Episodes
Saturday May 24, 2014
Eight Ways to Exit Your Company (article) Bill Black
Saturday May 24, 2014
Saturday May 24, 2014
Eight Ways to
Exit Your Company
By
Bill Black
According
to Paul Simon, there are 50 ways to leave a lover. Not being as creative as Mr.
Simon, we’ve only come up with eight ways for owners to leave their companies:
- Transfer the company to a family
member;
- Sell the business to
one or more
key employee; - Sell to key employees using an
Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP);
- Sell the business to one or more
co-owners;
- Sell to an outside third party;
- Engage in an Initial Public
Offering;
- Retain ownership but become a
passive owner; and
- Liquidate.
Given
the right circumstances, one of these paths may be appropriate for you. The
process of determining exactly which path is best presents an obstacle to many
owners. If, however, you wish to “leave your business in style,” we suggest
that you work through this three-step path selection process.
Establishing
thoughtful objectives lays the foundation for an Exit Plan. Doing so well in advance
of your departure gives you and your advisors the time necessary to make your
goals a reality. As you work through this path selection process, you will
synthesize or harmonize your exit objectives with the characteristics and
capabilities of your company as well as with the external realities of the
marketplace.
Choosing a Path
Step One
First, you, as an owner and with the help of your advisors, identify your most
important objectives. (Please contact us for issues of this newsletter that
further explain how to identify and quantify your objectives.) These objectives
are both financial (“How much money will I need from the transfer of the
business to assure my, and my family’s, financial security?”) and non-financial
(“I want the company to stay in the family,” or “I want to remain involved”).
Internal
and external considerations also impact an owner’s choice of exit path. For
example, the owner who wishes to transfer the business for cash, but is
unwilling to trust his company's and his employees' fate to an unknown third
party, may decide that an ESOP or carefully-designed sale to a key employee
group is the best exit route.
Exterior
considerations that may impact the choice of exit path include business, market
or financial conditions. For example, the option of selling your business for
cash to an outside buyer may be eliminated because of the anemic state of the
M&A market.
Step Two
As
you develop consistent objectives and motives, you then must value your company
and determine its marketability. This analysis usually provides direction and
can eliminate potential exit paths.
For
example, if the value of a company is high and its marketability is low
(perhaps because of the depressed state of the M&A market), an owner may
decide that a sale of the business to an outside party is impractical. Instead,
selling to an “insider” (co-owner, family member or employee) may be a better
option.
Step
Three
The final step in choosing a path is to evaluate the tax consequences and
strategies of various exit paths. Many tax-minimizing techniques require,
literally, years to fully implement and are often linked to the person or
entity to whom you wish to transfer the business.
Using
these three criteria (objectives, value and tax consequences), owners can begin
to narrow the list of exit routes. It is far better for you to choose the
appropriate exit path than to delay and allow circumstances to force you onto a
particular path.
If
you have already decided on a path, perhaps to transfer your company to your
children, but have failed to implement the appropriate transfer and tax
decisions, you have delayed your departure. Likewise, if you have decided to
sell to a third party, but haven’t prepared your company to go to market when
the time is right, you have not taken advantage of the tools that can make your
company valuable in the eyes of a third party buyer. And as the economy has
clearly demonstrated over the past few years, postponing decisions can increase
business risk.
If
you have not yet chosen a specific exit path, we encourage you to conduct open
and frank discussions with your advisors about which path to take and when.
Feel free to contact us for further suggestions on the pros and cons of each
exit path.