Sunset Business Advisors
  • Home
  • Sellers
  • Buyers
  • Business Valuations
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact Us

Be Prepared Before Selling Your Business - Five Tips

6/22/2016

1 Comment

 
There may not be better time to sell a business than now. Values are high and interest rates are low. They may not stay that way for long. If you would like to sell your business now or any time in the foreseeable future, the time to begin planning is now.

Based on my experience as a M&A Advisor helping clients during the sale, merger, and acquisition process, here are five tips to consider and act upon now:
  1. Early in the process, consult key decision-makers and those who will be affected by the deal. Determine who will have a say in the deal and consult with them, even if they are minority owners. If your business is family owned, talk to your family members as soon as possible. Involving your family at the outset can help minimize potential family problems later. This is particularly important if a second or third generation is involved and family members expect to take over or profit from the business. Making sure that family members understand what is going on can help keep harmony in the family.
  2. Determine whether and for how long you would like to continue to work after the sale. This can be a tough one. You have to be honest with yourself. It is not a bad idea to discuss this with your significant other. This decision is dictated for many by their age, health, and lifestyle preferences. Older business owners may be more prepared to retire and step away than younger ones who may need or want regular incomes to support their lifestyles or remain active. In general, at a minimum, it is a good idea to be prepared to continue working in some capacity during a transition period. In some cases with financial buyers, you might continue to run the business for years until the next sale.
  3. Organize your documents in advance. Well-structured corporate and financial documents and sound record-keeping practices always make good business sense. Getting your books and records in order now will help keep you from scrambling for documents when potential buyers conduct their due diligence. Keep all your financials, vendor contracts, and customer contracts easily accessible. You will derive immediate benefits from this, as you will be in better shape running your business today with good, timely information.
  4. Determine whether you want a partial or total exit. Private equity firms and other financial buyers can either buy control or minority positions. In a total exit, you might maximize the consideration you receive, especially if you sell to a strategic buyer (although financial buyers are currently aggressive when it comes to pricing). In a partial exit, there are many social issues to consider that might be just as important as what you receive. If you are going to partner with a private equity firm, the comfortability factor may be more crucial than the dollar amount, since you will not get that until the final exit when you sell your remaining ownership interest.
  5. Have realistic expectations of value. Ask your advisors to provide realistic guidance on the value of your business. Too often, I hear stories from frustrated sellers who regret having hired advisors who gave unrealistic valuation numbers just so they would get the job. It is equally important for sellers to be realistic and not merely pick whatever numbers they think they need to sustain their lifestyles. A multiple of earnings or EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) is the way most buyers determine what they are willing to pay for a business. The more you earn, and the higher your future projected growth, the more you can expect buyers to pay for your business. The amount buyers are willing to pay also will vary depending upon factors including your company’s size, stability, industry, and working capital needs. It also is important to have a diverse customer base, as your valuation will be hurt if your revenue is heavily concentrated with one or two clients.
Without a doubt, a little planning now can go a long way to help ensure you obtain the maximum value for your business and achieve your specific goals associated with the sale of your business. Contact Sunset Business Advisors today at 251.751.4744.
1 Comment

Keys to Selling a Business

6/13/2016

0 Comments

 
For all entrepreneurs, selling a business is a complex and delicate process that requires preparation, shrewd maneuvering and self-control — while still running a company. Considering the tensions, it’s no surprise a lot of sure-fire deals short-circuit at the negotiation table, souring what should be a cause for celebration.

For many business owners striking deals is a core competency. At any given time, a CEO might be involved in day-to-day transactions with customers and vendors, decision-making with colleagues and partners, or deliberations with senior management and a board of directors. But ultimately, negotiating and closing the sale of a business takes greater acumen, nerve and awareness than any other transaction in an owner’s life.

Ideally, an exit plan is devised on day one and baked into the business, making an eventual sale as strategic and streamlined as possible. Realistically, this level of preparedness borders on omniscience. It’s unlikely that any business follows a strict timetable, growing exactly according to plan. Whether the sale is impeccably planned or event-driven, a few basic guidelines can help a business owner more predictably drive a positive outcome.

Embrace Process

Selling a business is a process that culminates in a closing. It takes time to build a team, market the business, conduct due diligence, negotiate and close. Start to finish, the sale of ones’ business could take well over a year. Even with an eager buyer on the line, negotiations typically play out over several months.

Given the level of complexity of such a transaction, the last thing a seller wants is to be under the gun. Of course, some sales are forced by unplanned events — the three dreaded D’s, death, divorce, disease — but entrepreneurs will be best served to resist sacrificing process for pace. Shortcuts do not make a more efficient sale. The key is to be prepared enough to strike while the iron is hot.

Partner Up

Finding a qualified and experienced M&A advisor / Business Broker is key to a successful sales transaction.  A broker or M&A advisor can provide expertise that leads to a superior outcome. Not only do they have a specialized Rolodex of contacts, knowledge of business synergies and experience selling and buying similar businesses, but they allow a CEO to keep some focus on running the business during a critical time. An intermediary also provides cool-headedness during a sometimes antagonistic negotiation. Deal making has been described as 50% economics, 50% emotion.

Along the way, an accountant and lawyer maybe necessary. Before a buyer comes to the table, a seller will have to assemble a mountain of bulletproof paperwork, including a business overview, client and supplier contracts, confidentiality agreements, insurance policies, relevant compliance reviews (environmental, occupational safety), an up-to-date balance sheet, and at least the last three years of profit and loss statements and corporate tax returns.

The Devil is in the Details

Particularly in a transaction of such scale and complexity as the sale of a business, the details cannot be overlooked. Nobody likes surprises, least of all potential buyers. Resolving all outstanding legal or accounting issues before bringing a company to market can help avoid any peripheral concerns. Transparency is catnip for deal makers, instilling confidence and good faith where doubt once lurked. Cautious buyers do not pay a premium.

No Pain, No Mutual Gain

Negotiation has been dubbed the art of letting opponents have your way, but a more applicable — and political — definition is that negotiation grants each party what it wants most at the least cost to the other. Especially considering the lengthy, involved process of selling a business, the resulting deal should be viewed not as a zero-sum game but as a compromise that leads to mutual gain. A win-win between buyer and seller is not unattainable, but often takes months to finesse.

No matter how you define it, negotiation is a meeting of extremes, with the seller and buyer frequently at odds. However, hard-nosed negotiating does not preclude accommodation. While sticking points abound, including price, payment schedule, deal structure — the legal and financial form that the deal takes — a principled process will focus on compatibility, preventing hurdles from becoming landmines.

Know Thyself

A seller needs to identify precisely what a successful sale means to them. This is not as simple as it sounds. Concessions will be necessary, so prioritizing goals — cash, a job, freedom from future liabilities — and identifying bargaining points is key. Sale price is often paramount, but it should not be the exclusive focus. Spending time on deal structure and evaluating the impact an acquisition will have on the business and its employees are important exercises for a selling CEO. Taking into consideration the different type of buyers can help a CEO weigh where his bargaining chips might lie.  For example, a private equity firm would treat the business differently from an existing competitor or a first time business buyer.

Fixating on price is myopic, and often creates an adversarial and unproductive negotiation. In order to settle on a sale price range, obtain a value from an outside expert or CPA, then identify a “best case” price before moving to a more realistic go-to-market price. This can be difficult for business owners, who tend to be generous with their own valuations. Lastly, the minimum acceptable price for the business should be determined. Below this threshold a business owner should be prepared to walk away.

Stand In Their Shoes

A seller should strive to understand the buyer’s motivation, finding a way to dovetail interests by evaluating the priorities of the opposing party. In-depth knowledge and understanding of the buyer not only encourages cooperation but can boost a seller’s bargaining power. Knowing what strategic value the deal holds for a buyer — the added capabilities and competitive advantage conferred, rather than just the financial value — can help a seller command top dollar. Finally, do not build castles in the air: No matter how amenable a potential buyer seems, a letter of intent is not a blood oath. Business owners should always have a plan B if negotiations fizzle.

Of course, not every deal was meant to be. Never be afraid to walk away. If a negotiation does break down, end on a positive note, leaving open the possibility of resuming talks. However, never threaten to walk away unless its genuine. It’s not a bargaining tactic.

Inking the Deal

Closing is not the time for second-guessing or skepticism; it is the consummation of a protracted and mindful process. A sale should bring certainty, not unease. That is why it is best to adopt an approach that embraces process, addressing the complexities of a deal full on, rather than shrinking from them. From pre-sale planning to marketing to negotiation, each stage should be used to strengthen the deal, not just entrench the seller-side position. What’s more, a deliberate and painstaking process not only reaps rewards, but does credit to the years of work a CEO spent building his business.

As a selling CEO, this will be the biggest deal of your life. Make the most of it.


0 Comments

    Jeremy Hovater

    President, Sunset Business Advisors

    Archives

    June 2017
    May 2017
    April 2017
    December 2016
    November 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    June 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    February 2016
    January 2016
    December 2015
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    June 2015
    May 2015
    April 2015
    March 2015

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
Photo used under Creative Commons from bvi4092