You Are Destroying Business Value, Just Pay the %^$*^R and Move On!

Business owners working on exit planning and maximizing the value of their company for sale often take a wrong turn. Litigation is a nightmare. When we work with owners to sell their companies and advise on the value-building process, we find they are sometimes destroying business value without realizing the extent of it.

We are human beings – we get into disputes. This is America – people sue people. If you have been through business litigation of any sort, you know it is not pretty. In the end, it’s rarely worth it. You may be in the right, there may be real damages or loss of money, and darn it, they should pay!

Certainly, there are situations in which you cannot avoid the dispute dragging on. It may be a substantial amount of damages or it may be a more complex situation tied to other potential liability. Often, however, the relentless, unending fighting – especially going all the way to court – can reduce the value of your company. If each year over a few years you are paying $100,000 in legal fees and your net income takes a hit of $100,000, the reduction in business value can be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    • Revenue Decline: There is no question that you will be distracted by the process. Even with your attorneys handling much of the work, it will always be on your mind. Stress grows and you will have a less-than-100% focus on growing your business, exit planning, and building value for a sale. Revenue will suffer.
    • Bad Decisions: You will – consciously or subconsciously – adjust the decisions you make away from your best course of action because of the ongoing dispute and its implications.
    • Attorney Fees: They add up very quickly – quite possibly ending in more money than it would have taken to just pay the *$*&* and get it behind you to focus on value growth.
    • Brand Damage: The longer the fight continues, the more likely this will get out to hurt your brand and image, even if you are right!

 

36 to 53 percent of small businesses are sued in a given year.

~4 Small Business Statistics About Lawsuits – SmallBizDaily

So just forget it?? Well, sometimes, yes, as much as it pains you. Work with your attorney to make a fair offer, even go a little higher to get it settled! The investment can be worth it!

There are great attorneys who know that doing right by their client is to quickly come to an agreement. Make sure your attorney is not encouraging you to fight without considering all options, the financial implications, and the effect on business value. Consider the options, despite your frustration. You may be on the right side of the dispute but don’t reduce the value of your business any further.

Don’t let one of these issues delay or derail your exit planning, value-building, and the sale of your company. Resolving these issues quickly will help you maximize value and move through the business transaction process more smoothly and quickly.

Call if we can help you think through your specific situation. Always happy to have a conversation to provide some guidance on the business sale process, business value, exit planning or building value for sale.  

 

David Shavzin, CMC, Exit Strategist

David Shavzin

Transactions, Value Growth, Exit Planning, Succession Planning

Founder and President, The Value Track, Atlanta, Georgia
Co-Founder and President, Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta

 

 

 

 

770-329-5224

david@GetOnTheValueTrack.com

Our BLOG // LinkedIn // www.GetOnTheValueTrack.com

 

Plant a Pine Tree!

Do you know the best time to plant a pine tree?

TWENTY YEARS AGO!!

Do you know the best time to plan your exit strategy??

The first day you stick the key into the front door of your new office!

Franklin Covey said, “Start with the end in view!”

I know in the excitement of launching a new venture and all the chaos that ultimately ensues, an exit strategy is the LAST thing on an aspiring business tycoon wants to consider.  The problem is that once it is pushed to the back burner, it tends to stay there for the next 30-40 years!

So let’s compromise!  If you are 55 years old and own a business, it is time to start giving serious consideration regarding what your ultimate destination will be.  An “Exit Strategy” is about selling the business off and a “Succession Plan” is about passing it down to the next generation, but both demand serious consideration well before you are ready to step away.

Two realities must align at the same time to maximize the value of a business: The owner must be mentally and emotionally prepared to walk away from a business they birthed and nurtured for the last 30-40 years AND the business must be structured to operate without the daily oversight of the owner and generating the highest level of profitability possible. Invariably, the business owners get to the finish line before the business is ready to command its highest multiple!

Now a good M&A guy can recast your financials to take out the country club membership and the spouse’s Cadillac, but if profits have been leaking out of the business, there just isn’t enough lipstick to make that pig win the blue ribbon!

The reason a 10-year runway is advised is to be able to make any necessary corrections in the business and run at that higher level for at least 3 to 5 years prior to going to market to demonstrate sustainable profitability.

As Dr. Ortego used to say, “The VALUE of a thing is the PRICE it will bring!”

Plan NOW to MAXimize Your Exit!!

 

Ralph Watson

Ralph Watson has a varied and extensive career spanning 45 years of increasingly responsible positions in both sales and operations in a very diverse mix of industry specialties, including food processing, textile and apparel, financial services, and professional management consulting.

Ralph served as a Senior Executive Analyst with a number of international consulting companies focused on the family-owned, privately held market where he distinguished himself as one of the top analysts in a highly competitive field.  In early 2014, he personally coached 10 businesses in Europe.

Ralph C. Watson, Jr.   404-520-1030

Thank you for visiting our blog.

I hope you enjoyed our point of view and would like to receive regular posts directly to your email inbox.  Toward this end, put your contact information on my mailing list.

Your feedback helps me continue to publish articles that you want to read.  Your input is very important to me so; please leave a comment.

Jim Weber – Managing Partner, ITB Partners

 

 

During & Post-Crisis: Preserving, Rebuilding & Growing Business Value

You need to address the urgent needs of keeping your family safe and healthy. You need to address the critical issues around employees, payroll, managing your cash and other realities of the current crisis. Period! Absolutely! If you haven’t spoken to your bank about the financial relief bills that congress is about to pass, call them now!

 

You also need to get back to business to the greatest extent possible as you address these – hopefully – short-term issues, even if you are doing it from your home kitchen table in your pajamas. During the last recession, I saw too many business owners slow down when they should have been redoubling their efforts.

 

You need to get back to basics and plan out how your business may change (opportunities!) and how you are going to ramp up as quickly as possible. You need to get back on The Value Track and back to exit planning – creating your future: your exit / succession / transaction. Make sure that you are integrating your short-term crisis management decisions into your planning. They will impact your business and its value just like any other decision.

 

How can you keep to your timeline for the sale of your business or get back to family business succession planning for the transfer/sale to your children or other family members? It may be delayed but don’t assume it will and don’t slow down working toward it.

 

What can you learn from what other companies are doing? What is likely to change as we come through this period that you can adapt your product or services to address. (Hand sanitizer in happy meals? McD’s, I want royalties!) I am very serious about this. My clients have been hit hard like everyone else, in a variety of ways. They are all getting creative in the short-term and I know that these decisions and detours are going to make them stronger and more valuable companies.

 

You need to have a clear, but flexible plan that considers the “what-ifs”. Whether here in the Spring of 2020 or in every year since you started your business. You won’t always know what those “what-ifs” are, but they WILL occur. Hurricanes, recessions, competitors, regulations, your own illnesses, tariffs, hacking, lawsuits…

 

Here are 4 brief blogs I have written over the last 10 years on the topic of business risk. These business management and leadership issues did not start today. Take a few quick minutes: Thoughts to Consider on Risks to Your Business

 

In the meantime, I am reiterating my offer of a one-hour conversation with you, your clients or other business owners who could use a sounding board at this time – whether for input on urgent problems, thinking through strategy in order to come out of the crisis or to focus on building/rebuilding value if working toward a sale.

 

This year of challenges marks my 20th year in practice as a consultant, coach and exit strategist; helping clients grow, solve problems, build value and work on exit strategy. I would be happy to explore how my 20 years of experiences with other clients – and how they are addressing this situation – might provide insights and help your business survive & thrive!

Stay Healthy & Safe!

David Shavzin

 

David Shavzin, CMC
Exit Strategist – Value Growth, Exit Planning, Succession Planning

Founder and President, The Value Track, Atlanta, Georgia

Partner, ITB Partners

 

 

Building Transferable Value for Sale
770-329-5224 david@GetOnTheValueTrack.com
Our BLOG // LinkedIn // www.GetOnTheValueTrack.com

 

Family Business Transfer Conversations – Talking with Your Adult Children About Succession Planning

Family Business Succession 

 

David Shavzin

Are your children ready to take over your business? The answer I usually get is something like “No, she has only been in the business for 10 years, she’s not ready to run a business.” Or, “He will get it eventually, but there is no rush.” Exit planning and succession planning are critical to a smooth sale and transition, but they are too often ignored until it’s too late, especially when it comes to family business situations. Are you burying your head in the sand because you are uncomfortable planning to leave the business?


You don’t have to leave tomorrow.
At the same time, starting early will help you think through a variety of options to find a structure that best fits your needs. An early start will also provide enough time to talk through key issues with family, inside and outside of the business. The issues can be thorny ones when dealing with the family business, but time can bring everyone together.


Don’t leave a mess for your spouse, children, and employees.
We will ALL exit our business at some point, one way or another. The process of selling is very complicated, and it will take much longer than most owners expect. Family business transfers are especially complex.


Again, you don’t have to rush out the door
just because succession planning begins. But your family and employees will be more engaged knowing that you are laying out a game plan. If they are not yet ready, start now and include a plan for them to get ready. You may still think of them like this, but they really may be more ready than you think.

 

It takes a huge toll on morale when your children lack specifics and any semblance of a timeline. We routinely hear from adult children of business owners who are beyond frustrated at the lack of a real plan as to how they will eventually start taking steps to succeed Mom and Dad. They don’t need it to happen next week, but they need to know how and when. And, yes, what they need to do to show you that they are ready.


They may never be ready.
However, getting an early start on talking about these issues will help you determine whether that is the case or not. You may find that they don’t want the family business, even if they would be capable. Either way, you need to know that as early as possible.


Get your family engaged in these complex issues.
The right conversations will lead to the engagement that carries on your business legacy for years to come. Another significant benefit to family business succession conversations is that with a plan in mind, business value growth becomes a lot easier.


Let us know if a conversation about your specific succession planning situation would help you move forward.

______________________________________________________________________________________________

David Shavzin, CMC
Exit Strategist – Value Growth, Exit Planning, Succession Planning
Founder and President, The Value Track, Atlanta, Georgia

Building Transferable Value for Sale

770-329-5224 david@GetOnTheValueTrack.com
Our BLOG // LinkedIn // www.GetOnTheValueTrack.com

 

David Shavzin, CMC, Exit Strategist, interviewed on RadioX North Fulton.

David Shavzin Interviewed by N. Fulton RadioX

David Shavzin created The Value Track to help business owners build value and create a path toward a successful exit. Too often, they have not built the value they need and are unprepared when the time comes to put their transition into action. In this RadioX interview, “Maximizing Exit Strategy, Understanding Value”, interviewed by John Ray on Business RadioX®:  Listen to the Interview

David discusses critical issues that business owners need to understand in order to maximize the sale of their business. Exit planning is a process – not something to decide one day, and try to implement the next.

David helps business owners think through their long-term goals and plans, educates them on business value and brings the right – collaborative – advisory team around the table. He then assists in the implementation of value-growth initiatives, guiding them to a successful transition (sale, family transfer, etc.). His 7-step process improves their quality of life and allows them to exit on their own terms.

A frequent speaker on these topics, David is a CMC, former IMC Georgia chapter president and President and Co-Founder of Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta, formed to bring advisors together in a collaborative effort to serve their clients.

His early career was in banking and finance, then 12 years with life sciences company Sanofi/Aventis. He spent 4 years in corporate finance and Mergers & Acquisitions. Then, 8 years of leading teams responsible for Quality, Finance, Supply Chain, Customer Service and IT functions within a $175M subsidiary.

For More Information, Contact David Shavzin at:

(770) 329-224

david@getonthevaluetrack.com