Exit Planning When Kids Don’t Cut It

Many owners want to see their children inherit the business, but what happens when the kids don’t cut it?

Some years ago I worked with a business owner whose exit plan was to sell into one of the private equity roll-ups that were active in his industry. His son was finishing college, where he studied for a career in wildlife management. The son’s ambition was to spend his life in the great outdoors.

One day my client was beaming when I walked into his office. “Guess what?” he said. “My son called. He wants to take over my business!” After a few minutes, it was pretty clear that we weren’t going to have a conversation about experience or qualifications. This owner had a whole new exit plan.

Fortunately, that plan worked out. There was strong management in place, and the son paid his dues in sales and management training before the transition. Not all such shifts work out that way.

When kids don’t cut it

when the kids don't cut itThere was another prospect who gave me my “assignment” for proposing. “My son has been in the business for the last ten years. He seldom shows up. He is nominally in charge of a department, but we do little or no business in that area. He’s abusive when he is here, and all the employees hate him.”

“We (his mother and I) want to sell him the business, and we need him to perform well to fund our retirement. How much will you charge to straighten him out and get him to run the business right so he can pay us?”

I wanted to answer “Infinity,” but chose instead to politely decline the engagement.

I’ve written many times about the attachment a founder has for his or her business. Of course, parents (hopefully) have an even stronger bond with their children. Watching the first client’s face light up when he made the announcement was the best illustration of how important legacy preservation can be to an owner.

Yet, keeping the business in the family isn’t always the best idea. It involves a number of stakeholders, including employees and other children.

Key Employee Issues

For brevity, we will start by presuming that you’ve never promised, indicated, discussed, or even hinted to key employees that they were going to own the company. If you have, that’s a whole different can of worms that we’ll deal with another time.

We also aren’t talking about a succession plan where the son or daughter has always been the heir apparent, and has trained for the position.

Commonly, it’s somewhere in between. The child holds a job in the company, but not the second-in-command position. He or she does it well enough, but isn’t a star. They are interested in ownership (another too-often ignored question,) but their ability to act as CEO in the foreseeable future is doubtful.

Even if key managers aren’t resentful, they are not chattels. Giving ownership to a child is a clear message that their career path has reached a stopping point. It may be an eye-opener, and almost certainly disposes them to look at other opportunities, even if they don’t do so actively. Remember, their loyalty is to you. It isn’t automatically transferrable.

One solution that’s often employed is the perpetuation of the founder/owner. He stays on in a consulting role long after normal retirement age. Often it works out, and it can lend tremendous experience to the company.

If you don’t want to stick around in the “answer man” role, however, you need to secure the continued commitment of the key managers. That should be done through conditional compensation, tied to the continued success of the company. If appropriate, it may also require reaching benchmarks for training the offspring to take the reins of the business.

Long-term compensation can be through virtual equity (Phantom Stock or Stock Appreciation Rights,)  direct profit participation, actual minority equity ownership, or supplemental retirement insurance. It needs to be more than just a salary, though. Someone else can always beat a salary.

Keep Thanksgiving Friendly

The other stakeholders who should be considered are the siblings who don’t work in the business. Often the owner wants to leave the business to the child who has worked in it. The owner’s spouse wants to divide it equally among all the children. Both ways are fraught with issues.

Leaving the entire income-producing capability of the family (the company) to one child can obviously create resentment. On the other hand, forcing that child into a lifetime of working for the benefit of his or her siblings is likely to end family Thanksgivings. No one wants to grow a business only to see a third, or half or three-quarters of the benefit go to bystanders.

Some owners choose to balance their estate with other assets outside the business. If that isn’t practical, we frequently recommend dividing the business equally, but with a valuation formula and documented agreement to sell the inherited shares to the active child or children. Everyone benefits from the parent’s work, but going forward the active child keeps any increase in profits (and also bears the risk of any decline.)

Passing the legacy of a successful enterprise to children can be one of the greatest thrills of a parent’s life. When the kids don’t cut it, however, it is wise to face facts and plan accordingly.  Glossing over the issues will inevitably lead to more pain down the road.

Posted in Exit Options, Exit Planning, Leadership, Management | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

2 Responses to Exit Planning When Kids Don’t Cut It

  1. Valerie Koenig says:

    Nailed it, John.

  2. Maryanne Guido says:

    You got this right!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

COVID Fatigue Unites Business Owners

Dealing with  COVID fatigue unites business owners. If that sounds strange to you, let me make my case. I’m not doing this to whine, but I want business owners who don’t have an existing support structure to know that they aren’t alone.

I facilitate several peer groups of business owners. For decades, we’ve met monthly to discuss trends and issues in our businesses. It is typically a lively roundtable. Hiring, termination, customers, vendors, regulation, new initiatives, and finances present themselves at most, if not all meetings.

The First Wave

At the beginning of the pandemic, we increased our meeting frequency from monthly to weekly. It really helped with the news pummeling us every day. First, we had sanitation and control of infection. What should we do if an employee was diagnosed? What were the guidelines, or more accurately, the current guidelines regarding quarantine? How serious was this? Opinions ranged widely on the severity and need for action.

COVID FatigueThen came the lockdowns. Who decided that this was within the power of a mayor? Like so many regulations, it seemed to come without any discussion of the impact on small businesses. We never “blamed” the medical community. They were told to recommend the best way to slow the virus’ spread. They did.

Our meetings became both strained and strange. We started living in two worlds. Some businesses were decimated, others were setting sales and profit records.

The Light in the Tunnel

Then came the relief bills. How did FFCRA work? Who has the poster? Will our employees all choose to go home at 2/3 pay? (Not very many did.) We traded policies and memos from HR advisors, CPAs, and law firms.

Then the CARES act. BAM! $2 trillion flushed through the economy like a transfusion. We didn’t talk much about EIDL. The need to pay it back from PPP proceeds and running out of money early on focused us all on the Paycheck Protection Program. Of the 28 participants in the groups (myself included,) all 28 applied for and received PPP funds. We all shared application information and intelligence on which banks were handling it best.

Again, we had concerns that the $600 unemployment bonus would dry up the recruiting market. It made things a bit more challenging, but not insurmountable. Most folks seem to prefer continuing employment. People who seek to milk the benefits to the last dollar aren’t the ones we wanted anyway. Of course, watching the collapse of the antiquated government infrastructure for unemployment may have influenced applicants as well.

We traded information on remote working. How to keep employees engaged? Tips on contests, productivity tracking, and virtual technology. Those in essential industries never stopped working (see my post on Morlocks and Eloi.) Some found that remote workers had no desire to return to the office, and began looking at reducing their commitments for leased space. Others went back as soon as they could.

As we progressed into June, we basked in the belief that we had dodged the bullet. Our region (South Texas) had among the lowest in infection rates in the US. Many of us applauded the governor’s early, but seemingly sensibly staged reopening. We cut back to one “touch-base” meeting midway between our usual monthly half-day sessions.

The New Normal – Not

We were fed up with COVID fatigue. Discussions turned to new initiatives, how to best utilize the PPP money (for those who didn’t need all of it just to stay alive,) loan forgiveness, and how to deal with the “new normal.”

There is an old saying. “Man plans and God laughs.” No sooner did we start to draw a collective breath than we were hit with the results of Memorial Day. It seemed that the entire population under 40 decided the crisis was over. Our county went from the least infected major metropolitan area in the nation to one of the 5 worst in a few weeks. The tone of the meetings became somber again.

We weren’t dealing with a short-term crisis, nor with a new normal. It was just getting worse each day. One member with a small retail chain has seen more holdups in 90 days than in the last 5 years. Those with school-aged children, or employees who have children, are at a loss on how to deal with the school issues. (my post on school return) Many of us who had no direct experience with COVID now know people who were very ill, or who died.

New problems keep popping up. One member who spent a weekend getting emergency plumbing done in his offices (due to flushing of disinfecting wipes) called COVID “The gift that keeps on giving.”

COVID Fatigue

Now we are living in Bill Murray’s “Groundhog Day.” We keep trying to talk about non-COVID related issues, but there aren’t any. Hiring, attendance. productivity, communications, customers, supply lines, shortages, backlogs. All this has to be considered in light of the damn virus.

COVID Fatigue 2We are all gun shy with COVID fatigue. Every issue surmounted may come back. It may take on a new aspect, or pop up when or where it is unexpected. No one wants to say “We’ve got this.” At best we say “We’ve got this so far.”

As business owners we expect more control over our environment. That’s why we are business owners. Instead, we keep fixing a problem only to face the next one. They aren’t unique. They are serial manifestations of the same root cause.

We are fed up with the lack of direction or plan. Cities sue states (with our tax money.) States sue the Federal Government (with our tax money.) Protestors march, and sometimes riot. Frankly, if I was watching all this from a home from which I feared being evicted and weeks or months without an unemployment check. I’d probably be in the streets too.

Quoting the Temptation’s Ball of Confusion, “And the band played on”. At the end of every conversation, we have to go back to running our businesses. We have to show a strong face for our employees. We have to overcome or circumnavigate the challenges, even though we know that the solutions will be temporary.

It’s what we do. If you are doing it alone, find someone who understands the burden. I can assure you, dealing with COVID fatigue is a bit easier when you share with people who know what you are dealing with.

There really is strength in numbers. All too often, business owners assume they have to go it alone.

Posted in Entrepreneurship, Leadership, Management, Thoughts and Opinions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

3 Responses to COVID Fatigue Unites Business Owners

  1. Kay Scroggins says:

    Thank you, John, for writing this. The chronic impact of COVID-19 seems to get heavier as time goes on. Being part of TAB where I can share thoughts/feelings about difficulties has been so helpful during this time. Successful business owners have perseverance, but these times sure have been challenging. Your statement about the serial issues/problems is spot on. We fix one issue only to have several more lined up to deal with. The issues brought about by COVID-19 are on top of our usual issues so take even more time/energy/money… I hope you are well. Thank you again for your article.

  2. Jay McDowell says:

    John,
    In a few short paragraphs you have succinctly stated what so many feel, but are at a loss to define or adequately express. I have copied and shared your thoughtful article with a couple of my Business Coaching Clients that are doing “well” during COVID and yet feel strangely guilty in doing so. They know much of their “New Normal” success is COVID generated, and is temporary in nature, but are thankful, and a little guilty, that it comes from the misfortune of others.
    Lemonade from lemons with a COVID twist?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

School Daze and Business Owners

“School Daze” is more than an old Spike Lee movie. It’s the latest “COVID-19 gift” as one of my clients facetiously refers to ancillary issues created by the pandemic. As employers, we are watching and waiting to see what new burdens are going to be foisted on us in the coming weeks.

School Daze

School DazePlans for reopening, partially reopening or not reopening schools will have a huge impact on our employees. (We’ll get to the impact on their children at another time.) The variety of proposals is mind-numbing, and none is very appealing. I’ve seen proposals for:

  • Split sessions. Some children go to school from 7:30 until noon, others from 1:00 PM until 5:30. This has the advantage of not requiring lunch, but is bad for the kids who depend on school lunches for a decent meal. It worked in the ’50s, but teachers (and their unions) are opposed to the long workday. District budgets don’t allow for doubling staff, so that idea seems to be a non-starter.
  • Reduced weeks. Some kids go to school from Monday to Wednesday, and others from Thursday through Saturday. Again we have staffing issues, and would have to seriously consider reducing the curriculum to focus entirely on academics. On one parent committee, the comment was “But my kids play soccer on Saturdays.” (Talk about clueless!)
  • Here or there: One school district is planning to split the school year into 9-week “mini-mesters.” Students will have to register for either in-person classes or remote classes, and make that choice anew for each 9-week period. I have no idea how any extra-curricular activities would be handled.
  • A little of both: A few days remote, and a few in-person each week.
  • Split split sessions: Perhaps the worst idea is one group of students attending on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, with the other half going on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.  I can’t believe that proposal was even made, much less seriously considered.

Employee Daze

Working parents are facing a double dilemma. Do they send their children to school in the first place, or keep them home until the virus is under control? Regardless of their choice, how do they balance their need to earn a living with caring for their children?

Even if they can work from home, they will lose productivity to the demands of teaching (if the kids are home,) or scheduling (if they are attending school on any non-5 day rotation.) If they can’t work from home, they are almost inevitably balancing between finding part-time child care (itself another level of risk) or raising latchkey kids.

Some families are pooling resources to hire teachers (or share teaching duties) for “learning pods” or “cottage schools.” It’s a stopgap solution for those who can pay for it or dedicate the hours, but not many can afford either the time or the additional expense.

As with most such disasters, the lower socioeconomic levels will fare the worst. Those who can’t work from home, and can’t afford child care, also can’t afford reduced income and are least likely to focus on their children’s lessons. The cycle of poverty continues.

Employer Daze

You can guess whose lap this winds up in, right? As good employers, we feel responsible for our workers’ welfare, even when we don’t have a clear legal obligation. How do we navigate the maze of different issues that will present in another few weeks?

We could simply be Darwinian. Some folks would just have to resign, and we could hire others who don’t have (or don’t tell us about) child care issues. I find that approach distasteful, and would hope that it’s only a last resort.

If we want to keep our best and most loyal employees, we have to get a lot more flexible. Reduced hours, job sharing, remote working, piece work, weekend work, early arrivals, late departures, and other types of creativity will be needed. We will focus more on what needs to be accomplished, and a lot less on the how, when and where of doing it.

It’s not just school daze. Everyone is going to be a bit dazed as these new “COVID-19 gifts” hit. It won’t be forever, but how we handle it will impact our companies’ cultures and our employees’ attitudes long after the virus has stopped being such a dominant issue.

 

 

Posted in Leadership, Management, Thoughts and Opinions | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Dirty Laundry and Taming the Media

The longer this virus goes on, the more I am reminded of Don Henley’s 1982 song “Dirty Laundry.”

A friend and his wife declined an invitation to come over for a glass of wine (OK, maybe a bottle) on the back porch the other night. They were concerned about being with their daughter the next day, who is immuno-suppressed. I get it.

It’s funny. We went back to our office a few weeks ago. There are only 3 of us in 1,500 square feet, so we will have no trouble distancing. After 2 months as shut-ins, we felt like we were being adventurous, but very, very careful.

We have a few friends who have been doing mask-less socializing for weeks. They haven’t had any problems yet, but Texas had its highest new COVID infection and death toll yesterday. I know that their claim of “it’s all bullshit” is all bullshit, but we have to figure out the new normal.

This isn’t going away in another month or two, and those of us who can earn a living remotely can’t just become a nation of well-off hermits, depending on a separate class of citizens to feed us and provide our goods.

Morlocks and Eloi

I have a number of clients who own essential industries. They never stopped going to work in fully staffed operations every single day. Those of us who are lucky enough to maintain an income and work remotely marvel at those who act as if nothing is wrong. In some cases, we think it’s courageous. In others…not so much.

My Morlocks and Eloi blog on Awake at 2 o’clock back on April 3 predicted this. That was ten weeks ago, when we had about 2,000,000 fewer cases, we were just beginning to see Shelter in Place orders, no PPP applications had yet been submitted, and masks were widely discounted as ineffective by the CDC.

In hindsight, the rumor that they were waiting for health care workers to be supplied first seems to have some veracity. It’s getting tougher to sneeze <GRIN> at some conspiracy theories when others are so apparently true.

Dirty Laundry

My biggest disappointment is that where things like this have historically pulled Americans together, we have this time been driven further apart. How can the crisis of the century become so politicized? We all acknowledge that it is highly contagious, and deadly to at-risk folks.

I’ve heard arguments about severity, pre-existing conditions, and socio-economic factors. No one, however, disagrees that it spreads like wildfire and kills old people.

Damned media, who thrive on causing people to get angry. Tell Alexa to play Don Henley’s “Dirty Laundry.” The coldness of the lines. The bubble-headed bleach blond with the gleam in her eye. Is the head dead yet? The boys in the newsroom have a running bet. Get the widow on the set. 

Most importantly, the chorus – “Kick ’em when they’re up, Kick ’em when they’re down.”

dirty laundryCNN decries a feckless president, and Neanderthals who want to infect your world and kill Grandma. Fox trumpets (pun intended) the liberal plot to deprive us all of our American lifestyle and our cherished liberties. No mercy. No discussion of what’s going right. Just kick the other guys relentlessly.

Those who are either out of work, fascinated by slow-motion train wrecks, or simply really worried are staying home and digesting this stuff all day long.

New Normal – Accepting Individual Rights

Part of the new normal has to involve turning off the television.  We need to spread an awareness that these are not thought leaders or investigative journalists. They are pitchmen preaching to the choir from carefully censored scripts. They make millions by stirring things up, never from calming them down.

Now, with the protests, I can watch two different cable networks and see two different countries. One just shows cops beating up peaceful protestors. The other just shows rioters burning and looting.

I’m not seeking to be trolled, but I’d welcome someone who could tell me the last time you saw a “news” show that said, “We should all calm down, and learn to live with folks who have different opinions than we do. It’s OK to have a difference of opinion.”

No chance. WE are crusaders, and THEY are infidels. (Regardless of which we or they you connect with.) There is no advertising money in cooperation and compromise.

The Solution to Media Inflammation

Here is my recommended solution. We can tame the runaway media bias with existing legislation, and without censorship. All we need is a wave of public opinion.

Broadcast licenses are worth billions of dollars. They come with a requirement that the license owners use a portion of their airtime for public service. Multiple administrations have let this requirement erode so that now public service is limited to occasional “public service announcements.”

The newsroom has become a profit center. Reporting accuracy takes a distant back seat to attracting the most eyeballs. That requires dirty laundry.

Make broadcasters stick to the spirit of the law. Two hours of news each day without commercials. Say a half an hour at 8:00 AM and another half an hour at 11:00 PM, with a full hour at 6:00 PM.

You can report the news any way you want, but it should be news. That means the events of the day, not opinions about what happened last week. The whole world, not six different retellings of the same story. You can slant it any way you wish, but you just can’t use it to sell advertising. If you want to feature an editorial personality, use your advertiser-paid time to do it.

It’s easy to understand why we are so intolerant of each other. Just follow the money.

Posted in Leadership, Thoughts and Opinions | Tagged , | 7 Comments

7 Responses to Dirty Laundry and Taming the Media

  1. Larry Dickman says:

    100% accurate observation, John. Well written.

  2. Chip Mayo says:

    You hit the nail on the head! Fast money and power lead while respect and common sense are kicked to the curb.

  3. Malcolm Webster says:

    Hi John
    An external perspective …Your media is broken because your system is broken – just 2 parties who are constantly in campaign mode – from election to mid-terms to next election have over the decades created an Us versus Them culture in everything that is powered by he who has the most money – its black or white, red or blue and any debates starts with “but what about their …….”. The best media in the world is public media, strongly supported by the tax payer, but independent of the party on power. The only place I get any news on the USA is now from NPR, our own CBC or the BBC – (occasionally The Economist). Fox and CNN are not media outlets – they are mouthpieces for either red or blue. The only other place in the world where Sean Hannity would get the power he has, is in a 3rd world country.

  4. Valerie Koenig says:

    John – your column is well done, such alienation, not seeing each other’s points of views. I’ve never had it come into business discussions so much, it’s challenging each side’s core values. Malcolm is spot on about our political system and news outlets (although I’d contrast Fox with MSNBC, CNN being the middle spot), but he might be surprised to learn that the right believes NPR is just another Democratic Party mouthpiece – they boycott it.

  5. Still Fill in Phil says:

    Don\’t get me wrong but Covid-19 has been good for my business, yet I still write to complain because of the absolute and complete devastation I am witnessing of our State and National economies, our individual rights, our freedoms, our wealth and our happiness.

    In Texas, more than 11,000 people died from flu and its complications during the 2017-18 flu season, including 16 children, the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) said.

    As of today in Texas, 2,220 people, 75% of whom were living in Nursing homes with the highest demographic of over the age of 80, have died of Covid-19 related illnesses. No children under 19 have died as of this writing.

    So why now? Why is this a big deal when the 17-18 non pandemic flu season killed so many more?

    https://www.zerohedge.com/political/emergency-real

    • John F. Dini says:

      Not to harp on my topic, but perhaps it’s partially because it was a worldwide hot media story. Then we had the protests, and there was a new “new” story. COVID is worse than ever, but now everyone is kinds zzzzzzz unless you are among the increasing number that have it. Now if it really does overwhelm the hospital system, I think we will decide that we should have paid more attention.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your Exit Plan: The 3 Inarguable Reasons to Start NOW

What is Your Exit Plan?

If you’ve ever done a business plan for the purpose of raising capital, one of the key questions is “What is your exit plan?” Many business owners think that question is self-serving, intended merely to let the venture capitalists figure when and how they will get their return on investment. In truth, however, that question is far more important.

An exit plan is a strategic plan with an end date. Putting a time frame on your plan, and defining the goals to be achieved by that date, creates a future-focused mindset for the owner. It controls and reduces your tendency to prioritize daily firefighting over long term thinking. It provides you with a yardstick to measure progress. Most importantly, it affects your thinking about almost everything in your business.

Here are the 3 inarguable reasons why you should start your exit plan now.

Reason #1: It’s Never Too Soon

In my years of working with business owners, I’ve helped many transfer their businesses to family and employees. I’ve worked with others who sold their companies to a third party for tens of millions of dollars.your exit plan

Surveys show that many owners have regrets afterward. Others happily move into the next phase of their lives or careers. A few have seller’s remorse. On the other end of the spectrum, some come to the realization that they hated their business owner lives for years. The majority feel that they received a reasonable reward for monetizing their work of decades.

None of them. NOT ONE of them, has ever said “I spent too much time planning.

It’s likely that the sale of your business will be the most important financial event of your life. There are a few lucky owners who have wealth outside or beyond the value of their businesses, but for most of us monetizing those decades of effort is the culmination of our working careers.

If your exit plan is to transfer to family, you can choose vehicles like Grantor Retained Annuity Trusts (GRAT) or Self Cancelling Installment Notes (SCIN).  These may have to be in place for years to substantially reduce or eliminate taxable proceeds for you and/or your heirs.

In a sale to employees, developing the documentation that shows their assumption of managerial responsibilities over time is a basic qualification for SBA loan approval. That, plus developing their “down payment” equity, punches the ticket for you to walk away with your proceeds in pocket on the same day that you cede control of the company.

In a sale to third parties, the condition of the financial markets at your time of exit will decide the size of your multiple.  Preparing your business with due diligence in mind, and understanding the different classes of buyers, (see my post on identifying a buyer) allows you to better choose the time, method and proceeds of your transition.

Although it is difficult to time the stock market, shifts in acquisition multiples take much longer to develop.  Being prepared allows you to enter the market while prices are at a peak.

Five years is a reasonable planning time. Ten years is better. There is no time frame that’s “too far out” to be thinking about your exit.

Reason # 2: It Changes Your Thinking

It’s difficult to run a business without being reactive. Employee issues, customer problems, and vendor policies can shift your priorities on a daily basis.

When your exit plan is in place, you have a broader perspective. Every decision you make is now in the context of “Does this support my bigger picture?” There are numerous examples.

Hiring: If your exit plan is to pass the business on to your children, then hiring becomes a support function. You look for employees who can fill in areas where your offspring lack the necessary skills, or don’t have an interest.

If you plan to sell to employees, then you are looking for a Successor in Training (SIT). That is someone who shares many characteristics with you. If you are selling to a third party, you want a Second in Command (SIC). That is someone who compliments your strengths, and who can be contractually incented to stay on the job with a new owner. (See my piece on SIT vs. SIC here.) Securing a management team adds considerable value to any company.

Lease vs. Buy: If your plan calls for selling to someone who is likely to relocate the company, or who already has your production capabilities, you may want capital equipment to be easily disposable. A competitor or much larger acquirer may want to leave the equipment out of the transaction. In a Main Street business, you may choose to have a strong tangible asset base for an entrepreneurial owner to use when obtaining acquisition financing.

Real Estate: Should you own your building? Some buyers (say a publicly-traded acquirer) prefer to lease space. In that case, owning your building could provide a post-transition income stream in your retirement.

On the other hand, a relocated company could stick the owner/landlord with a special purpose building that requires significant remodeling to be rentable.

These are just a few of the decisions that are better made in the context of your long term plan. The decisions you are making in your business today all have lasting implications.

Reason #3: A Plan is not an Action

youe exit planIf you are taking a long trip, you likely determine the route before you start out. If it is complex, you may print out the directions. Nonetheless, you are still likely to use a wayfinding app to alert you to problems along the way, like traffic jams or construction.

But everyone understands that printing out the directions isn’t the same as beginning the journey. You might take that step days or even weeks before actually getting into your car.

It’s the same with your exit plan. Choosing your time frame and preferred method of transition isn’t the same as making it happen. Writing it down is a key component of preparation, but it shouldn’t be confused with implementation.

Starting Your Exit Plan

Venture capitalists ask an entrepreneur  “What is your exit plan?” because the answer shows that he or she has thought through the implications of their decisions. They have built the business with a purpose beyond merely growing or getting through the next cycle. It shows that the allocation of resources, the selection of personnel, and choices in product and service offerings are coordinated.

There will be obstacles along the way. Your strategy may shift to compensate for new technology or changing market tastes. As the company grows in your chosen direction, you could just be having too much fun to leave on your originally planned date.

But those changes will be conscious. You will see how new factors fit with your plan, and when they don’t. Course adjustments keep the goal in mind. Alternatively, you understand when the goals themselves have to change.

For years, clients have asked me “What should I do to increase the value of my business?” My answer is always the same. “Exactly the same things that you should be doing to improve your business every day.”

Stephen Covey coined the axiom “Begin with the end in mind.” Yogi Berra said “If you don’t know where you are going, you may wind up somewhere else.”

Your exit plan is the road map to your eventual financial security. It doesn’t have to be a huge undertaking. All plans begin with where you are now. You already have the company, the management team, the customers, and the products or services. You’ve likely thought about how you would like to finish. What’s left is just putting the two together.

The sooner you go through the exercise, the sooner your company will be a component of your exit plan, rather than a distraction from it.

John F. Dini, CExP, CEPA is an exit planning coach and the President of MPN Incorporated in San Antonio Texas. He is the publisher of Awake at 2 o’clock, and has authored three books on business ownership. If you want to see how prepared you are for transition, take the 15-minute Assessment at www.YourExitMap.com 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Exit Planning, Top Blog Posts | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *