What were your business goals for the year? If you’re like
most successful owners, you have a profit goal you want to hit. You may also have a top
line revenue number that’s important to you.
While those goals are important,
there is another objective that may have an even bigger payoff: creating a
commercial profitable enterprise that works without you. In doing so, you are also building a sellable
business.
But what if you don’t want to sell? That’s irrelevant. Here
are five reasons why building a sellable business should be your most important
goal, regardless of when you plan to push the eject button:
1. Sellability means
freedom
One of the fundamental tenants of sellability is how well
your company would perform if you were unable to work for a while. As long as
your business is dependent on you personally, there’s not much to sell. Making
your company less dependent on you by building a management team and creating just-add-water systems for employees to
follow means you have the ability to spend time away from your business. Think
of the world of possibilities that would open up if you could choose not to go
into the office tomorrow….
2. Sellable
businesses are more fun
Running a business would be fun if you were able to spend
your days on strategic thinking and big picture ideas. Instead, most business
owners spend the majority of their day on the minutia: the government forms,
the employee performance reviews, bank reconciliations, customer issues,
auditing expenses. The boring details of company ownership suck the enjoyment
out of owning a business—and it is exactly these tasks you need to get into
someone else’s job description if you’re ever going to sell.
3. Sellability is
financial freedom
Each month you open your brokerage statement to see how your
portfolio is doing. Not because you want to sell your portfolio, but because
you want to know where you stand on the journey to financial freedom. Creating
a sellable business also allows you peace of mind, knowing that you’re building
something that—just like your stock portfolio—has value you could choose to
make liquid one day.
4. Sellability is a
gift
Imagine that your first-born graduates from college and as a
gift you give him your prized 1967 Shelby Ford Mustang. Your heavily indebted
child takes it on the road, but after a few miles, the engine starts smoking.
The mechanic takes one look under the hood and declares that the engine needs a
rebuild.
You thought you were giving your child an incredible asset,
but instead it’s an expensive liability he can’t afford to keep, and nor can he
sell it without feeling guilty.
You may be planning to pass your business on to your kids or
let your young managers buy into your company over time. These are both
admirable exit options, but if your business is too dependent on you, and it
hasn’t been tuned up to run without you, you may be passing along a jalopy.
5. Nine women can’t
make a baby in one month
There are some things in life that take time, no matter how
much you want to rush them. Making your business sellable often requires
significant changes; and a prospective buyer is going to want to see how your
business has performed for the three years after
you have made the changes required to make your business sellable. Therefore,
if you want to sell in five years, you need to start making your business
sellable now so the changes have time
to gestate.
Are you curious about how sellable your company is and what
you would need to tweak to sell it when you’re ready? Then it’s time to get
your Sellability Score via the questionnaire on our website. It takes about thirteen
minutes and your responses are kept confidential. You can complete the
questionnaire here www.actioncoachsellabilityscore.com.
Owning a business is a lot like owning a boat. the happiest two days are when you buy it and when you sell it.
ReplyDeleteCarl, it's the journey between those 2 points that makes life exciting.
ReplyDeleteMany business owners don't consider their exit strategy when starting a business. This is unfortunate since one of the biggest benefits of owning a business is being able to eventually sell it.
ReplyDeleteStart at the end and work your way back.
ReplyDelete