Early planning – integrated with your personal financial plan – can help you avoid the most common pitfalls.
A successful outcome to the sale of your private business could be transformative for you and your family.
But it is not uncommon for transactions to fall through, sometimes after months of negotiations and significant time commitments from the owner and management team.
Thankfully, the risk of a failed transaction can be substantially reduced by recognizing common pitfalls and addressing them with early planning. Based on our experience, below are nine of the more common reasons transactions fail and advice for avoiding them.
As you prepare for the transition of your business – whether this year or sometime in the future – consider the following advice for three main areas of planning:
It is important to prepare your business and management team as early as possible prior to commencing a formal sale process. Consider conducting “due diligence” on your own business as if you were a potential buyer evaluating your business. Preparation will be time consuming but will allow you to anticipate buyer questions and issues and identify employees who will be critical to managing the business sale process.
You should also identify successors to groom for key management positions and consider enhancing or establishing certain protections (e.g., employment agreements and retention bonuses) to help ensure that senior and high-performing employees are protected financially if the business is sold.
It is not uncommon for business owners to become distracted with running their business and overseeing the sale process, and as a result, underestimate the importance of planning for the transaction’s impact on their family and personal wealth plan. To avoid this issue, work with your family and advisors to develop the following:
It is important to have a general understanding of the private business sale process in order to anticipate the time commitment that the process will require of you and your management team. Review the various ways a business sale process might be structured (e.g., a broad auction, limited auction or exploratory discussions), as well as the types of advisors on a typical transaction “deal team” and the role that each will play in the transaction.
The above pre-transaction planning can significantly reduce the risk of a failed business sale, but it takes time and coordination across multiple advisors. For help streamlining this process and developing a plan that integrates the goals you have for your business and family, consider speaking to one of our advisors. »