CSI Financial Planning II study guide for succession, estate freezes, and continuity planning, with learning objectives, integrated planning decision cues, and exam traps.
Succession, estate freezes, and continuity planning is part of the CSI Financial Planning II (FP II) financial planning for small business topic area, which carries 15% of the exam emphasis. Treat this section as an integrated planning lesson: FP II usually tests whether a recommendation still works after retirement, tax, insurance, business, family law, estate, cash-flow, and implementation consequences are considered together.
| Concept | What to know for FP II |
|---|---|
| Integrated issue | Explain how succession planning links business continuity, estate planning, retirement planning, and family objectives |
| Client fact | Distinguish an estate freeze from other business succession strategies at the level needed for owner-manager planning decisions |
| Second-order effect | Evaluate when continuity planning should prioritize sale readiness, family transfer, or income security for the owner |
| Advisor action | Determine how death, disability, or relationship breakdown can affect the value and continuity of a small business |
| Documentation cue | Assess how shareholder or partnership arrangements may support or undermine succession planning |
| Exam trap | Identify the planning issue that should be addressed first before recommending a business-transition strategy |
FP II scenarios often contain more facts than a single topic requires. That is intentional. The exam is testing whether you can identify the dominant planning issue, spot the second-order consequence, and choose a recommendation sequence that is workable rather than merely clever.
Read each case for timing, liquidity, tax status, family obligations, business ownership, insurance exposure, estate documents, and client capacity to implement the recommendation. A strategy that solves one problem can create another if those facts are ignored.
| If the stem shows… | Prefer an answer that… |
|---|---|
| one strategy looks attractive in isolation | test its tax, cash-flow, insurance, retirement, estate, family law, and business consequences |
| facts are missing or assumptions are stale | clarify, document, or review before treating the recommendation as final |
| legal, tax, business, or family law facts drive the outcome | scope the advice carefully and bring in specialist input when needed |
| two answers are technically possible | choose the one that is more feasible, better sequenced, and easier to implement |
Start with the dominant planning issue, then run a quick cross-check across related planning areas. Ask whether the proposed answer changes taxable income, survivor protection, retirement income timing, business continuity, legal obligations, or estate administration. If it does, the stronger answer usually names the sequencing or documentation step that keeps the plan defensible.
FP II often rewards conservative process discipline when a case becomes complex. The correct answer may not be the most advanced tactic. It is the recommendation that best fits the facts, respects implementation constraints, and reduces avoidable planning risk.
After this section, write a two-column note: the immediate recommendation on one side and its cross-area consequences on the other. FP II questions often turn on that second column.
When reviewing practice questions, underline words that signal integration: spouse, corporation, separation, estate, beneficiary, tax, retirement income, disability, debt, liquidity, sale, succession, and review. Those cues often decide why the best answer is not the narrow answer.
Return to the FP II guide for the full topic map, or use the FP II Cheat Sheet for integration cues, formulas, and final review tables.