Family Office
Single Family Office: Three Different Types For Efficient Asset Transmission

There are different forms of family office and understanding the variations and the reasons for these is important for those working in the space.
The following article is from Gilles Erulin, founder of Westwick Melrose & Cromwell, a hands-on consulting firm that supports families with family offices in managing extraordinary challenges. The editors hope these insights about family office models are illuminating.
This news service regularly looks at how family offices are set up. For example, a few days ago, we examined how FOs' use of private equity affects the way family offices are set up. Back in 2021, we reviewed a book by Edward Marshall and Bill Woodson about family offices and all their different formats.
Remember, these articles are meant to start conversations so please contact the editors with your own views. The usual disclaimers apply to view of outside contributors. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com and amanda.cheesley@clearviewpublishing.com
In the next 10 years, an unprecedented shift in wealth will
happen as trillions of dollars will move from one generation to
the next. Referred to as “The Great Wealth Transfer,” this
phenomenon will have a major impact on the way wealth is managed
globally. Merrill Lynch research estimates that $84 trillion will
change hands by 2045, with Baby Boomers passing on their fortunes
to Gen X, Millennials, and even younger generations. Considering
that 70 per cent of families lose their wealth by the second
generation (G2) and 90 per cent by the third generation (G3),
massive amounts of wealth and numerous assets under control are
at risk of disappearing into thin air.
Has anyone among us lived through such a massive transfer? We
doubt it. So how have families prepared for this, and with what
long-term goal in mind? This question is worth exploring. For
principals – the current holders of wealth and power – a family
office is probably the greatest tool to plan and execute the
transmission of assets to the next generation. Its role is to
provide a centralised structure for holding and managing family
assets, ensuring that financial, legal, and strategic elements
are seamlessly coordinated.
As discussed below, it can also be the tool for executing a
power transfer in an organised way.
Additionally, family offices provide transparency and facilitate
alignment among family members, which, as we all know, is the
greatest threat to wealth preservation during transition moments.
Family life, focused on preserving unity, applies equally to
wealth. Unity may seem like a boring concept to many, but it is
undisputed that disunity can be extremely costly.
The saying goes, “When you’ve seen one family office, you’ve seen
ONE family office.” While they share a common set of
characteristics in terms of purpose and modus operandi, a “family
office” is not a standardised organisational model. It is a
highly customisable entity designed to serve the unique needs of
wealthy families or individuals. After analysing the multitude of
frameworks now in existence, we concluded that principals can
(and need to) choose from three main categories for their family
office. Their decision typically depends on family dynamics and
expectations regarding how the family will remain united
– or not – after their passing.
1. Asset manager
The goal of this type of FO is to grow the family’s wealth for
the benefit of both current and future generations, acting as a
traditional collective asset manager. It oversees and manages
diversified portfolios aligned with the family’s long-term goals
and risk appetite. By recruiting an expert team and centralising
asset management, the family office pools resources to navigate
complex financial markets and invest in alternative assets such
as private equity, real estate, or art.
This approach ensures that assets are professionally managed at
minimal cost (the FO costs) while accessing diversification
opportunities resulting from the unified pool of assets under
management.
In this setup, family members determine the long-term strategy
and act as ultimate decision-makers on portfolio allocation,
relying on the expertise of a specialised asset management team.
Occasionally, a family member may take on a more operational role
within the asset management FO. However, such a decision does not
(or should not) involve a power transfer component.
2. Wealth carrier
This type of family office is primarily dedicated to the
transmission of assets that are, at least in part, intended to
remain under the family’s control or ownership. This could
include the family’s historical company, perhaps one carrying the
family’s name, or assets that benefit from direct family
involvement in management or oversight. Unlike the asset manager
model, this structure focuses not only on regular distributions
among heirs but also on maintaining long-term control.
These family offices play a critical role in preserving family
operational knowledge and ensuring continuity. Unlike the third
model described below, they are not designed to concentrate
control in the hands of one family member.
By establishing a clear framework for long-term asset
transmission, the FO (and its team) simplifies the operational,
tax, financial, and legal challenges that accompany generational
transfers. Separating the emotional aspects of succession from
the technical management of one or a small group of controlled
assets reduces the likelihood of poor or erratic operational
management, especially during transition moments.
3. Dynastic succession
This model emerges when the current principal(s) want one or a
very small group of heirs to retain full ownership of a family
business. The principal(s) aim to keep the dynastic business
tightly held, ensuring concentrated power protects what they
expect to be a perpetual holding.
Heirs will naturally be divided between those who remain involved
and those who exit. The remaining heir(s) are tasked with
corporate oversight and the responsibility of extracting
sufficient wealth or leveraging dynastic assets to generate
distributable wealth. Departing heirs are progressively bought
out, initially under the current principal’s watch and later by
the chosen heir(s), based on a fair valuation mechanism designed
to ensure equitable compensation for their entitlement.
This process usually takes 10 to 20 years and requires sustained
efforts to create wealth separate from the “dynastic asset.”
Dynastic succession is not merely about wealth transfer; it
involves dividing wealth between passive wealth and controlling
ownership.
Since this structure relies heavily on the remaining heirs’
skills and preparation, it is also the riskiest. It demands
extensive foresight and decisions that are challenging to revisit
a decade later. This approach is rarely, if ever, a late-stage
strategy, as it requires a significant reserve of “non-dynastic
assets” to be successfully accumulated over time. The more
exiting heirs there are, the earlier – and more challenging
– the process becomes.
In summary, deciding at inception – or very soon thereafter
– what the key purpose of the FO is regarding transmission
is crucial. The three models outlined here may not be exhaustive
but they cover the vast majority of available options. This
critical decision should primarily take into account family
dynamics and the ability to remain united when the time for
difficult conversations about succession arises.
About the author
With over 30 years of experience in corporate family office
governance and management—including 26 years as a senior
executive at the Pinault family office—Gilles has led a wide
range of transactions, advisory mandates, and board roles. In
2013, he founded Westwick Melrose & Cromwell (WMC), a hands-on
consulting firm dedicated to supporting families and their family
offices.