You Are Destroying Business Value, Just Pay the %^$*^R and Move On!

Business owners working on exit planning and maximizing the value of their company for sale often take a wrong turn. Litigation is a nightmare. When we work with owners to sell their companies and advise on the value-building process, we find they are sometimes destroying business value without realizing the extent of it.

We are human beings – we get into disputes. This is America – people sue people. If you have been through business litigation of any sort, you know it is not pretty. In the end, it’s rarely worth it. You may be in the right, there may be real damages or loss of money, and darn it, they should pay!

Certainly, there are situations in which you cannot avoid the dispute dragging on. It may be a substantial amount of damages or it may be a more complex situation tied to other potential liability. Often, however, the relentless, unending fighting – especially going all the way to court – can reduce the value of your company. If each year over a few years you are paying $100,000 in legal fees and your net income takes a hit of $100,000, the reduction in business value can be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    • Revenue Decline: There is no question that you will be distracted by the process. Even with your attorneys handling much of the work, it will always be on your mind. Stress grows and you will have a less-than-100% focus on growing your business, exit planning, and building value for a sale. Revenue will suffer.
    • Bad Decisions: You will – consciously or subconsciously – adjust the decisions you make away from your best course of action because of the ongoing dispute and its implications.
    • Attorney Fees: They add up very quickly – quite possibly ending in more money than it would have taken to just pay the *$*&* and get it behind you to focus on value growth.
    • Brand Damage: The longer the fight continues, the more likely this will get out to hurt your brand and image, even if you are right!

 

36 to 53 percent of small businesses are sued in a given year.

~4 Small Business Statistics About Lawsuits – SmallBizDaily

So just forget it?? Well, sometimes, yes, as much as it pains you. Work with your attorney to make a fair offer, even go a little higher to get it settled! The investment can be worth it!

There are great attorneys who know that doing right by their client is to quickly come to an agreement. Make sure your attorney is not encouraging you to fight without considering all options, the financial implications, and the effect on business value. Consider the options, despite your frustration. You may be on the right side of the dispute but don’t reduce the value of your business any further.

Don’t let one of these issues delay or derail your exit planning, value-building, and the sale of your company. Resolving these issues quickly will help you maximize value and move through the business transaction process more smoothly and quickly.

Call if we can help you think through your specific situation. Always happy to have a conversation to provide some guidance on the business sale process, business value, exit planning or building value for sale.  

 

David Shavzin, CMC, Exit Strategist

David Shavzin

Transactions, Value Growth, Exit Planning, Succession Planning

Founder and President, The Value Track, Atlanta, Georgia
Co-Founder and President, Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta

 

 

 

 

770-329-5224

david@GetOnTheValueTrack.com

Our BLOG // LinkedIn // www.GetOnTheValueTrack.com

 

Should I Sell My Business Without an Advisor?

Optimizing the sale of your company should not be a DIY undertaking. A business sale is complicated, not a do-it-yourself activity. This is not like selling your home. Business owners can and do a lot themselves, we all do.

 The riskiest thing you can do: The most complex transaction you will ever likely engage in is the sale of your business. Selling your company by yourself, your life’s work is just too risky.  This is true from a legal perspective and financial perspective. And when most of your net worth is tied up in the company, you cannot afford big mistakes as you work on exit planning.

 Engaging a professional team to help you sell will maximize the sale price, optimize terms, and minimize the risks inherent in such a complex transaction. Your professional advisory team should also include expertise in exit & succession planning.

Selling baseball cards on eBay or selling your used car might have low financial risk. And we do not recommend selling your house by yourself even if you can get good data on comparable home prices. It is definitely not a good idea to do so with your company. This is even more true through the chaos of COVID, economic challenges and changes, uncertainty in politics (impeachment, a new administration, new potential tax changes, trillions in federal spending), as well as issues tied to your industry.

 One current client example: the first offer that came was a business value at about 30% of the number now under discussion. On their own, our client may have taken that first offer up by 100% but they would most likely not have taken it up more than 200%. Every case is unique but investing in the right advisory team will help you maximize what you walk away with for retirement, or whatever your plans may be.

Are you ready? A few thoughts: Sell Now? Wait for the Economy?

 

David Shavzin

Call if we can help you think through your specific situation. Always happy to have a conversation to provide some guidance on business valuation, exit planning, and the transaction. 

David Shavzin, CMC, Exit Strategist

Transactions, Value Growth, Exit Planning, Succession Planning

Founder and President, The Value Track, Atlanta, Georgia
Co-Founder and President, Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta

770-329-5224 david@GetOnTheValueTrack.com
Our BLOG // LinkedIn // www.GetOnTheValueTrack.com