During
a period of more than 10 years, as a CEO, Director, and Board
Chairman, I have been responsible for disposing of three
organizations and have been an acquisition target of
two other organizations. I
have also been a close observer of several
other business sale transactions.
Here's
what I learned.
Start Early. From
concept to handing over the keys takes about 2 years. Seller or
buyer, it takes time to find and qualify
good prospects, and it's a process of due diligence, negotiation, and
hand-holding until the deal
is completed.
Carefully Select Your
Help. There is a lot of work to
do – some requires the knowledge of your people, other requires
outside skill and expertise. Choose professionals wisely – keep
away from a fee structure
that rewards time spent rather
than results achieved.
Each deal varies in how long
it takes to complete (or IF it completes) so, a term certain contract
is not a good choice, especially if requiring a periodic payment
even if no work is done.
It's Like Having Two
Jobs. Due diligence and sale
contract negotiation requires time and concentrated effort – but
the organization must continue to operate above
normal level during the process. You and your people will be working
hard, long hours doing both and neither the sale or operations can be
shortchanged – either can
put the sale in jeopardy.
It's More Than Just a
New Coat of Paint. Preparation
for a sale goes beyond just prettying up the organization. Like a
comfortable old house, where you know to avoid the third porch step,
you will find 'invisible' practices within your organization that
must be identified and changed – like a handshake contract
continuation – deals have soured over the 'invisibles', don't
ignore them.
Dot the i's And Cross
the t's. While pulling out all
the documents and other materials for the document requests – take
the time to logically organize them for the buyer, and review
everything for being current and complete. Other
useful documents: a current
chart of responsibilities (a/k/a institutional knowledge) of
the staff, current process and procedures for operations, and other
similar references that will help the new owners.
Courting the Other
Party. If you are selling,
increase visibility about your organization immediately after
deciding to investigate a sale; if buying, look for prospects early
and keep looking. This will give you prospects, but it also is an
indicator of the degree of difficulty in making your best deal.
It's Not Over Until
It’s Over. Deals can
evaporate
at any time, often based on a gut feel, rather than a discovered
defect. It is critical that the communication between buyer and
seller is active and that the effort does not let
up when almost completed.
The
organization must not be actively in the market at this stage of the
deal, but continuing to be
visible is important to spinning things up again if the deal falls
through. Does that happen? Yes, too often – on
one transaction, Dick had
five
buyers, each deep in the sale who canceled for various reasons – he
was finally successful
with buyer number six.
I
have seen deals canceled because of major defects in the buyer or the
seller, but I have also seen deals sputter and go dark when
everything seemed as perfect as possible. The statistics on non-deals
show there are fewer completed deals made than deals begun. In my
experience attention to the details and clear, frequent
communications increase the likelihood of success.
A
view from the top – Tips
4 The Big Chair
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