managing-next-generation-planning

Structures next-generation wealth education and involvement with financial literacy and responsibility programs. Use when preparing next generation, designing wealth education, or managing family learning programs.

11 stars

Best use case

managing-next-generation-planning is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.

Structures next-generation wealth education and involvement with financial literacy and responsibility programs. Use when preparing next generation, designing wealth education, or managing family learning programs.

Teams using managing-next-generation-planning should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.

When to use this skill

  • You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.

When not to use this skill

  • You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
  • You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.

Installation

Claude Code / Cursor / Codex

$curl -o ~/.claude/skills/managing-next-generation-planning/SKILL.md --create-dirs "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/CaseMark/skills/main/skills/finance/managing-next-generation-planning/SKILL.md"

Manual Installation

  1. Download SKILL.md from GitHub
  2. Place it in .claude/skills/managing-next-generation-planning/SKILL.md inside your project
  3. Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill

How managing-next-generation-planning Compares

Feature / Agentmanaging-next-generation-planningStandard Approach
Platform SupportNot specifiedLimited / Varies
Context Awareness High Baseline
Installation ComplexityUnknownN/A

Frequently Asked Questions

What does this skill do?

Structures next-generation wealth education and involvement with financial literacy and responsibility programs. Use when preparing next generation, designing wealth education, or managing family learning programs.

Where can I find the source code?

You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.

SKILL.md Source

# Managing Next Generation Planning

Structures next-generation wealth education and involvement programs, coordinating financial literacy curricula, governance participation tracks, and responsibility milestones across rising-generation family members.

## When To Use

- A wealth management team is designing an education program for heirs or rising-generation family members
- A family office needs to assess readiness of next-gen members for governance roles, trust distributions, or investment committee participation
- Advisors are building age-appropriate financial literacy milestones tied to wealth transfer timelines
- A family is onboarding young adults into understanding existing trust structures, investment portfolios, or philanthropic vehicles
- Preparing next-gen members for participation in family meetings, investment reviews, or foundation board service

## Inputs To Gather

- **Family demographics**: Ages, education levels, career stages, and current financial literacy of each rising-generation member
- **Wealth structure overview**: Trust types, distribution triggers, governance documents, investment vehicles, and philanthropic entities the next generation will eventually interact with
- **Family values and mission**: Any existing family mission statement, charter, or governance document expressing values around wealth stewardship
- **Current education efforts**: Prior financial education, mentorship arrangements, internship programs, or family meeting participation already in place
- **Timeline drivers**: Upcoming trust distributions, age-based triggers, governance succession dates, or wealth transfer milestones that create urgency
- **Advisor team**: Wealth advisors, trustees, family therapists, estate attorneys, and other professionals involved in next-gen development

## Workflow

1. **Profile each rising-generation member**
   - Document age, education, career stage, personality assessments (if available), and current engagement with family wealth
   - Categorize into development tiers: foundational (under 18), emerging (18-25), transitioning (25-35), and active steward (35+)
   - Note any known concerns: disengagement, overspending patterns, career uncertainty, or family conflict

2. **Map learning objectives to wealth structure**
   - For each tier, define concrete competencies: budgeting basics, understanding trust documents, reading investment statements, evaluating philanthropic grants, participating in governance votes
   - Align objectives with actual family vehicles — e.g., "Understand the terms of the 2018 dynasty trust" rather than generic "learn about trusts"
   - Identify which advisors or family leaders are best positioned to teach each topic

3. **Design the education program**
   - Build age-appropriate curricula with specific modules, timelines, and delivery methods (workshops, mentorship sessions, experiential learning, simulated investment exercises)
   - Include experiential components: shadowing investment committee meetings, managing a small discretionary fund, serving on a junior philanthropy board, attending advisor reviews
   - Schedule progressive milestones that gate increased responsibility — e.g., completing a financial literacy module before receiving discretionary distribution access

4. **Structure governance participation tracks**
   - Define a pathway from observer to voting participant in family governance bodies
   - Specify prerequisites for each level: meeting attendance requirements, education completions, age thresholds [VERIFY against trust documents and family governance charter]
   - Create mentorship pairings between senior family members and rising-generation participants

5. **Establish accountability and assessment**
   - Set measurable checkpoints: completion of modules, demonstrated competency in advisor meetings, feedback from mentors
   - Design periodic readiness assessments for major transitions (first trust distribution, board seat eligibility, investment authority)
   - Build in feedback loops — rising-gen members should have input channels to shape the program

6. **Compile the next-generation planning report**
   - Summarize each member's current profile and development tier
   - Present the education program with timelines, responsible parties, and milestone gates
   - Include governance participation roadmap with prerequisites and target dates
   - Flag any timing risks (e.g., distribution trigger approaching before member has completed readiness program)

## Output

The deliverable is a **Next-Generation Planning Report** containing:

- **Member profiles**: Individual assessments with current tier classification and key development needs
- **Education program**: Structured curriculum with modules, delivery methods, responsible advisors, and completion timelines for each tier
- **Governance roadmap**: Participation pathway from observer to active steward with prerequisites and target dates
- **Milestone schedule**: Calendar of education completions, readiness assessments, and governance transitions aligned with wealth transfer timelines
- **Risk flags**: Members approaching distribution triggers without adequate preparation, disengagement concerns, or gaps in advisor coverage
- **Recommended next steps**: Immediate actions (within 90 days), near-term program launches, and annual review cadence

## Quality Checks

- Every rising-generation member is individually addressed — no member is left without a development path
- Education objectives reference actual family wealth structures (specific trusts, entities, vehicles) rather than generic financial concepts
- Milestone gates align with real distribution triggers and governance dates [VERIFY against trust documents and family charter]
- Program includes both technical competency (reading statements, understanding tax implications) and soft-skill development (decision-making, family communication, stewardship values)
- Readiness assessments are defined with specific criteria, not vague "when ready" language
- The plan identifies who is responsible for delivering each component (advisor, family member, external educator)
- Privacy and sensitivity considerations are addressed — individual assessments should be shared appropriately, not broadcast to all family members
- Annual review cadence is specified to keep the program current as members age and circumstances change

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