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Poster for Succession (2018)

Succession

Directed by Mark Mylod, Adam McKay (pilot) · written by Jesse Armstrong

Series · 2018 · 4 seasons · ~39h total

Starring Brian Cox, Jeremy Strong, Sarah Snook, Kieran Culkin.

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I love you, but you are not serious people.
Logan Roy (Brian Cox), Succession (S4)

The lens

A cautionary tale

The argument

Central thesis

Succession is HBO's four-season anatomization of what happens when a founder's company outlasts the founder's ability to choose a successor — and the children fight, and lose, and fight, and lose, with neither the temperament nor the legitimacy to take what they were raised to inherit. Brian Cox's Logan Roy is the founder's shadow side: the one who built it, the one who can't let it go, the one whose children are warped by his presence and useless without it.

The series's structural genius is to make every meeting bend toward Logan — every approval, every move, every decision routed through him whether he's in the room or on a yacht. By season three you understand viscerally what founder dependency looks like at scale. The company can't make decisions without Logan. When Logan dies — mid-season-four, abrupt and consequential — the children prove it: not one of them can hold the wheel.

For founders, Succession isn't a manual; it's a warning. The company you build will outlive you. The succession question isn't who do I love? It's who can hold the work after me — and have I structured the work so that holding it is possible? Most founders, like Logan, never answer this question. They assume the children — or the deputies, or the co-founders, or the second-in-command — will figure it out. The series watches them not figure it out, for thirty-nine episodes.

The hook

The founder lesson

The company you build will outlive you. The succession question isn't who you love — it's who can hold the work without you.

Three founder lessons.

First, the bus factor at 100%. Every Waystar meeting bends toward Logan. Every approval the children seek is a bid for his presence as much as a business decision. The cost is hidden until it isn't. For first-time founders, the lesson hits earlier than succession: if you stepped away for six months, who could run the company? If the answer is nobody, you don't have a company — you have a personal franchise. Succession shows what that becomes after thirty years.

Second, Kendall's pattern. Across all four seasons: rebellion, capitulation, rebellion, capitulation. He never builds independent legitimacy. Every move he makes is in reaction to Logan, even when Logan is dead. You can't compete with your founder by becoming a softer version of them. Founders raising successors-in-waiting often miss this — the successor needs space to fail and recover independently, not just operational handoffs. Without that space, the heir spends a lifetime auditioning for a part the parent will never give them.

Third, the cost paid by the children. The series is brutal about what Logan's presence has done to his kids — Roman's arrested development, Shiv's cynicism, Connor's loneliness, Kendall's addictions. Founders whose children grow up inside or adjacent to the company should watch this with care. Logan's love isn't insufficient; it's the wrong shape for what the kids needed. The work he gave them shaped them in ways neither he nor they chose. The tragedy isn't that he loved them poorly — it's that he loved them through the company, and the company isn't a vessel that can carry love without distorting it.

0 takeaways

What to remember

    Practice CardOne-screen exercise

    What's your bus factor?

    Tomorrow morning, write down: if you disappeared for six months, what specifically would happen to the company?

    Be granular. Sales calls would stop because only I do them. Engineering would slow to a third because I review every PR. The fundraise wouldn't close because the term sheet is in my head. Hiring would freeze because every candidate ends with my interview.

    Each item is a single point of failure — also your bus factor.

    Pick the top three and design a six-month plan to reduce each to a deputy who can hold the line. Not delegation; succession in miniature. Re-do this every six months. Logan never did it. The company paid for thirty years.

    If you have children — or co-founders' children, or younger siblings — growing up inside or adjacent to the company, the same exercise has a softer twin: what shape am I giving them by being who I am to them now? Logan's love wasn't insufficient; it was the wrong shape for what the kids needed. Founders whose families are entangled with the work owe themselves this question.

    Share with a founder who's deciding whether to keep going.