Advisor M&A Tip
What Does It Feel Like When You Sell?
"Immense satisfaction tinged with loss." That's how one business owner described selling his business.
After putting years of hard work into building a business, many owners have a hard time letting go. Emotions run high, and those emotions can lead to some regrettable decisions.
As advisors, part of our role is to help you make sound choices when it comes to selling your business. We can help you sort through your emotions and your goals to find the right buyer to carry on your legacy.
Smart preparation and planning make it easier to find the right fit. It doesn't matter if you're not ready to let go yet. Let's start the conversation today.
Market Pulse Survey -3rd Quarter 2019
Presented by IBBA, M&A Source and in Partnership with Pepperdine University
M&A Feature Article
GF Data shows that a solid management team will increase the valuation multiple. For smaller businesses, the quality of your management team can be an even bigger factor, influencing whether your business sells at all.
Here are five ways to develop your managers and bring out their best:
1: Coach, don't rescue
A lot of leaders are "rescuers." We care about our people and we want to see them succeed. But instead of onboarding correctly or coaching, we take over for them every time they have a problem.
Try coaching your team member to a solution. Help them find the courage to voice their own suggestions.
Questions like, "What do you think you should do?" often yield "I don't know" answers. But a simple reframing can take the pressure off and encourage people to share their own thinking. If you're trying to get someone past "I don't know," try one of these approaches:
- "Suppose you did know. What's a possible answer?"
- "What if you knew you couldn't fail?"
- "Who's the smartest person you know? What do you think they would do?"
Getting people to reframe the answer from someone else's perspective can take away some of the discomfort we all feel about being wrong. What's more, it helps them stretch and develop their own capabilities and confidence.
2: Set a no-penalty zone
Create an environment where it's okay for people to make mistakes. Begin by setting boundaries (wide boundaries, preferably) around decisions and actions they can take on their own. As long as people are acting ethically and in adherence to your corporate values, support the choices they make.
You can always coach people and explain why you would have made a different decision, but don't impose any negative consequences. It's better to have a proactive team than people who sit in a state of paralysis waiting for you to sign off on a course of action.
3: Assess your team
Behavioral assessments can go a long way toward employee retention and development. From MBTI to DiSC, Strengths Finder, and others, tools like these can help your team identify their unique gifts and areas for improvement.
Invest in a business psychologist or other professional facilitator to take your team through the assessment. With the right guidance, the results can help improve team dynamics and equip you to be a better coach to each individual on your team.
4: Give them a voice
Give people a place at the table. For a long time, I made the vast majority of my business decisions based on what I thought was best for the company. But over the last few years, I've gotten better at listening to my internal team.
My management team has helped me challenge my assumptions, develop new initiatives, and most critically for me, stay the course on a promising business plan instead of following my next big idea.
5: Get out
We're working with a husband and wife team who haven't taken a vacation in five years. That's not great on many levels. I don't know if they haven't developed their people or if the issue is more about an emotional, personal need for control.
If that sounds familiar, start slow. Take a long weekend away. Leave early on Fridays. Build up your ability to step away. As you leave your team in charge, their confidence will grow, and so will yours.
In terms of value, the ideal goal is to work yourself out of the business. Get yourself to a place where you can take extended vacations. Transition your role from working IN the business to working ON the business.
Buyers want businesses with transferable value. That means you need a leadership team that can sustain operations and, better yet, drive growth, without your direct involvement. If the business can't survive without you, its value declines.
At the end of the day, building out your management team is a critical investment in your business. If it makes your life easier in the process (and it will), that's just a nice side bonus.