Business Exit
Strategies
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by Rosemary Ann Ogilvie
If you've
glanced at the title and thought 'no, doesn't apply to
me because I've only just started my business' - think
again.
So important
are business exit strategies that many professional advisers
believe they should be incorporated into a business
plan: in other words, that even before an entrepreneur
starts a business, they needs to know when, and how, to
get out of it.
And no, spending time thinking
about leaving your company does not indicate an abysmal
lack of confidence in your creation! An exit strategy is
the ultimate goal towards which you are working.
However, it is much more than your plan to get
out: it's also thinking about maximising the value of
your business for the particular time you intend to go.
The only rules are that the strategy must be right for
you, and it must be flexible to accommodate your
personal growth, and the evolution of your goals and
your business.
There are several ways you can
exit your company: you can sell it; it may be acquired
by, or merged with, another enterprise; you can go
public with an IPO; you may pass the reins to another
family member; you can arrange an employee buy-out; or
you can simply close the doors and cease trading, which
is without question the simplest option, but also the
one with least financial reward.
Sadly, the
latter often turns out to be the default strategy of
business owners whose official exit strategy is to
manage their business until they no longer have the
energy to continue - the worst business exit strategy of all, but
also the most common. An owner continues to run the
business until they wake up one morning knowing they
just can't do it any more. They starts desperately
seeking an exit, taking whatever they can get, which in
most instances is significantly less than if they had
planned the exit strategy when the fire for the business
still burned strong.
Putting an exit strategy in
place sooner rather than later boils down to simple
common sense. Leaving it until you are desperate to get
out, then attempting to sell your business at short
notice, rarely works. The reason? You are not in control
of the sale. And failing to find a buyer willing to pay
a fair price can be a devastating experience for someone
who has put everything - financially, physically and
emotionally - into their business, with the long-term
intention that it will generate a retirement fund.
To run a business successfully, it's crucial to
know what your exit strategy is at any given moment,
because it impacts everything you do. As an example: if
your vision is to sell to a strategic partner or
competitor who already has in place similar facilities
and its own distribution network, you may decide to
focus on product development or aggressive marketing to
expand your customer base.
Give some thought to
the type of buyer you'll target, for different buyers
have different motivations. A strategic buyer looks for
synergies, whereas a financial buyer seeks profitability
and may not be concerned about creating a dynamic
marriage. Try to get inside the heads of these potential
owners to determine what may turn them off the deal.
Look at factors such as problem equipment and problem
employees. Look at your supply chain, and your
inventory, distribution and logistics systems. Be
prepared to modernise systems and processes, for the
investment may result in a sale premium.
As part
of a thorough due diligence process, prospective buyers
typically review in detail every aspect of a business.
In preparing the answers to potential buyers' questions,
the owner must dig deeply: frequently, it's the first
time since starting the business such an intense review
has been performed. After going through this process,
owners often say that they have never understood their
businesses so well; many even declare that had they
known all the things they discovered, they could have
been much more successful.
This is something to
take on board: make it your objective to run your
business so that if you received an irresistible offer
today, you would be confident that the buyer's due
diligence would unearth nothing that would cause them to
withdraw it. Once or twice a year, look at your business
as though you were interested in purchasing it.
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