Your Business:
Will It Have A Happy Ending?
by Brent Dees
"Begin with the end in mind," says Stephen Covey in his
book Seven Habits of Successful Living. Those who have created a
successful business know it does not happen without planning, hard
work, and a little luck. Yet most have no plans for leaving their
business, ever.
Entrepreneurs are optimists, but all of us will stop work one day.
The truth is that most business relationships do not have a happy
ending. The question is: Will it happen as I want or will it just
happen?
Research in the UK indicates that 75 percent of small to medium-sized
businesses have no exit strategy. In Canada, 92 percent of entrepreneurs
say it is a good idea to have an exit strategy, but only 44 percent
actually have one. In the US, more than 20 percent of small industrial
business owners had not even thought about exiting their businesses.
Even professionals like physicians, dentists, and veterinarians
are ill prepared for exiting their practices. A survey of this group
indicated that 96 percent believed that poor planning left them
unable to exit their businesses on their own schedule.
Life shows us that we have to depend on ourselves. Yet we continue
to believe someone else will someday take care of us. We will live
on Social Security and income from the business that we created.
The idea that your business will strive on to provide you income
after you are no longer there is to believe that you have money
in a Social Security account. Your company will not work for you
after you are gone and there is no money in your account with Social
Security. Still, we believe. It is time to look at reality.
You will leave your business in one of four ways. I call it the
"The Four Ds of Leaving:" death, disability, divorce and
departing. To have a successful business, you must plan for all
Four Ds.
For the individual each one of the Four Ds has special demands
on family, income, taxes and transfer of control of assets. The
concern of the business is different. Your business is a separate
entity and your concerns for family and income will conflict with
the business desire to continue. The solution to the problem is
mutually fair agreements and enough money.
Fair agreements that take in the concerns of all parties negotiated
at the beginning of a business relationship will allow the participants
to handle transitions when relationships change. And relationships
will change. The agreements, commonly called buy/sell agreements,
are used to handle the Four Ds. Unfortunately, many buy/sell agreements
only address death at the urging of a life insurance agent. At the
meeting, you arbitrarily decide how much insurance you can afford
and how much your company is worth, when in fact you do not know.
Death is not as likely to end the business relationship as disability.
If the person is important to the business, the financial strain
is felt as keenly by the business as by the family who depended
on the income. If the business is faced with choosing between survival
or paying the disabled partner, it will survive.
You can imagine the torn feelings if a disability occurs, but what
if the partners cannot get along? How do we split a partnership
without financially ruining each other? It may be complicated by
many personalities, some may not even be a part of the dispute,
yet may be affected financially.
You may all be happy working together, but your partner or you
may decide to leave for another opportunity or simply to take life
easier. Who is going to do the work? What is owed the leaving partner?
Where is the money coming from?
A number of questions cannot be handled in this article, but there
are certain things that must be done: - The business needs to be
incorporated into a formal relationship that legally recognizes
that you and your business are separate entities - Devise a method
determining the value of the corporation that can be done at least
annually and will qualify under IRS standards - Develop an employee
benefit plan that will assist with the departure of each partner
in case of death, disability, or retirement - Finally, if we cannot
get along or simply want to leave, who gets the company and who
gets paid off and in what manner? If you think these decisions are
hard now, try to make them in the heat of the moment. You have to
think as if you are the one who wants to leave as well as the one
who wants to stay. It is not easy.
The "Great American Dream" is to create a business of
your own; to bring it to life and make it successful, financially.
A truly successful business is one that makes you financially independent.
How you leave will determine your financial success and that of
your family. Just as building a successful business takes planning,
hard work, and a little luck, so does leaving it.
Brent Dees, CFP, CSA is president of Brent Dees Financial Planning,
http://www.brentdees.com,
and a registered principal with Financial Network Investment Corporation.
He is one of only a handful of advisors in the nation who has both
the certified financial planner and the certified senior advisor
designations.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
Return to the Resources
Archive
|