­s can bring opportunit­y

- Your Turn Brian Morris Guest columnist

There is a saying: Never let a crisis go to waste. Now is the time to leverage the sense of urgency accompanyi­ng COVID-19 to develop long-term solutions for making central Ohio’s economy stronger, more resilient, and likelier to withstand whatever’s thrown at us next.

Even before the pandemic, central Ohio’s small businesses were running straight into the headwinds of the Silver Tsunami. That’s the colorfully dramatic term for baby-boom business owners trying last minute to figure out if and how their businesses will outlast them when they haven’t done anything resembling a succession plan. Which is a big deal, since 80% of small businesses have no succession plan. And no succession plan means the real possibilit­y that the company disappears.

The Ohio Employee Ownership Center (OEOC) found 1,655 Franklin County businesses — with a combined workforce of nearly 55,000 jobs — at risk of going away when their Baby Boom owners retire, sell, or die. But the good news is this once-in-a-generation COVID/SILVER Tsunami collision offers central Ohio an opportunit­y to fortify small businesses and the workers who build them.

One of the most effective but least utilized ways to improve small business survival odds is to convert more of them to Employee Stock Ownership Plan companies (ESOPS) or worker cooperativ­es. That’s because worker-owned companies are 25 percent more likely to stay afloat in bad times than traditiona­l closely held businesses.

Worker-owned companies also have higher growth rates, hire more people and trigger virtually no loan defaults. Maybe that’s because highly motivated worker-owners retire with 2.5 times the asset value compared with their counterpar­ts who retire from traditiona­l businesses, giving worker-owners a whole new level of commitment to their companies’ success.

Central Ohio political leaders and economic developers need to look closely at the expansion of worker owned businesses as a mainstream business retention strategy and a critical measure of the region’s economic developmen­t success. And we can meet this critical measure by making central Ohio the national leader in converting Silver Tsunami businesses into sustainabl­e worker-owned enterprise­s.

And here’s how central Ohio political leaders and economic developers should immediatel­y begin work on a strategic initiative with business groups, financial and legal services firms, worker ownership advocates, and others to:

• Identify and prioritize businesses — with particular emphasis on minority-owned firms — most at risk of vanishing when the owner moves on.

• Determine the specific challenges that stand between these businesses and worker ownership.

• Provide these businesses with in-kind and lowcost legal, financial, and technical assistance in exchange for their commitment to converting quickly

• Strengthen grant, taxation, public contractin­g, loan, and other programs to encourage worker ownership. Sustainabl­e economic developmen­t is firmly rooted in business resilience and worker equity. In other words, it’s time to build back better. Brian Morris operates Morris Communicat­ions, a Columbus marketing/public affairs firm. He serves as Chair of the Workforce Developmen­t Board of central Ohio’s Business Solutions Committee.

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