|
Dear Subscriber,
We would like to nominate July and August as
National Business Transition Planning months. For
many businesses (at least those not tied to summer
vacations), these months are relatively quiet times.
The first half of the year for calendar year businesses
is in the record books. It is a good time for business
owners to reflect on their possible exit strategies.
Even if the anticipated exit is more than 10 years away,
owners should start the initial planning now. For
example, the time period the IRS requires to get the
full advantages of a S corporation election is 10
years. All too often, we see successful business
owners who have put off addressing these questions
until forced to by death or disability. Usually, the
consequences of failing to plan are devastating to the
value of the business.
In this issue, we are introducing a series on
business transition planning. As always,
we appreciate your feedback on our newsletter and
website.
|
Business Transition Planning
|
|
By Roger M. Winsby
Many private business owners begin their business
transition planning within a few years of when they
plan to exit. While that works for some, for most this
is too late to make changes that could lead to
significant improvements in their after-tax gain from
selling their business. Most business owners that we
speak with have two standard mantras: "I don't want to
pay a lot in taxes when I sell my business;" and "I do
not intend to provide any seller financing to the buyer."
Yet, without the proper planning in place well in
advance of the sale, many sales of smaller
businesses result in the owner
paying more in taxes than they needed to; and in the
owner providing financing to the buyer. Consequently,
we recommend that business owners conduct a
preliminary business transition planning exercise at
least ten years prior to when the owners guess that
they would be ready to exit. This business transition
plan should be reviewed every two to three years to
incorporate any significant changes in the business,
industry, and tax laws into the plan.
What is a business transition plan?
A business
transition plan should address the following
questions:
1. What is my business worth? A value
range for the business based on a realistic review of
the business exit options. The diagram above
gives one set of possible exit options.
2. What would be my total net worth after
exit? An estimated range of available post-exit
financial resources, including the after-tax ownership
interest based on the range of values for the
business, the estimated retirement funds available,
and any other sources of financial assets or income,
and an estimated range on annual income
available.
3. What are the tax and legal ramifications of
all this? A review of wills, business buy-sell
agreements, corporate form (i.e. C vs. S or LLC),
potential estate tax liability, and associated personal
financial and estate planning implications.
After going through this process, there are likely to be
a number of action items for the owner and his/her
advisors to facilitate and implement the agreed-upon
exit plan and related estate and financial plans.
Realistic Review of Business Exit
Options
This is really the key starting point for a serious
business transition plan. There are many successful
businesses of substantial size that are unlikely to
achieve a sale in the upper value quadrant of Selling
to a Strategic Buyer or even Selling to a Financial
Buyer.
Despite all the media hype about the current time
being the best time to sell a business because there
are strategic buyers and private equity firms
competing for businesses, most private businesses
do not have the characteristics that strategic buyers
and private equity firms are looking for. Hence, this is
a very challenging time to sell most private
businesses.
It is important to note that there are typically no
absolute answers to this review of business exit
options. There have been business roll-up activities
in the 1980s and 1990s where funeral homes,
ambulance services, electrical contractors, and a
variety of other types of firms have had strategic buyer
opportunities. Since few of these roll-up activities
were ultimately successful, the opportunities today for
these firms are mostly in the lower value
quadrant.
It is also important to note that while selling to
employees and/or family members is generally done
at lower value multiples than sales to financial buyers
or strategic buyers, these internal deals can often be
structured so that the after-tax gain over time to the
seller is greater than selling to a strategic buyer. For
example, an oft-quoted rule of thumb is that a steadily
growing business can sell for between 3 to 7 times
EBITDA. If the owner decides not to sell the business
but rather to retire from active management and leave
the management of the business to his/her key
managers, the owner could get several more years of
earnings distributions that could be worth more than
selling to an external buyer.
There are two primary objectives of this realistic
review of business exit options. First is to develop a
range of possible values for the business for the
owner's financial planning. If a business owner
learns that he/she is unlikely to achieve their after-exit
financial objectives from the sale of the business,
then the owner should focus on using tax-deferred
retirement options and other methods to increase the
available after-exit funds.
Second, making explicit the end option or options for
the owner(s) generally sets the future context for all
important business decisions. Should an owner
invest in continued expansion of his/her business, if
there are no likely mid-level managers that could take
over at some point? There is no single answer to that
question, but in most situations, the value of a
business increases when there is a management
team that can continue to run the business after the
departure of the owner(s)/founders(s).
It Takes a Team to Build an Effective Transition
Plan
In the development of an effective business transition
plan, there are tax, legal, financial planning,
insurance, and business valuation issues that should
be addressed by professional advisors, and any
action steps should be carefully coordinated across
the different disciplines. There are an increasing
number of professional advisors that are focusing
their practices on business transition planning; given
the importance of this planning, owners may often
need to augment their existing set of advisors with a
specialist, who can function as the "general manager"
of the process, reporting to the owner(s).
Experience in exit planning is also relevant for the
valuation expert participating in the process. Most
traditional valuation work is focused on valuing
businesses consistent with the IRS fair market value
standard. In the exit planning process, a key part of
the value estimate analysis is to identify the buyers
who would pay the most money for the business (in
the top quadrants of the Value Matrix, in addition to an
estimate of fair market value. Our Value
Estimate and Strategic Value Estimate services are
specifically designed to support the business
transition planning process.
More on Business Transition
Planning
This is the first in a series on the business
transition planning process. In our next issue, we will
consider the question of how the fair value of a
business is decided in the U.S. legal system or
arbitration if there is a dispute among the owners or a
divorce or a death of an owner.
|
|
Presentation: Dollars and Dynamics: Forging a Fair Value of the Family Firm
|
|
A Presentation at the Institute for Family-Owned Business (Maine)
Stan Feldman, Axiom Valuation's chairman, and
Mary Daugherty, Associate Professor of Finance, St.
Thomas College, recently gave a presentation to
family business owners and representatives on the
key concepts of value for a family-owned business. A
PDF version of the Powerpoint presentation is
available at our web site. Click on the link
below to view a copy.
|
|
Reminder about 409A Seminar
|
|
Upcoming Seminar on September 11, 2007 in Boston
Foley & Lardner, First Jensen Partners, and Axiom
Valuation are jointly holding a free morning seminar
on what CEOs and CFOs of early stage companies
need to know about the new IRS 409A requirements
and their impact on stock option plans of all types.
|
|
|