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What Got Them Here Won’t Get Them There: Transforming Founder Centric Companies to Maximize Their Value and Close the Sale

By Bonni Carson DiMatteo

Often motivated by business “burn out”, a strained business climate or the image of an endless vacation, founders begin to consider selling their business. It seems like a perfectly left brain solution to frustration, malaise or boredom. They may talk to their spouse about how they are burned out or want to extend their winter vacation in Naples, or have more time to visit the grandchildren, and before you know it they are talking to their accountant, lawyer, financial planner or a business broker about selling their business. Their business advisor helps them crunch some numbers, estimate how long it might take to sell the business in the current environment and to determine the value proposition. When all the signs point in the direction of “Sell”, why do some businesses fail to execute? Founder reluctance and a founder centric culture will derail the ability of many businesses to “close the deal”.How can these companies change their mindset so that they can implement a successful exit strategy? Which advisors are best equipped to address the right brain thinking that can often instigate or derail the sale?

Over the last several years, exit planning advisors have been thwarted by a business climate marked by declining sales and earnings, shrinking bank credit, and a poor economic outlook. Consequently, there have been few buyers in the market since the beginning of the financial meltdown in 2008. With cash reserves built up over the last 2-3 years, and gradual improvement in economic conditions, companies are showing more interest in buying new businesses. The availability of buyers is estimated to exceed that of sellers in 2011. As more deals are executed, company valuations are expected to increase. This appears to indicate a great opportunity for companies to jump into the market and sell their business.

[Reference: "Can 2011 Be a Good Year For Private Company M&A?" by John Hammett, Corporate Finance Associates Capital Ideas for Business, Winter 2010; http://www.cfaw.com/library/100/private-company-mergers-acquisitions.php;]
In spite of this, why will many companies fail to capitalize on this opportunity? It is often a right brain, not a left brain, challenge. Which advisors are best equipped to address the right brain thinking that can often instigate or derail the sale?

Stalled at the Altar

The companies most likely to stall at the altar are those that have what we call a “founder centric culture”. These companies, often started by boomers 25-40 years ago, have been operating for more than a generation. If they do not have a succession plan they are looking for some way to capitalize on their biggest investment, their business. What obstacles are inhibiting these companies from successfully completing a sale? Many attribute the failure to execute the sale to factors such as disagreement on price and market conditions. Buyers looking for a good investment may back away from companies that have an immature internal structure and a founder centric culture. Often, the emotional founder ambivalence and founder centric culture of the company are the biggest hurdles to overcome.

Symptoms of Founder Ambivalence

Founder ambivalence is marked by:

  • Difficulty with following through on action plans suggested by advisors.
  • Being preoccupied by a stream of company crisis that distracts from the big picture.
  • An over worked and stressed founder who has no reason to focus on the big picture.
  • Lack of a clear personal and family strategic plan to take them into the next 10-20 years
  • A clearly defined sense of purpose and mission beyond the business
Symptoms Of Founder Centric Companies: Signs This Sale Will Stall At The Altar:
  • Company leadership deficits
  • Process deficits
  • Culture deficits

The business is the founder and the founder is the business. Therein lies the challenge. Their greatest strengths are often their greatest weaknesses. In founder centric companies, you often find a Founder who is actively involved in working in the business, but not on the business. They are a key rain maker or customer evangelists. They are what we call a Founder Hero because they are often the only one who can serve customers right. There are frequent fire drills and often the founder is the one rescuing the day.

It is what Michaels E. Gerber refers to in The E MYTH as the conflict that rages among the three hats of entrepreneur, manager, and technician. They may be the chief decision maker and process saboteur; they have no succession plan or strategic plan; They have no advisory board; They simply meet each day’s challenge; keep a steady pace and do things in ways that have worked in the past. They see no reason to have a vision or a plan. The company mantra is “we’ve always done it this way”.

Buyer Red Flags

Buyers are wary of a lack of process and systems that can survive beyond the founder. They may, or should, have a certain skepticism that this founder will be able to let go of something that gives him or her such a sense of identity and purpose, or that staff, vendors and customers will be able to transfer their loyalty to a new owner.

Company/Leadership Deficits

In the founder centric company there are noticeable leadership deficits. While the founder is clearly the culture creator, and larger than life in many ways, the sense of leadership dwindles from there. Often there is a key executive who has been with the company almost as long as the founder and follows his or her path. There are little to no leadership/management competencies or development. If there is a management team, it may be one that does not function effectively.

Buyer Red Flags

Buyers may be cautious of such leadership vacuums, knowing that without the founder there is little capacity to decide, execute and achieve results.

Process Deficits

In founder centric companies there are often great ambiguities among people in terms of roles and responsibilities. This is further complicated by the lack of a systemized process that allows for efficiency and success. The firefighting caused by last minute crisis ultimately results in the erosion of profits. To further compound the problem, decision making often occurs only at the top and there is no accountability throughout the company.

Buyer Red Flag

Buyers observe this cautiously. Process improvement and tightening may create an opportunity to improve profits, but the current state of the organization points to weakness.

Culture Deficits Are Created By The Leader/ Founder

In founder centric companies there are often extreme levels of morale and engagement. Larger than life personalities often create a tightly woven family of employees. They are loyal to the founder and the founder is loyal to them. There are blessings and curses with this.

As the company grows it is difficult to change the guard and the guard is not always adaptable to change.

The culture is often marked with crisis du jour, stress, complacency, silos, no sense of accountability. There are challenges with retention/talent attraction, an aging work force, lack of diversity, change resistance, and no sense of vision of the future due to strategic plan deficits.

Buyer Red Flag

Buyers eye this phenomenon guardedly. They understand that if the founder leaves there may be a vacuum too big to fill and the loyalty will soon dissipate. Buyers are looking for a company that can evolve beyond a company founder. As buyers observe the challenges of a founder centric company often the financial value begins to diminish.

What can a founder and their advisor team do to reshape their company and make it buyer friendly?

Steps In Evolving From A Founder Centric To A Buyer Friendly Company

Buyer friendly companies have evolved from a founder centric culture by implementing best practices in leadership, management, organizational development and process/ profit focus. They differ from founder centric companies in that they focus primarily on working ON the business rather than IN the business, utilizing a more systematic business process. The following steps are needed to evolve the company from founder centric to buyer friendly.

Key Advisors Needed At Each Step

To execute a sale that maximizes the company value, key advisors must work together and in tandem to help reset the company’s GPS.

Steps And Advisors Needed In Resetting Founder GPS

1. Founder Readiness: Creating A Legacy And Resetting The GPS Personal Strategic Planning:

ADVISOR: Business Coach

The execution of a sale begins with a focus on legacy and personal strategic planning combined with corporate strategic planning. This enables the founder to create a vision, mission, values, and goals for him/herself, as well as leaving the business in a position that commemorates their legacy of success.

2. Building a Leadership Bench:

ADVISOR TEAM: Management Consultants; OD/Coach; Recruiter

The company and the founder need to prioritize building a leadership/management bench by identifying key leadership capabilities and competencies, and through training or coaching in house managers or recruiting new blood. There also needs to be some team building to solidify a cohesive team to set and execute goals and to develop a new organization chart that clearly defines roles and responsibilities.

3. Developing A Strategic Plan: Assessing the company SWOT:

ADVISOR TEAM: Business Coach/ OD Consultant Corporate Strategic Planner

As with a personal legacy, the founder and executive team need to create a strategic plan that closes the gap of vision and current reality and sets executable goals for:

  • Decentralized decision making
  • Management competencies
  • Process improvement
  • Innovation
  • Increased revenues

It is necessary to set the stage for growth and operational effectiveness that will attract the right buyer at the right price. The discipline of executing on a 1-3 year plan will much better position themselves for a good sale.

4. Creating And Managing Change:

ADVISOR TEAM: Business Coach, Organizational Development or Management Consultant

Help create the change necessary to maximize the volume of the business. Heath & Heath’s book, The Switch, is a good reference for this. This step is not only a process improvement leap, but a mindset and cultural leap as well.

5. Crunching The Numbers:

ADVISOR TEAM: Financial Planner/Accountant to help owner finance the future

Understanding what the owner needs, what they have, and closing the gap

6. Positioning the Company for Sale: Cross functional Team Approach

ADVISOR TEAM: Lawyer, Coach, Financial Planner, and Accountant

Addressing the 4-legged stool: the legal, financial, long-term financialgoals and the personal legacy the owner wants to create

7. Finding The Buyer:

ADVISOR: Broker

Identify the new value of the company and determine the strategies for selling and finding the best buyer.

8. Executing The Sale:

ADVISOR TEAM: Lawyer, Accountant, Coach, Broker, Financial Planner.

This is where seller ambivalence most rears its head. The collective input of all advisors, particularly the coach who best knows the right brain challenges needed to help take the founder to the altar.

Conclusion

Both advisors and sellers can benefit from the lessons learned from implementing these steps. Evolving from an Entrepreneur to Founder owner to Leader is not an easy or fast process. However this can be accomplished in 6-12 months once the founder mindset is fully engaged in the process and the outcome. Specialists in behavioral economics and organizational culture are essential to unbind the organization and leader from a founder centric mindset and homeostatic behavior. Experts in this field are an essential part of the Exit Planning Team that provides right brain balance to the left brain experts.

A sale that maximizes the value of the company can best be reached when the first 7 steps are completed. As the founder resolves their ambivalence they become more confident and committed to the sale. In turn, buyers respond with a similar confidence and enthusiasm. It is only through creating the changes inside and outside the founder and the company that the sale can be fully achieved at its greatest value and without last minute ambivalence that can undermine the final signing of the agreement.

Copyright Bonni Carson DiMatteo 2011 Atlantic Consultants 27 Mica Lane, Suite 106, Wellesley, MA 02481 5

 

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Commercial Bankers Must Know the Owner/Manager’s Exit Plan

By Michael Oleksak

In the early days of my consulting practice, I met with the owner of a small manufacturing business. The owner had just learned he had inoperable cancer and confided that he would be dead in about six months. He did not have a succession plan but hoped his daughter, who was then 22 years old, would take over the business.  The owner wasn’t sure because he had not discussed this plan with his daughter yet.  Ultimately, the business owner turned to his accountant, who was also a close family friend, to oversee the transfer of the company to his daughter while the accountant stayed on as advisor. Because it was cancer, the owner had time to draw up a will and organize his estate.

His succession plan for the company, however, started with hoping his daughter would take over its management. His exit strategy had been determined by his health.

Prepare for Sudden Changes in Management or Ownership

Imagine you were this business owner’s commercial banker. Your small-business borrower drops this situation in your lap. Your first reaction is disbelief: This middle-aged man looks healthy. Then you become sad because you know and like this person.  But when you hear the owner’s succession plan is to hope he can leave the company to his young daughter, you wonder: “What experience does this just-out-of college daughter have?  Have I even met her?” This leads to more questions.

  • How will employees react?
  • How will customers react?
  • How will you as a lender react?
  • What is the future of this company?
  • Will it stay financially healthy enough to repay the loan?

No question, the lender’s risk just went up. Should the interest rate rise as well? Is there a change of ownership clause in the loan agreement?  The owner’s terminal illness is not his fault. It is, however, his responsibility to prepare for eventualities like his own untimely death. His family, employees and company rely on his leadership and foresight to anticipate future issues.

By the same token, it is the commercial lender’s duty to ask tough questions to protect the bank’s position. Even if there is a change of ownership clause, you as the lender are in the same boat as your borrower. You want the company to succeed so the loan will be repaid or taken over at some point by another lender. No other lender will want to step in now unless the conditions can be improved with a defined succession plan along with increased collateral or financial support.

Understand the Owner/Manager’s Exit Strategy

Commercial lenders should address this risk by understanding the exit strategy of every owner/manager in their loan portfolios (if these owners even have an exit strategy).  The exit strategy will have a big influence on the strength of your credit as well as on the viability of your relationship with the company.

The exit strategy can lead to a conversation about whether the owner has a will and a succession plan. If the owner has not made a will, this could mean that ownership of the company’s shares is undecided or that the shares could land in the hands of under-prepared family members in case of the owner’s sudden death.

Case in point: Miami Dolphins owner Joe Robbie, a successful real estate attorney, did no estate planning before his death. His heirs had to sell the Dolphins franchise and Joe Robbie Stadium at fire-sale prices to pay estate taxes. The family fractured over the crisis, and Robbie’s legacy is not his successful real estate development career but the poor planning that harmed his family.

As a lender, you need to ask about an owner’s succession plan and whether the firm has the management depth and clear operational assignments to survive a surprising end to the owner’s life or incapacitation. A lender who asks these questions can prompt a business owner to develop a strategy and address shortcomings, thereby alleviating the lender’s concerns about unforeseen occurrences.

What are the possible outcomes for an owner-managed business besides the dire circumstances just addressed? Let’s look at two, both with different implications for the commercial lender: internal transfer and external transfer.

Internal Transfer

An internal ownership transfer could be (1) a sale to the management team, known as a management buyout; (2) a sale to employees via a tax-advantaged employee stock ownership plan (ESOP); or (3) a gifting of shares, usually to the next generation of the family, also with significant tax benefits. If the internal transfers are for less than 50 percent of the ownership shares of the company, the owner may stay in control of decisions and finances by controlling the voting stock.

Influence on relationship with lender. With an internal transfer, the lender should already be familiar with management if there is a change. With a management buyout, the lender should know the individuals taking over and must make a decision about whether the new team can lead the company despite the increased debt to finance the transaction. If not, the bank will ask to be paid out of the loan.

With an ESOP, the transaction will often be for less than the control of the company, a way for the owner to share with loyal employees by giving them an equity stake. A lender’s decision making should be the same, however, given greater debt on the books to finance the purchase. Gifting of company shares may be done in stages, so the current owner or management team may still be in control.

In all of these scenarios, what role will the current commercial lender play? No outside financing source will know the debt-service capability of the company better than the current lender, making it likely that the current lender will be the first invited to stay on to provide loans and services, including financing an internal transaction or ongoing operations.

All these scenarios could be subject to a change of ownership clause in the loan agreement, allowing the lender to opt out if not satisfied with the new ownership structure.

External Transfer

An external transfer would be a sale, either to a strategic buyer (such as a competitor) or to a financial buyer (such as a private equity investor). Because the external transfer will likely be for at least a majority of the shares, the owner will likely be out of the picture in a few years.

Influence on relationship with lender

With external transfers, it is likely that the private equity group or strategic buyer will have its own stable of lenders. By keeping the lines of communication open with the company and the prospective financing team, as well as expressing interest in taking at least a piece of the financing, however, the current lender may well have a role in the new loan or be kept on to provide some services.

Exit Strategy: Not Always Obvious

Commercial lenders are not often thought of as trusted advisors to a company’s business owners. Trusted advisors are generally the company’s CPA, attorney, and, sometimes, the owner’s investment advisor. The fault is not with the banker. Decades ago, the relationship was closer. However, successful lawsuits for lender liability cases have influenced lenders’ behavior. As such, lenders never want their actions to be interpreted by judges as having exerted undue influence over a borrower’s business decisions. Lender liability can result in big financial penalties against the lender.

For this reason, commercial lenders are often out of the loop when it comes to a critical factor influencing the strength and viability of their borrowers: the owner’s exit strategy. Much conversation between a bank and the owner-manager of a business focuses on the owner’s managerial role. It can be hard to get an owner to talk about ownership issues because these often require a discussion of personal and family issues. However, the owner’s exit strategy can have a huge influence on the health of the company and on the bank’s relationship with the company.

A good commercial banker provides numerous services to the owner-managed business, generating considerable fees for the lending institution. Apart from the fees and interest from the loan, the relationship probably also provides income for the bank from cash management services, trade services, account fees and balances.

Sometimes, when the lender is successful in engaging the owner in discussions of exit strategy, the loan and services may be lost anyway. Recently, a 12-store retail chain in the Northeast was sold to a large national retailer. Over the previous year, the lender had actively reviewed all the options facing the owner and the second-generation owners of the family business. In the end, the acquiror will pay out the family members for their shares, and the acquiror’s bank at the corporate level will take over the financing and services. Even with this outcome, the former lender had a good understanding of risk throughout the life of the loan and was able to anticipate some form of upcoming change.

Sources of Strategic Information

The lending officer typically meets regularly with the borrower’s chief financial officer, treasurer, vice president of finance, or controller to discuss the quarter’s results and trends. The lender can use these meetings to ask about ownership issues, including whether the owner has a will, who the beneficiary is regarding the company’s ownership, if there is a succession plan and whether or not there is an exit strategy. If the lending officer is aware of upcoming changes in ownership, the lender can protect the bank’s position as the preferred commercial lender.

The lender can help focus the owner-manager on the future by asking probing and thought-provoking questions about the owner’s will, succession plan and exit strategy. If the owner is reluctant to discuss these issues, the lender should take this as a signal that such plans may not exist.

If there is a board of directors, or board of advisors, the lender should ask these questions:

• Where will the business be in five years?

• Does the owner want to own the business in five years?

• Does the owner want to be managing the business in five years?

• Does the owner have a will?

• Who is currently the beneficiary regarding ownership of the company?

• Is there a succession plan if the owner gets hit by a bus on the way to work?

• Does the owner simply envision the spouse or other relative taking over if something happens?

Owners Want Their Businesses to Live On

Given the personal nature of these questions and their implied reminder of the owner’s mortality, these can be difficult topics to discuss openly. But the commercial lender is a key stakeholder in a business, and asking such questions protects the bank’s interest and capital.

Ultimately, most owners would like their businesses to carry on and thrive even after they are no longer active participants in it.

Creating and sharing details of a will, succession plan and exit strategy with their lender can help build toward a longer, successful existence for the business.

 

Michael Oleksak was a lender for 17 years at Bank of Boston. He is a principal at Trek Consulting LLC, Woburn, Massachusetts and co-founder of the Exit Planning Exchange. He works with small and medium-sized businesses to increase value and prepare for exit. Contact him at oleksak@ trekconsulting.com.  www.trekconsulting.com

© Copyright 2010 Michael Oleksak. All rights reserved.

 

 

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The Role of Financial Executives in Exit Planning for Business Owners

By Michael Oleksak

Over the next several decades, millions of U.S. businesses will be sold, merged, recapitalized, gifted, closed, or liquidated. In any of these events, both the owner and the company’s value will benefit from advance exit planning. Financial executives, whether internal or external, play a key role in educating company owners on the basics of exit planning.

If you are the lead financial officer of a privately-held business, such as CFO or VP Finance, part of your fiduciary duty is to protect the company from the risk of an unplanned change of ownership, through sudden death, of both the shares and the operation of the business.  You also play an important role in increasing the company’s value by strengthening it for the possibility of a future transition or transaction.

Whether you are an internal or external financial advisor, you should make the business owner aware of three things every owner must have: a will, a succession plan, and an exit strategy.

The will protects the ownership of the firm in case a tragedy or sudden death affects the owner.  With a will, the shares will stay out of probate court and land in the hands of the person or people chosen by the owner, thereby ensuring some sense of business continuity.

The succession plan will help with the orderly transition of the operation of the business if the owner is suddenly incapacitated.  The exercise of preparing a succession plan will also help establish whether internal management is strong enough to handle running the company without the owner.

The exit strategy will be the catalyst to determine whether the company is ready for some other entity to assume ownership. Are the books and records, processes and systems, management and employees, business model, brand, public image and reputation desirable enough for someone else to pay to acquire it? If the answer is yes, the next question is would the acquirer be external or internal?

Exit Options

The owner’s external exit options are sale to a strategic buyer or sale to a financial buyer or private equity group. Internal transfer options include a management buy-out, a sale of shares through the Employee Stock Option Plan (ESOP), or gifting of shares, usually to the next generation of the owner’s family. Each of these five exit options has a different valuation range, with external transfers generally having higher values. The owner will also relinquish control of the firm after the external transaction, giving up the ability to subsidize his or her lifestyle through internal expenses. The external exit option also eliminates the owner’s control over his or her legacy, so the owner must determine his or her financial and emotional readiness to exit the business.

If the owner is emotionally ready to leave the business, but needs the highest financial return, as the financial advisor you can recommend that a sale to a third party strategic or third-party financial buyer should be considered. Under these arrangements, it’s important to calculate investment banking and legal fees, as well as taxes, because all will be subtracted from the amount of the check the owner will cash at the end of the day. Due diligence by the third party buyer will be thorough. If there are family members working in the business, their employment may be at risk if the current owner is not calling the shots.  The owner may be required to bridge any financing or value gap with seller notes or earn-outs over time.

A management buyout (MBO) creates a different risk to analyze: is the management team capable of continuing to generate enough cash to pay out the owner over time? Some industries lend themselves to MBO’s better than others, such as construction. Such a deal will require outside financing from a bank or another source, and management may be required to pledge personal assets to support a bank loan. Seller notes will also likely be part of the financing. After the buyout, the owner may still be involved and may retain some financial expense benefits under the deal. The further in advance this option is considered, the better the owner can prepare the team for the execution.

An ESOP is a tax-advantaged, though administratively complex, way for the owner to take some money off the table by selling shares to employees and management. Under a buyout or transfer through an ESOP, the owner will likely remain in control if less than 50% is sold, and will continue to have some personal expenses paid by the company.

Gifting is also a tax-advantaged way to transfer ownership, usually to (hopefully capable) family members. The owner can stay in control and have expenses paid for by the firm. This option will cause complications in relationships, especially as you get deeper into the second and third generations of the family.  Capable outside consultants with experience in family business issues should be considered to help smooth out issues.

All the options that financial executives can suggest for exit strategies carry different valuation ranges, with external transfers having higher valuation ranges (and higher tax impacts). However, a clear awareness of each will help the owner and the company mitigate risk and prepare for the future.

Published in Financial Executive

Michael Oleksak was a commercial lender for 17 years at Bank of Boston. He is a principal at Trek Consulting LLC, Woburn, Massachusetts and co-founder of the Exit Planning Exchange. He works with small and medium-sized businesses to improve performance and value and to prepare for exit.

Contact him at oleksak@ trekconsulting.com - www.trekconsulting.com

© Copyright 2010 Michael Oleksak. All rights reserved.

 

 

 

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