Digg it UP
#1 in Business Subscribe Email Print

You are here: Home > Business > Entrepreneurialism > Business Sellers - Avoid These Ten Mistakes

Tags

  • offer
  • attacked
  • financial records
  • transaction value
  • everyday bookkeeper

  • Links

  • Tips and Tricks for DIY Credit Repair
  • Memorable Sales Copy -- How to Write it
  • 2006 Toyota Tacoma
  • Digg it UP - Business Sellers - Avoid These Ten Mistakes

    Kids and Money Guide
    As the name of our website suggests we help you in managing your finances when you think it is time that you had a baby but are worried about the cost and responsibility of a new life on your shoulders and pockets.Expecting a baby soon? Worried how you’ll be able to manage in the limited finances after it’s born? Worried about your child’s higher education? Well, we have the solution to your problems. At teachmoneytochildren.com, not only do we help you sort out your financial problems but we also explain as to how to go about explaining to your child the need to save money for a rainy day!Soon you may be incurring expenditure for diapers, baby soap, cradle, cots and the works. Within a few years you will be preparing for clothes, shoes, education, sports equipment, dates and bikes. We need to finance our children not only till the time they are in univer
    perly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a

    Tips to Correctly Size up a Business Opportunity
    Most business opportunities seem like a godsend at first glance only to find out that they’re curses in disguise. If you suddenly discover or are offered with a business opportunity, here’s what you should know to prevent yourself of becoming a victim of the same fate.Tip #1 Know the Source of the Business Opportunity How did you learn about the business opportunity? Was it something you discovered by chance or research? Was it offered to you by someone you know and trust? Consider the source of the business opportunity and determine how trustworthy it is. If you know nothing about the source then you should take the necessary steps to rectify the matter. Forearmed is forewarned!Tip #2 Can You Afford to Take Advantage of the Business Opportunity? Let’s say that the business opportunity is indeed legitimate. That, however, is not reason enough fo
    Selling your business is the most important business transaction you will ever make. Mistakes in this process can greatly erode your transaction proceeds. Do not spend twenty years of your toil and skill building your business like a pro only to exit like an amateur. Below are ten common mistakes to avoid:

    1. Selling because of an unsolicited offer to buy – One of the most common reasons owners tell us they sold their business was they got an offer from a competitor. If they previously were not considering this business sale, the owner has probably not taken some important personal and business steps to exit on his terms. The business may have some easily correctable issues that could detract from its value. The owner may not have prepared for an identity and lifestyle to replace the void caused by his separation from his company. If you are prepared, you are more likely to exit on your own terms.

    2. Poor books and records – Business owners wear many hats. Sometimes they become so focused on running the business that they are lax in financial record keeping. A buyer is going to do a comprehensive look into your financial records. If they are done poorly, the buyer loses confidence in what he is buying and his perception of risk increases. If he finds some negative surprises late in the process, the purchase price adjustments can be harsh. The transaction value is often attacked well beyond the economic impact of the surprise. Get a good accountant to do your books.

    3. Going it alone – The business owner may be the foremost expert in his business, but it is likely that his business sale will be a once in a lifetime occurrence. Mistakes at this juncture have a huge impact. Do you understand the difference in after tax proceeds between an asset sale and a stock sale? Your everyday bookkeeper may not, but a tax accountant surely does. Is your business attorney familiar with business sales legal work? Would he advise you properly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a

    Innovation - How To Spot The Ideal Environment
    Some of the conditions for innovation may seem 'idealistic' and it is extremely unlikely that the perfect organisation exists. All of the key areas are important and it is useful to identify how effective organisations are and whether any aspects of the organisation are being neglected. This only gives a broad overview. To get a detailed picture it is necessary to look at how creativity and knowledge are used and managed.Team WorkDo people work as individuals or in teams, how effective are they, are teams multi/single function. An important factor is the degree of autonomy.Hands-on ManagementHow much interference is there by managers in every-day working and how prescriptive are they? What actions are taken when problems occur. Do managers take immediate control or do they trust the people working for them t
    usly were not considering this business sale, the owner has probably not taken some important personal and business steps to exit on his terms. The business may have some easily correctable issues that could detract from its value. The owner may not have prepared for an identity and lifestyle to replace the void caused by his separation from his company. If you are prepared, you are more likely to exit on your own terms.

    2. Poor books and records – Business owners wear many hats. Sometimes they become so focused on running the business that they are lax in financial record keeping. A buyer is going to do a comprehensive look into your financial records. If they are done poorly, the buyer loses confidence in what he is buying and his perception of risk increases. If he finds some negative surprises late in the process, the purchase price adjustments can be harsh. The transaction value is often attacked well beyond the economic impact of the surprise. Get a good accountant to do your books.

    3. Going it alone – The business owner may be the foremost expert in his business, but it is likely that his business sale will be a once in a lifetime occurrence. Mistakes at this juncture have a huge impact. Do you understand the difference in after tax proceeds between an asset sale and a stock sale? Your everyday bookkeeper may not, but a tax accountant surely does. Is your business attorney familiar with business sales legal work? Would he advise you properly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a

    How to Know What You Know (2)
    Do you know what you know? You especially need knowledge management in high changing environments; if all remains the same, why should we think about the knowledge we need? Knowledge management is an iterative process of making tacit knowledge explicit and visa versa. But why would you make implicit knowledge explicit?Knowing something without knowing it is very useful. You can just trust on your actions. You can continue with what you did yesterday. The same rules apply. You can delegate as before.But then there has been a structural change. For example:Your (sales) organization has organized activities in the way that different experts where relatively autonomous in dealing with clients. They sold the product of their expertise in a both efficient and effective way.In the new situation this (product) expertise of the sales representative w
    ometimes they become so focused on running the business that they are lax in financial record keeping. A buyer is going to do a comprehensive look into your financial records. If they are done poorly, the buyer loses confidence in what he is buying and his perception of risk increases. If he finds some negative surprises late in the process, the purchase price adjustments can be harsh. The transaction value is often attacked well beyond the economic impact of the surprise. Get a good accountant to do your books.

    3. Going it alone – The business owner may be the foremost expert in his business, but it is likely that his business sale will be a once in a lifetime occurrence. Mistakes at this juncture have a huge impact. Do you understand the difference in after tax proceeds between an asset sale and a stock sale? Your everyday bookkeeper may not, but a tax accountant surely does. Is your business attorney familiar with business sales legal work? Would he advise you properly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a

    Owning a Vending Machine Business
    The first thing to consider when starting your own vending machine business is that it is not for slackers. It takes work. Just because you are going into business for yourself, will have no boss to deal with, and pretty much determine your own plans, that doesn’t mean the vending machine business is easy money.Assess your financial situation. How much money will it take to start out? Before you mortgage the house and buy a hundred vending machines, start with one or two and see how things go.Pick a good location. Don’t go through a location finder; they will charge you a fee, and their information is often useless. They might pick out a place that’s in a rough part of town, or they will pick a spot where the people you need to deal with are difficult. It is a better idea to scout out territory on your own. If you have or know any kids, ask them where the
    ntant to do your books.

    3. Going it alone – The business owner may be the foremost expert in his business, but it is likely that his business sale will be a once in a lifetime occurrence. Mistakes at this juncture have a huge impact. Do you understand the difference in after tax proceeds between an asset sale and a stock sale? Your everyday bookkeeper may not, but a tax accountant surely does. Is your business attorney familiar with business sales legal work? Would he advise you properly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a

    The Fastest Growing Company in the World
    So you want to have the fastest growing company in the world. Any one coach or entrepreneur can tell you it takes teamwork, time management, organizational, innovation and execution skills.Almost always right, but what does it take to make a great company in today's world. Why are companies like Microsoft expanding and companies like GM decreasing. Is it technology, partly, innovation, partly but not completely.What makes the best companies rise to the top? What makes a company go from $0-$1,000,000 in 1 year. What makes a company go from $11,000,000- $20,000,000 plus in one year.The answer is the S word. The S word changes everything, but you have to create the S. S takes time, collaboration, constant, collective, communication at all levels. However S takes more than this, it takes exectuable action. S is something like the atmosph
    perly on Reps and Warranties that will be in the purchase agreement? Your buyer’s team will have this experience. Your team should match that experience of it will cost you way more than their fees.

    4. Skeletons in the closet - If your company has any, the due diligence process will surely reveal them. Before your firm is turned inside out and the buyer spends thousands in this process and before the other interested buyers are put on hold – reveal that problem up-front. We sold a company that had an outstanding CFO. In the first meeting with us, he told us of his company’s under funded pension liability. We were able to bring the appropriate legal and actuarial resources to the table and give the buyer and his advisors plenty of notice to get their arms around the issue. If this had come up late in the process, the buyer might have blown up the deal or attacked transaction value for an amount far in excess of the potential liability.

    5. Letting the word out - Confidentiality in the business sale process is crucial. If your competitors find out, they can cause a lot of damage to your customers and prospects. It can be a big drain on employee morale and productivity. Your suppliers and bankers get nervous. Nothing good happens when the work gets out that your company is for sale.

    6. Poor Contracts – Here we mean the day-to-day contracts that are in place with employees, customers, contractors, and suppliers. Do your employees have non-competes, for example? If your company has intellectual property, do you have very clear ownership rights defined in your employee and contractor agreements. If not, you could be looking at meaningful escrow holdbacks post closing. Are your customer agreements assignable without consent? If they are not, customers could cancel post transaction. Your buyer will make you pay for this one way or another.

    7. Bad employee behavior – You need to make sure you have agreements in place so that employees cannot hold you hostage on a pending transaction. Key employees are key to transaction value. If you suspect there are issues, you may want to implement stay on bonuses. If you have a bad actor, firing him or her during a transaction could cause issues. You may want to be pre-emptive with your buyer and minimize any damage your employee might cause.

    8. No understanding of your company’s value – Business valuations are complex. A good business broker or M & A advisor tha

    HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
    <a href="http://www.diggitup.net/article/18100/diggitup-Business-Sellers--Avoid-These-Ten-Mistakes.html">Business Sellers - Avoid These Ten Mistakes</a>

    BB link (for phorums):
    [url=http://www.diggitup.net/article/18100/diggitup-Business-Sellers--Avoid-These-Ten-Mistakes.html]Business Sellers - Avoid These Ten Mistakes[/url]

    Related Articles:

    If You're Selfish, Teaching's Not for You

    Customer Service for Chambers of Commerce

    Buy A Business In Your Own Backyard And You Could Be Committing Business Suicide

    Bookmark it: del.icio.us digg.com reddit.com netvouz.com google.com yahoo.com technorati.com furl.net bloglines.com socialdust.com ma.gnolia.com newsvine.com slashdot.org simpy.com shadows.com blinklist.com

    minikatalog.bydgoszcz.pl zakłady bukmacherskie zakłady bukmacherskie Bank Zachodni WBK cash loans