Exit Planning Tools for Business Owners

Will You Be Ready?

Will you be ready when it is time to leave your company? A business owner needs to have a basic business strategy to monitor company financials regularly. Several owners consider this a strategy to prepare for exiting their businesses. However, monitoring company financials is like looking in the rearview mirror. What if you could incorporate a business strategy that looks forward and leads to accelerating profitability and increases business value? In addition, this strategy helps lead to less stress, more free time, and ultimately helps take control of a business exit?

The Active Strategy

The Business Strategy is called Exit Planning. John H. Brown, author of How to Run Your Business So You Can Leave it in Style, writes: “Exit Planning is a process that results in the creation and execution of a strategy allowing business owners to exit their businesses on their terms and conditions. It is an established process that creates a written road map, or Exit Plan, often involving efforts of several professionals, facilitated and led by an Exit Planning Advisor who ensures not only the plan creation but its timely execution.”

Unfortunately, most business owners do not employ this strategy. They are personally unprepared, and their business is not ready when it comes time for them to transition. Ultimately, there is less control over the timing of the exit and even less control over the value they receive when they do exit their business entirely.

What can you do?

Consider this when building an exit strategy:

1. Focus – Adhere to the niche the company serves. Buyers place a premium valuation on focused companies that do one thing very well, better than others. Do not stray from the niche because it destroys value.

2. Develop a Management Team & Reduce Owner Dependency – Ensure the management team can carry on without the business owner when the business sells. It is difficult for the business owner to disengage while they still actively manage. But this is precisely when the owner can create more value—because when the business is not exclusively dependent on the owner, it is worth more! Ask yourself, if I leave today for an extended length of time, will the success of my business be impaired? If your answer is yes, you have not created value. You have created a glorified job.

3. Assess Your Business – Prepare an objective assessment of the company’s current position and potential. A simple SWOT analysis is beneficial. Write down the Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities & Threats of the company.

4. Ensure the Business Has Adequate Capital – The lending markets are often more willing to lend in good times than in bad times. Are you maxing out your credit lines, or do you have a comfortable margin of credit? Are you happy with your current lending relationship? Evaluate alternatives and review your loan covenants regularly.

5. Clean Up the Balance Sheet – Collect past due accounts or write them off if uncollectable. Review customer credit policies. Clean up inventory and take it off the books if obsolete or unsellable. Diligently track personal expenses run through the business. And lastly, call in loans to shareholders and employees.

6. Obtain Financial Audit of Business – Frequently, the company’s accounting has not grown at the speed of the company’s growth. An audit prepared by an objective third-party accounting firm provides a high level of credibility to the business performance.

7. Protect Key Personnel – Obtain employment and non-compete agreements from key employees. The last thing you want is someone leaving just before you decide to exit. The buyer is looking for continuity of Key Personnel. If you have not already tied your integral people to the business, it may be far more expensive to do so at the time of sale.

8. Identify & Mitigate Legal & Environmental Risks – Working with your liability insurance advisor is essential. Unfortunately, until the buyer brings up the subject, this is often left undone.

9. Review Customer Concentration & Overall Operations – Are your vendor contracts assumable/transferable upon sale? Do you derive more than 20% of your revenue from one customer or client?

10. Build Your Team of Advisors – Establish a strong team of qualified accounting, tax, legal, financial, and investment banking professionals. Invite them together at one meeting to establish your expectations of collaboration around your personal & financial goals. Establish recurring management meetings to monitor progress.

While there are many competing needs for a business owner’s time, working on an exit strategy can result in less stress and more time to do the things you want to do instead of need to do. In addition, an exit planning strategy can also enhance profitability and business value, resulting in a win-win for the owner, the owner’s family, and the employees of the business.

Securities and advisory services offered through Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser. Fixed insurance products and services offered through Legacy Planning Partners, LLC or CES Insurance Agency.

Jan Graybill is a Certified Financial Planner® (CFP), and holds the Certified Exit Planning Advisor® (CEPA), Chartered Financial Consultant® (ChFC) and Chartered Life Underwriter® (CLU) professional designations. He is a Managing Partner and CEO of Legacy Planning Partners. For more information about Jan, click here.

Avoiding Financial Anxiety

Financial anxiety
Seek help and avoid financial anxiety
Everyone has financial anxiety to some extent. Whether you have a little money or a lot of money does not make a difference. However, when it comes to asking for help, many people avoid seeking financial advice until necessary.
 
As financial decisions become more complicated, it is far easier to make a mistake. Today more and more people procrastinate on making financial decisions. Procrastination to make financial decisions can ultimately lead to anxiety, delay, or indifference.
 
In this article, I provide three keys to seek out and accept financial advice from a professional advisor. If you recognize the need for help, whether you are a millennial, a baby boomer, or someone in between, you can increase the odds of making beneficial financial decisions. You can avoid making predictable financial mistakes.
 
One may ask, “Why can’t I do all of this on my own?” To which, I would respond, “You don’t know what you don’t know!” An experienced financial planner has many clients that are at different stages of their financial lives. They can use their experience of what has worked and what has not worked to help you arrive at a better outcome. Financial success is not only contributed to by the earnings over a lifetime, but it is also the avoidance of predictable financial mistakes.
 

Who to turn to for Financial Advice?

Let us start with some definitions: A Financial Planner is a professional who helps individuals create a plan to meet long-term and short-term financial goals. A Financial Advisor is a broad term for those who manage money, including investments and insurance products. A Wealth Manager is a financial advisor who utilizes the spectrum of financial disciplines available such as financial and investment advice, legal or estate planning, accounting and tax services, and retirement planning to manage an affluent client’s wealth. Let us place all these labels under the heading of Financial Coaching.
 
You can decide to work with a Financial Coach based on the financial complexity and after an initial meeting without obligation. This initial contact can take place via an introductory phone call or in-person meeting without obligation. At that time, expect to learn about the financial coach’s value proposition. If financial advice is what you seek, a comprehensive planning process should include: assessing your financial needs, educating you on your financial life choices, recommendations, and a timeline for ongoing review of your financial plan.
 

Choosing the right Financial Coach

If comprehensive financial decision-making is what you seek, start by looking for a professional with CFP credentials. The CFP credential stands for “Certified Financial Planner” and is the gold standard for financial professionals engaged in financial planning. In addition, look for senior financial planners who have 10+ years of experience with a support team around them. This team might consist of a client relationship manager and an associate financial advisor who is always available to the client for follow-up and execution of action items. The senior financial planner’s job is to get to know your unique financial needs and manage the overall strategy to achieve your financial goals. This process covers important concepts around economic assessment, risk management, and education related to your unique circumstances.

Accepting Financial Advice

Today, everyone faces increasingly complex financial decision-making. In addition, financial information has become readily available to anyone who searches the internet. However, this information is useless without the wisdom to know how to use it. Is it any wonder we fear making financial decisions? It is often difficult to distinguish good financial choices from bad. As a result, many people make financial decisions without knowing the negative impact they will have on other areas of their financial lives until it is too late to correct them.

Seek out a qualified and experienced financial coach/planner to assist you in making your financial decisions. The results may lead to reducing your anxiety around making financial decisions and ultimately improve your overall fiscal well-being.

Securities and advisory services offered through Commonwealth Financial Network®, Member FINRA/SIPC, a Registered Investment Adviser. Fixed insurance products and services offered through Legacy Planning Partners, LLC or CES Insurance Agency.

Jan Graybill is a Certified Financial Planner® (CFP), and holds the Certified Exit Planning Advisor® (CEPA), Chartered Financial Consultant® (ChFC) and Chartered Life Underwriter® (CLU) professional designations. He is a Managing Partner and CEO of Legacy Planning Partners.