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Note From the Editor: July 2020 2020-07-22Note From the Editor: July 2020 2020-07-22

Editor in Chief Susan R. Lipp discusses this month's issue.

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator, Editor in Chief

July 22, 2020

1 Min Read
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The COVID-19 pandemic continues to take its toll on U.S. businesses, as well as on the economic, physical and psychological well-being of everyone living through it. No sector is immune, including family offices. So, it’s no surprise that many of the articles in our High-Net-Worth Families & Family Offices Committee Report focus on how family offices are adapting to this new reality and the lessons they’ve learned from dealing with it. For example, according to Jonathan Carroll, Catherine Fankhauser and Robert A. Stover, Jr., in their article “How Family Offices Navigate Disruption,” p. 54, family offices with a structured business approach and risk management that included contingency plans were more resilient when the pandemic abruptly closed normal operations. And, in “Reinventing Family Enterprise After the Pandemic,” p. 39, Dennis T. Jaffe provides tools for how family enterprises—small and large family businesses and financial entities like family offices—can reinvent themselves and emerge from the upheaval. Other issues discussed in the Committee Report include how the pandemic has changed the way family offices approach philanthropy, how to talk about the taboo topic of money, the “Inheritance Effect” (that is, the consequences that can arise from inheriting business wealth rather than earning it through personal investment or sweat equity) and what the family office of the future will look like.   

During this time of uncertainty, individuals of all wealth levels may find themselves thinking about estate planning and what items of tangible personal property they might want to leave to members of their families. As “Division of Tangible Personal Property,” p. 25, by Sandra D. Glazier reveals, these decisions can cause distress. She provides 12 different scenarios that illustrate the various complexities that may arise and how to avoid them. 

About the Author

Susan R. Lipp - Moderator

Editor in Chief, Trusts & Estates Magazine

Susan R. Lipp is editor in chief of Trusts & Estates magazine, the WealthManagement.com Journal for estate-planning professionals. She oversees both the print and online version of T & E, as well as the monthly e-newsletter articles.
Susan served in leadership positions at Vendome Group, LLC (formerly Brownstone Publishers, Inc.) with editorial responsibility for publications and newsletters. Following her tenure at Vendome Group, Susan joined Community Housing Improvement Program (CHIP) as General Counsel, where she was editor in chief of its monthly newsletter and implemented initiatives to educate members on legal requirements. Susan began her career at Rosenberg and Estis, P.C., a real estate law firm in New York City.
Susan holds a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from Brandeis University. She received her Juris Doctor Law degree from Hofstra University School of Law, graduating with distinction and having served as Associate Editor of the Law Review. Susan is admitted to practice law in New York State and is a member of the New York State Bar Association.