Rich Owner - Poor Seller (eBook)
112 Seiten
Bookbaby (Verlag)
978-1-0983-0406-5 (ISBN)
Become a Rich Owner, Not a Poor Seller!I wrote this book for the benefit of all small business owners. It's a must-read book as you look forward and plan the future of your business. A few will become Rich Owners, because they will follow a wealth-building strategy and build a million-dollar net worth. Most, however, will remain Poor Owners and Poor Sellers, because they will make very different choices. I expose the many small business marketplace myths and misunderstandings. Which choices will you make?Small business owners represent about 75% to 85% of all U.S. businesses. Over the past nearly 20 years, as a business broker and investment banker, I saw hundreds of businesses and talked with many, many owners. I wanted to share my observations with all of you. I believe you will benefit significantly by reading this book, regardless of the road you take. Some small business owners became Rich Owners. I noticed that the Rich Owners had implemented consistent winning strategies in operating their small businesses and had consequently built million-dollar net fortunes and more. They made a lot of good investment choices and avoided financially destructive ones. The Rich Owners chose wealth-building paths. Rich Owners didn't SELL their small business. They didn't give them away for pennies on the dollar, or dump them onto the first buyer that walked through the door! They knew it was worth a lot more to them than the market would pay! Selling was not the answer! I'll show you how it's a two-to-thee-year financial poor choice!Many Rich Owners managed their businesses themselves. Or, they hired a manager to run it for them. They implemented many of those best small business practices I observed. I'll share them with you. They invested in and through their small business. Let me repeat that. They invested in and through their small business. Successful owners put their extra money back into their business to drive growth. They hired good people and built out their management teams. They took all their available tax deductions and tax savings, invested fully in their retirement plans, and funded savings accounts and stock portfolios. They also purchased the building to house their business. Consequently, over time, they built significant wealth for themselves. They made many right choices. Follow the same path yourself, and you will also create a high net worth down the road. As a Licensed Business Broker, a Licensed Investment Banker, a Licensed Financial Advisor, a Licensed Securities Broker, a Licensed Real Estate Broker, and a broker of many things media, I saw a few things along the way. I believe my observations may help you financially in your journey, whether you are a small business owner or a potential owner. I want to share these observations with you. In short, this book is about the "e;small"e; business owner. He or she operates in a big, unfair, and competitive marketplace. I would like to see the small owner catch a break by working on a more level playing field, and thereby experience increasing success, and wealth. I'll point out examples of winning financial strategies by successful small business owners. They included things like taking full advantage of small business tax deductions and of owner's discretionary earnings deductions. They made smart choices like buying versus renting the company building, and taking excess cash to over-fund retirement and stock portfolios. I'll show you the short term and long-term financial consequences of those decisions, and how they made some owners the millionaire next door. You now have the essence of this book. Read on to learn more about the choices facing all small business owners. Make the right choices and follow the right path, and become a Rich Owner yourself!
Chapter 1
Don’t be a Poor Lemming!
Become a Rich Shark!
In this chapter, we’ll look at those small business owners that followed the masses, like lemmings marching into the sea. They chose to sell their business. The selling process created frustration and failure. Most never sold. They became disappointed in the pricing, the costs, the lengthy process, and the poor results. Most remained Poor Owners. None became Rich Sellers.
By definition, small businesses are too small and worth too little to generate a sales price that makes an owner wealthy. So avoid becoming a poor lemming! Don’t sell too early. Consider other choices. In the end, if you must sell, know the basics about the process. Once you do, I believe you’ll rethink your options and take a more rewarding path.
Eventually, all small business owners will exit their business one way or another. So focus on running your business now for as much financial gain as possible. Then, smartly prepare for an exit. Only a small percentage of small business owners do any exit planning. And of those that do, few fully consider all the exit options of selling, such as liquidating, closing it down, partnering, finding an investor, or managing it absentee. There is likely a more financially suitable exit plan for you than selling. But you must be open to considering all the options.
I’m not going to get into complicated ESOP exit plans, little-understood insurance schemes, risky shell company strategies, or public penny stock offerings. I’ll leave that to the “how to become a millionaire” marketing charlatans. I believe that the simple basics can teach you a lot. They point you in the right direction from the start! Remember my 20-80 Rule mentioned in the Prologue: 20% of the basics would reward you with 80% of the upside!
In this chapter, I detail my observations during the past 20 years. During that time, I worked as a licensed business broker, investment banker, M&A advisor, financial advisor, real estate broker, and media broker.
I observed much about small businesses, their finances, their structure, their processes, and their operations. I also learned a lot about the broker selling process, the broker marketplace, the small business marketplace, and the abundant research available.
My observations are not necessarily those of the professional community. I didn’t become a broker or investment banker with any particular bias in mind. Broker services just seemed like a valuable service. I’d be helping owners sell their business, cash out, move on, and begin the next chapter in their life, or enter retirement. I loved finance, accounting, brokering, marketing, and selling. I also enjoyed dealing with business owners and decision-makers.
My observations, however, consistently led me down similar paths with similar conclusions. I felt that owners of small businesses needed to understand much more about their options. Should they continue running their business? Should they hire a manager? Find a partner or investor? Should they try to sell it? Liquidate it? Or close it down?
Do small business owners understand the actual process of selling a small business? Do they know the complexity of it all? The costs? Success rates? Failure rates? Typical results? Have they considered how selling will impact their long-term financial well-being?
Over time, I learned and saw a lot about the process and metrics of selling a small business. Having that understanding will help owners make much more informed decisions. Help them select choices and paths that are truly best for them. Sell? Run? Manage? Liquidate? Close? Which one is the right one for them? It depends.
I saw that most small business owners were very uninformed about three areas. First, they could know a lot more about the best practices involving building wealth through their small business. Second, they understood little about the process of selling a small business. And third, they hadn’t explored the other exit options thoroughly.
Unfortunately, most of the marketing noise and advice comes directly from one source: the selling broker or selling advisor. That would be comparable to visiting a car dealership and asking the car salesman if you should buy a car from him. Duh!
If the advice to sell your business comes from your CPA or attorney, and they say they can help you, I have a problem with that too. I’ll share more about that later. But remember, they are accountants and lawyers, not brokers! Lawyers do lawyering, accountants do financials, and brokers market and sell.
Keep in mind that about 90% to 100% of a business broker’s remuneration comes from the success fees or success commission. In other words, they make money when you sell your business. If it doesn’t sell, they make nothing! NOTHING! NADA! ZILCH! That’s a compelling reason to push, push, push, and convince you to list and sell your business.
There you have it. Are you thinking of selling? Consider the points below.
- For starters, selling a small business is a 12monthto18month process on average.
- It usually entails a detailed, lengthy restructuring of your financials.
- It can be expensive. You will usually need to engage your attorney, CPA, and tax professionals. You pay for these expenses.
- It may put at risk your key employees when they find out.
- It may open you up to additional tax liabilities. You pay.
- You will face higher tax liabilities at close. You pay.
- Don’t expect to be successful in selling. Only one out of five small businesses represented by a broker will sell. The other four don’t sell. That’s an 80% failure rate!
- Less than 1% of all small businesses sell. That includes those represented by a broker and those that are not. Ouch!
- Half of those that do sell get less than 2.6 times cash flow before paying taxes. That means you keep just about two years of income.
- On the flip side, only 10% get more than two years’ income at the close of the sale.
- Broker commissions are high. (Typically, they are 10% to 12%)
- Taxes can take another 20% to 40%.
- The selling process creates a ton of work for the owner.
- It could take one to two years to sell.
- Isn’t this enlightening about selling a small business?
- It’s not easy! Not inexpensive! Not quick! Not cheap! And not very successful!
- And it’s not very rewarding financially!
These are the facts. They are readily available from services such as BusinessBroker.net, IBBA.org, D&B, Reference USA, and Business Reference Guide.
Now you are becoming a more knowledgeable owner, a more knowledgeable potential seller, and probably a more cautious seller. You’ll likely not join all those uninformed poor lemmings marching into the sea. And, after reviewing these selling facts, you’ll probably be asking yourself how you should proceed. What other options are there? Is there a better way? Yes. I believe there may be. Read on.
So that’s enough about lemmings. If you must be labeled something, become a Shark. It will serve you much better. Let me explain.
The definition of a Shark, according to the Webster dictionary, is a carnivorous fish in the class Chondrichthyes. It is also slang for a person who is an expert in a specific activity. A Shark might be a tough lawyer who is expert in his practice of lawyering and thus always wins his cases. It could also be a successful venture capitalist or equity fund manager who is skillful and expert in recognizing a business’s both current value and future potential value. They buy it on the cheap, way below market value, only to manage and build it into a profitable business worth many times more.
So become that business Shark yourself. Learn to recognize business opportunities and value. Learn how to build it. Learn how to make it worth many times more for yourself. As you learn more, you will not act so quickly to sell your business to a Shark. You will become the Shark yourself. You will become skilled at recognizing business values and business potential, and ultimately know how to grow your small business yourself. The more you know, the better off you’ll be. Practice and execute through your own business. Capitalize on all of this. In time, you may decide to go out into the market and hunt like a Shark for new opportunities for yourself.
I saw hordes of Sharks out there. The equity fund and venture fund Sharks are always trolling for good valuable businesses to acquire cheaply. The broker game is all about finding good sellers motivated to sell. Yes, the lemmings. It’s a tough job. Good profitable businesses to sell are hard to find. Buyers are a dime a dozen. Good companies to sell are rare. If you represent one, buyers will come.
But I’m not writing this book for the benefit of the Sharks, the Vultures, the Venture Funds, or the Equity Fund buyers. I’m writing it for the small business owners. Yes, for some of the lemmings and the potential lemmings.
During my experiences as a broker, I saw, essentially, three exit strategy options for small business owners: (a) selling your business, (b) liquidating it, or (c) putting a manager in to run it for you. Let’s look at each briefly.
I saw that selling is challenging and complicated. The process has low success rates. Nonetheless, selling a small business...
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 2.3.2020 |
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Sprache | englisch |
Themenwelt | Sachbuch/Ratgeber ► Beruf / Finanzen / Recht / Wirtschaft ► Bewerbung / Karriere |
ISBN-10 | 1-0983-0406-3 / 1098304063 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-0983-0406-5 / 9781098304065 |
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