INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY CONTEXT

Succession Planning & Governance

Continuity does not occur by default. It is structured deliberately — through disciplined governance, clear authority, and thoughtful succession design across jurisdictions and generations.

For internationally connected families, wealth structures often outlive the circumstances in which they were created. The governance frameworks that surround them must be maintained with equal care.

STEWARDSHIP PERSPECTIVE

Beyond Transition — Preserving Authority

Wealth structures often outlive the circumstances in which they were created. Over time, governance frameworks may lag behind the evolution of family dynamics, enterprise growth, and jurisdictional exposure — not through neglect, but through the natural pace of change.

Succession planning is not an event tied to retirement or mortality. It is a continuous discipline — ensuring that authority, decision-making clarity, and responsibility remain aligned across time, regardless of what external circumstances produce.

Effective governance protects both the legacy of the past and the stability of the future. It transforms succession from a moment of risk into a moment of structured continuity.

“A family that has governed its wealth with clarity for one generation has built something valuable. Governance that ensures the second generation inherits that clarity, not just the assets, has built something durable.”

Intercorp’s role is not to act as trustee, executor, or fiduciary. It is to ensure that the governance architecture surrounding the family’s wealth remains deliberate, coherent, and forward-looking — so that when transition occurs, it is managed rather than improvised.

CONTINUITY SIGNALS

When Governance Requires Deliberate Attention

Governance frameworks are rarely perceived as inadequate until they are tested. The signals that warrant proactive attention are often subtle — changes in family dynamics, shifts in ownership, or the growing complexity of a structure that was designed for a different generation.

The following conditions signal that governance and succession planning warrant deliberate, independent review — before circumstances force a reactive response.

Family leadership responsibilities are beginning to shift — through generational transition, changing personal circumstances, or the evolution of professional roles within the family enterprise.

Ownership spans multiple generations or jurisdictions — creating complexity that informal governance arrangements were never designed to manage with clarity or consistency.

Informal arrangements that once provided clarity — understood roles, unwritten conventions, trusted relationships — are no longer sufficient as the structure grows or the family evolves.

Long-term control and decision-making authority must be preserved without creating operational disruption or introducing conflict into the transition process.

ADVISORY COORDINATION

Structuring Authority Across Time

Effective governance requires understanding both the origins of wealth and the responsibilities it carries forward. Intercorp coordinates the structural, legal, and advisory inputs necessary to ensure that authority transitions deliberately — and that the framework which supports it remains defensible across generations.
Discipline 01

Decision-Making Clarity

Defining authority, voting rights, and governance protocols that withstand jurisdictional complexity and generational change. Clear governance frameworks reduce the likelihood of dispute and create the conditions for orderly, deliberate transition — rather than contested or improvised succession.
Discipline 02

Generational Alignment

Preparing successors through structured transition frameworks that preserve stability without constraining the next generation’s capacity to lead. Generational alignment is not about replicating the past — it is about equipping the next generation to carry forward the values and intent behind the family’s wealth while exercising their own authority effectively.
Discipline 03

Continuity Architecture

Aligning ownership, control, and fiduciary oversight within a governance framework that supports long-term stewardship — not just the immediate transition. Continuity architecture ensures that structural decisions made today do not foreclose the options available to future generations, and that the governance framework evolves alongside the family it serves.

Disciplined governance ensures authority transitions deliberately — not reactively — preserving stability across generations while creating the conditions for long-term family cohesion.

ADVISORY BOUNDARY

Independent Governance Oversight

Intercorp’s role remains strategic and coordinating — safeguarding continuity without assuming trustee, fiduciary, or execution authority.

Governance advisory of this kind requires a structural independence that is difficult to maintain when the adviser also holds a fiduciary, legal, or product role within the family’s structure. Intercorp’s independence is the condition that allows it to provide objective guidance — free from the conflicts that arise when governance advice and execution authority are held by the same party.

No trustee or fiduciary execution authority in any jurisdiction.

No replacement of existing family office, legal, or trust structures.

Coordination across specialist advisers and jurisdictions without assuming operational authority.

Confidential, need-to-know handling of sensitive family, ownership, and governance information.

GOVERNANCE FRAMEWORK

A governance framework for long-term wealth stewardship typically addresses three interlocking layers — each requiring deliberate design and ongoing coordination.
LAYER 01 — OWNERSHIP
Structural Authority

How ownership is held, how voting rights are exercised, and how economic and governance interests are distributed across the family and its structures.

LAYER 02 — GOVERNANCE

Decision-Making Frameworks

The protocols, bodies, and documented processes through which strategic decisions are made — across family councils, trustee arrangements, and formal board structures.
LAYER 03 — SUCCESSION

Transition Architecture

The structured, sequenced process through which authority, responsibility, and stewardship are transferred — across generations, across jurisdictions, and across time.

ALSO IN THIS PRACTICE

Related Service Areas

The governance challenges of a family enterprise abroad rarely exist in isolation. The following service areas address the structural and transitional considerations that most commonly arise alongside them.

01

International Investment Structuring

02

Protection of Family Business Abroad

03

Corporate Restructuring

05

Adapting to Structural Change

06

Relocation & Lifestyle Transition

Stewardship Begins with Understanding

Governance and succession discussions begin with context — family history, structural realities, and long-term intention. Recommendations follow only after alignment is clearly established, and engagement proceeds only where scope and suitability are mutually confirmed.

Engagements accepted by referral. All introductory discussions are confidential.