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      • Exit Strategy
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for Business owners
growing or selling

You Know, Now Buyers Need To Know

4/21/2023

1 Comment

 
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Buyers Are Not Mind Readers
As the Owner, you know all the wonderful things about your company. But that doesn't mean a Buyer automatically does. You will have to tell them. Making someone work for it isn't the smartest strategy. It's not just numbers Buyers need to consider purchasing your business.

​You know who your best technical staff are, the ones who are the most loyal and the small circle you can count on any time. The folks I like to describe as 'in a crunch it's always the same bunch'. The staff with huge potential who are consistently growing and assuming more responsibility. The key people you've been grooming to take over management. The loyal, hard working day to day heartbeat of your organization. 

This is the knowledge gained over years of working together week after week. Experienced Buyers can acquire some of the information via staff interviews, but not near what you can provide. If you think you can hide the dirt, think again. Maybe you can for a while, but the truth always seems to surface. The Buyer of today is typically seasoned and short on a capacity for BS.

You know how great your relationships are with specific large key and smaller long-term customers, but the Buyer doesn't until you show them. You know the ideas and opportunities that have been on the back burner and are ready for moving forward.

It's Your Job To Tell Them Everything
You need to dig out all the great things about your business, the obvious and the not so obvious. The things you take for granted and the stuff you just do because, well you've been doing it forever. The new innovations and the upcoming industry trends you spotted years ago and have prepared for. The relationships with friendly competitors and the strategic alliances.

And don't forget the numbers. They will be requested in every configuration and scrutinized with a magnifying glass. Knowing how to present them is key. If you can't anticipate the requests and respond quickly the momentum can get lost pretty easily.

Yes, after the NDA.

Think Of It As Sharing With More Than One
​It's not about bragging or blowing your own horn. More like sharing the many accomplishments you and your staff have achieved over likely, give or take, 30 years of blood, sweat and tears. Sales, well run processes, reputation, innovations and industry standing are all important. The successes you've attained need to be recognized and you need to be compensated for them.

You can't expect a potential Buyer to just uncover the information or glean it all from your conversations and retain it on their own. The data has to be packaged, wrapped in a bow and presented like it was the greatest gift they will ever receive. 

As with many large purchases the decision will be made by more than one person. The Buyer may make the final decision, but they will consult with others. 

Your company story needs to be told with as much impact and backup detail as your most important sale ever. But more so, it needs to be transportable to other offices and the many conversations that will go on while a Buyer is considering the purchase of your business. And frankly, you or your representatives will not be in all those meetings and conversations.

There Are No Secrets
So remember, as you move down the path of transition, you can't keep the wonderful things about your business, both the obvious and the hidden value a secret. If you expect to sell for top dollar and on your terms you need to clearly tell the complete story in an interesting, informative and exciting way.

You Control Your Story
The trick is to dig it all out and communicate all of your company greatness in an easy to digest format. Present it so anyone can get your story quickly and easily. You don't always know who is being told or asked about you and under what circumstances. What you do know is, they will be influencing the purchase decision. Or the potential Buyer wouldn't be talking to them in the first place. 

Subtle or heavy influencer, they can only comment on what they've been told. You can control the story more or less. Shouldn't you make it more than less.

To help tell your story or to discuss the many services we have available to increase your odds for a successful transition please contact me today. 

Schedule A Call

​Cheers, Eric
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Timeline Of Events For Selling Your Business

4/12/2023

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Timeline Of Events For Selling Your Business
Extraction From Eric Gilboord Online Courses

This is an extremely optimum time frame and would require a very well prepared Seller, highly desirable company, a qualified Buyer and may not include the transition time to ease out of the company post sale. All in count on 3-5 years.

4-6 Weeks Preparation
• 2 Weeks to gather the required information. The Intermediary will work with you to gather necessary information and to gain an understanding of the business (Information gathering is mostly a Seller responsibility.)

• 2 weeks for the Intermediary to compile the necessary Teaser and Confidential Information Memorandum documents (Mostly an Intermediary responsibility.)

• 1-2 weeks to review and finalize representations (Joint responsibility of Seller and Intermediary.)

1-3 Months for Soliciting Interest from Buyers (duration is very variable)
• During this time the Intermediary will mostly be talking with prospects, answering questions, feeding more information to them.

• Much of the effort during this phase is the Intermediary working with prospects, trying to figure out who are serious and who are not, filtering and moving them along. Making sure that only serious, qualified prospective Buyers get to meet and talk with the Seller.

• The Seller may be required to provide ad-hoc ancillary reports. Mostly accounting type data or answer questions.

• The Seller will be required to meet with prospective Buyers (1:1, duration and frequency is variable and will be based on seriousness of Buyer and comfort of the Seller).

Receive a Letter of Intent (LOI) to Proceed
The prospective Buyer will issue a LOI. The Seller will be required to negotiate and accept the LOI terms (Review by Sellers' legal counsel is mandatory. ) The typical LOI would contain terms about the deal, payment schedules, vendor notes and post transaction employment / contracts, but it can have all kinds of terms and considerations that will form the basic terms of the future transaction.
         
Accepting an LOI is certainly a significant go/no go point in the process. The Seller gets to make the final determination at this stage.

2-4 Months Buyer Due Diligence Process (This is a fairly intense period of time )
• The Buyer will provide a list of expected items that they wish to review.

• The Seller will need to work diligently and expeditiously to respond and provide this information in a timely manner. Responses could be piecemeal over a few weeks. This for most sellers is the hardest part of the work required since there could be considerable asks, lots of documents to gather and create and lots of meetings to review and discuss.

• Depending on the answers to the above there could be further requests, conversations and meetings.

• The Intermediary will assist you during this period. But this is largely dependent on the information request, and what role the seller would like the Intermediary to play and what access to information would be provided to the Intermediary.

4-6 Weeks Legal Process (Time required to read & review docs)
• Legal begins once Due Diligence completes and this typically lasts a 4-6 weeks or more. The variability depends on the legal complexity and detailed Seller & Buyer review of clauses and specific wording.
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• Emotions will be running high at this point, so patience is required if you really want the deal to close!

Deal Done! Total elapsed time from start to end: 8-12 months but most of the Seller effort was during the Due Diligence phase.

Exercise - Questions

What would be your ideal timeline for starting the process to completely exiting with you having no further involvement with the business?

Is it realistic?

Why is this your ideal timeline?

What about the above timeline do you think does not fit with your personal situation?

Schedule a Call or Meeting
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Note From A Recent Seller

4/2/2023

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