Exit Planning Tools for Business Owners

Selling Your Business – the Buyer’s Eyes

Selling your business is much like selling a house. In order to realize the highest price possible, you want it to look its best.

The other day I passed an independent gas station/convenience store. The marquee at the curb advertised  their price for “unlead” gas. Really? Unleaded fuel has been required for new cars since 1975. Lead was completely banned as an additive 22 years ago. That means anyone who has bought a new car in the last 40-plus years, and every driver under 40 years old, has never purchased anything but unleaded gas.

What does that indicate about the maintenance of the business? If it has been decades since they updated their sign, what have they done with their refrigeration, roof, and other, more costly items of the infrastructure? Their P&L and cash flow are suspect, and due diligence will be more extensive. All because the first thing you see is an outdated sign.

First Impressions Count

In Steve Martin’s “LA Story” his girlfriend (Marilu Henner) checks her wardrobe by closing her eyes, spinning around in front of the mirror, opening her eyes, and removing the first thing she notices.

Very early in my working career I was in retail. My training manager taught me the same technique. Each day I walked out to the edge of the street in front of the business. I stood with my back to the business and my eyes closed. “Pretend you’ve never done business with us before,” he told me, “Then turn around, open your eyes, and see how our business looks to a new customer.”

I’ve used that exercise ever since. When I was actively brokering businesses, I remained acutely aware of first impressions. A parking lot with weeds in all the cracks or sidewalk seams. A front office with stacks of unfiled invoices on top of the cabinets. A conference room with six month old notes on the whiteboard. An owner’s office that doubled as storage for samples.

My favorite is the “Employee of the Month” board that was last updated years ago.

Staging for a Sale

Most small business owners seeking to sell ask “What can I do to get the best price?” Surprisingly, many pushed back on my staging suggestions. “I’m selling a profitable business, not a parking lot.” “Those invoices show that we are busy shipping product instead of filing.” “If a new owner wants to reinstate the employee of the month, the board is there and ready.”

Selling your business isn’t a joking matter. I want to do the best job I can for the client. If the first suggestions I make are shrugged off, what will happen when the client has to execute the more difficult tasks like preparing due diligence information?

Fortunately there were other brokers who would gladly list any business, in any condition. I was happy to let these brokers put in the effort. My time was too valuable to invest in a client who refused to see his business through the eyes of a buyer.

Subordinated Debt in an Exit Plan

Subordinated debt can be a key consideration in any sale transaction. Whether you are contemplating a sale to a third party or an internal transfer to employees, the topic of taking second place to a lender will likely come up.

If an outside buyer is financing the purchase, seller notes can be considered as part of a down payment, but any bank will require it to hold second priority to their loan. If the Small Business Administration is involved, they will usually demand that the seller assume some of the risk with a secondary loan. In an internal sale, that will be a requirement.

Risk vs. Reward

As a business owner, you make decisions about good risk and bad risk every day. You extend credit to customers, and spend money on marketing or expansion based on your projection of a future payoff. Subordinated debt is just another risk/reward consideration.

It may allow you to get a higher price (eventually) than demanding an all-cash deal. It can also be the deciding factor in qualifying a buyer for outside financing for the majority of the purchase.

In an internal sale, subordinated debt is frequently a trade-off for time. An exit date may be your choice, or driven by outside factors such as health, family needs or increased competition.

When your target departure date is close, especially if it is two years or less, it is difficult to transfer enough equity to employees for them to qualify for 100% outside financing. The percentage of  the risk that you are willing to bear has a direct impact on what another lender will do.

If you need to leave in less than a year, financing the entire transaction might be your only choice.

Qualifying Subordinated Debt

Some brokers tout the tax advantages of installment sales with 100% seller financing as the best way to sell a business. In my experience, it is more likely to attract unqualified buyers. No reduction in tax rates comes close to the advantages of cash in your pocket.

It’s true that unsecured loans usually carry a higher interest rate due to the lack of security. That might be tempting, but no interest rate is attractive if you don’t get paid.

As a lender, you have the same interest in choosing a qualified buyer as the bank. Using subordinated debt to serve your purposes is a valid tactic. Using it simply because you are the lender of last recourse is probably not.

 

Business Buyers and Disintermediation

In the last post, we discussed the reluctance of many prospective business buyers to deal with the regulatory burden of being an employer or service provider. You may be among the lucky few whose profession doesn’t require licensing. Even better, you may have qualified employees who are able to run the business without you.

There are other issues that concern younger buyers, however. One of these is the threat of disintermediation. That’s a trendy word for what we used to call “bypassing the middle man,” but it applies to many businesses that are being made obsolete by technology.

Disintermediated Businesses

How many business people still rent cars to attend a couple of meetings in a city? With Lyft and Uber, it is frequently easier to call a ride than leave a car in the (expensive) hotel parking for 90% of a visit. I’d be very skeptical of buying a car rental business today.

What happens when (not if) autonomous vehicles become part of daily life? Long-haul trucking will move to non-peak traffic hours, reducing the need for drivers, training schools, highway expansion, truck stops, and perhaps the number of trucks themselves.

Service businesses where the middleman lends expertise (easily duplicated by Internet research) or access to vendors are feeling the crunch already. The warning bell is sounding for mortgage companies, real estate agents, insurance and benefit brokers, employment agencies, printers, publishers, and travel agents.

These businesses won’t go away, but there will be fewer of them, and their margins are eroding.

The rise of robotics and artificial intelligence threatens even the most skilled professions. Legal databases, automated interpretation of medical imaging and free online tax filing are a few examples.

This quote is from a  February 21 essay by Rob Kaplan, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.

As I have been discussing for the past two years, technology-enabled disruption means workers increasingly being replaced by technology. It also means that existing business models are being supplanted by new models, often technology-enabled, for more efficiently selling or distributing goods and services. In addition, consumers are increasingly being able to use technology to shop for goods and services at lower prices with greater convenience—having the impact of reducing the pricing power of businesses which has, in turn, caused them to further intensify their focus on creating greater operational efficiencies. These trends appear to be accelerating.

The Impact on Sellers

The overview of the business seller’s marketplace is straightforward. As I’ve been proselytizing for over a decade in my “Boomer Bust” presentations and books, selling a business will be more challenging, but that doesn’t mean any particular business is unsellable.

As with any other competition, the response is to create differentiation from the rest of the pack. There are a few key factors that top the list of appealing differentiators for business buyers.

  1. Build a business that can run without you. The more you work in your business, the less it is worth.
  2. Train effective management. Employees who understand how to run a profitable business are highly appealing to any prospective buyer. In addition, they can provide you with an alternative to a third-party sale.
  3. Upgrade the value-added component of your offering. If the only benefit you offer to a customer is time and place utility, you are probably toast.

There is another factor that may sound counterintuitive. Design your business so that it requires more expensive employees. If low wage workers are the backbone of what you do, you risk losing the technology arms race with larger competitors. I’ll expand on this in my next post.

The population of business buyers is younger, more technologically savvy, and less inclined to long hours than the generation that is selling. Winning in a competitive marketplace demands that you offer what business buyers want.

 

What’s Wrong with the Buyer Generations?

Many of the upcoming buyer generations can’t or won’t run Baby Boomer businesses. This is (or should be) of concern to sellers everywhere.

“The children now love luxury; they have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise. Children are now tyrants, not the servants of their households.” Attributed to Socrates by Plato.

Elders have been complaining about their offspring for 2,500 years. The complaints change only in the activity bemoaned. “Chatter in place of exercise” is replaced by those damn radios, or automobiles, or television, or rock’n’roll, or cell phones or texting. It’s amazing when you realize that we’ve somehow managed to thrive through eons of generational deterioration.

The Buyer Generations

But one thing is true. Generation X and the Millennials are not attracted, as a group, to many of the businesses run by Baby Boomers. We’ve discussed the macroeconomic trends, demographics, sociographics and psychographics, at length in this column and in my latest book Your ExitMap: Navigating the Boomer Bust.

For the next few columns, we’ll talk about other forces that deplete the number of available and interested buyers, and what you as a seller can do about them. Note that I said “deplete” the number. An attendee at one of my presentations a few weeks ago raised his hand during Q&A and said “There will always be someone willing to buy a profitable business.”

That is probably true, but in any competitive sales situation the challenge is to find and attract a qualified buyer. Most of us do that by targeting our offerings to the buyers we seek, then making certain they are aware of what we are selling. The buyers we seek are those who are willing and able to pay the price we ask. In other words, we play the odds. What we are discussing here is finding willing buyers who are able to pay your asking price.

Regulatory Obstacles

One issue in selling your business is the regulatory environment. Since the 1970’s, Americans have come to accept that basic business qualifications should be legislated. Some 30% of all products and services now require some form of government permission (licenses or certifications) to operate.

When the owner of a business is the sole qualified practitioner for its offerings, he or she has a problem. Selling the business requires either continuing to work in it personally until a new owner is legally qualified, or providing licensed employees with some insurance for the new owner of their retention. (See our column on Stay Bonuses.)

This issue drives many owners’ decision to sell the business to qualified employees. You can include a few licensed practitioners in an ownership group, frequently combining them with non-licensed managers or executives who are more suited to running operations. With a few years of advance planning, an owner can exit with the sale price in hand on the day he or she gives up control.

To be blunt, if you are the only person legally capable of creating, presenting or approving the work of your company, you have a job more than a business. The first step in preparing a saleable enterprise is to make sure it can operate without you.

Death, Taxes and Exit Planning

(This post was published in the Sageworks/ProfitCents blog earlier this week)

Understanding the Post-Ownership Void

As advisors, we understand that our business clients should be preparing for the biggest financial event of their lives – the sale of their business. However, when we ask, “How are you exit planning for your retirement from the business?” we seldom get a straight answer.

Instead, we get any number of comments like: “I still enjoy my business, I’m not thinking about it right now.” “I have a good company. I can sell it whenever I choose.” “Everything is available for the right price. I just haven’t heard it yet.”

These are all ways of evading the fact that they haven’t thought about their life after the sale of their business, and they don’t want to. Why is having the exit planning discussion so challenging? Because, like planning one’s own funeral or purchasing life insurance, it is frightening to contemplate the end of one’s professional career.

What I Do is Who I Am

Most business owners, particularly founders, find it difficult to separate their business from their own identity. The business is who they are. At family gatherings they overhear, “There’s Bob. He owns his own business, you know.”

The ownership of their business permeates their relationships. They are, “Bob Smith, the owner of Smith Manufacturing.” Not only in their business circles, but also at their church, in their children’s schools and their friendships. The business is their persona.

Contemplating life after ownership is scary. Who am I if I’m not me? Will I be treated the same? Can I command the same respect if I don’t have employees? Will my opinion still matter? Will others see me as successful without the trappings of a company around me?

Some owners have the confidence to leave a business with no concern about how others will perceive them. Most, however, associate retirement on some level with failure. While owning their business, they got a small shot of adrenalin every time they were asked to make a decision, which was usually many times a day. They fear a life without those little rewards, albeit unconsciously.

Understanding this reluctance to explore the void that retirement creates is a vital part of an advisor’s ability to serve their business clients. It’s easy to say, “Okay, I’ll be here whenever you want to talk about it.” But this alone is a disservice. Planning the most important financial event of a client’s life should be a priority, not an afterthought.

Have a Safety Net

When a client avoids the exit planning question, have a safety net. Selling a business is a competitive endeavor. No smart owner would enter a new market without knowing what his competition looks like. Just because someone isn’t thinking about an exit doesn’t mean that he or she shouldn’t do anything today. Getting the conversation started is one of the most valuable services you can offer.