By: Doug Robbins
Maybe, but there are a couple of things to consider:
When I started Robbinex in 1974, the life expectancy of the Canadian male was 69. Retirement was usually at age
65. Today, depending on who you speak to, life expectancy is somewhere between 85 and 92. Are you ready to
be retired for 20 or 25 years or longer?
Life after business plan??? There is just so much golf one can play. I’ve spoken with a number of fellows who
after five or six months of playing several rounds a week, with the same group, who say it gets quite boring.
Within a year, most wished they had not sold their business.
Quite often, a business owner thinks “I’ve had enough – – it’s time to get out.”
What they have not done is:
For every 10 clients who say they want to sell now, after the completion of a Robbinex® Strategic Business
Assessment only 3 or 4 are ready and positioned to sell immediately. The remainder are encouraged to consider
one of the alternatives with a view of selling in 2 to 5 years or perhaps transferring to the next generation.
Most buyers we interview are looking for three things!
From the sustainability perspective the three most significant factors buyers are concerned with are employees,
customers, and suppliers.
Customers are important, and the most frequent question is customer concentration. Do one or two customers
represent a major percentage of the revenue and are there contracts with those customers.
Also, the gross margin of high-volume customers tend to be lower. Is there a requirement to carry inventory for
customers to draw on demand? Do their buying needs change over time which results in slow moving or dead
inventory?
Buyers are often concerned about suppliers and dependence of the business on a particular supplier. We once
had a client with customers across Canada who depended on one supplier for 90% of their products. When we
went to transfer the company, the supplier cancelled the supply contract to the company and went direct to our
client’s customers. The lawsuit is still pending.
Profit reliability? Most business acquisitions are valued as a multiple of EBITDA (Earnings before interest, taxes,
depreciation and amortization). The buyer needs to believe they can continue to earn at that level, or higher, to
ensure they can finance the acquisition and obtain a reasonable ROI (return on investment).
Questions arise during due diligence…. the average number of questions is 200 to 250. One client with revenues
of only $6.5M had 849 items to deal with during due diligence.
Future Growth opportunities:
Many owners as they approach the retirement years, tend to become passive and allow the business
revenues/profits to stay relatively flat and not grow.
The purpose for writing this Execu-Brief® is to simply encourage owners and their advisors to think twice before
running out to find a buyer for their business. Having a third-party assessment of any impediments and
alternatives can often identify an opportunity that had not been considered, along with having a viable life after
business program in place.
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Yes, but it was more than 1.5 years ago
Yes, within the last 18 months
No, I don’t want one
No, but I am considering it !