5 Reasons Business Owners Fail To Exit Their Business With Maximum Cash Flow And Profit

Every business owner’s dream is to eventually exit their business with maximum cash flow and profit, assuring a comfortable retirement income as a reward for their years of dedicated hard work  To achieve this you will need to maximize the price you receive when exiting if you want to enjoy the comfortable retirement you’ve been hoping for.

Alarming facts about small business owners and retirement savings

Australian statistics reveal that only 5% or retiring business owners will have sufficient retirement savings to be completely financially independent.  In the US the average retiring business person has enough savings to fund approximately 8 years of their retirement, but will on average live 17 to 18 years beyond retirement age.  Facts such as these really bring home the need to focus on succession strategies that will boost your business valuation so you can exit with maximize profits and retirement income.

5 reasons business owners miss out on maximum retirement income

While some business owners will be sufficiently prepared to reap the rewards of years of effort, the reality is that many will fail to maximize their business value in a way that could ease their financial burden during the next phase of their life.  Here are the 5 main reasons why:

  1. Strategy Weaknesses involve 8 key areas of failure to have the end in mind when operating their business.  The strategic decisions made in the business do not adequately take into account market demand for the products and services they provide, nor the market conditions in which they operate. They lack a long term customer service focus, and fail to recognize the competitors they’re up against. Two types of competition exist -  competition for customers who use their services, and competition for potential purchasers of their business when they exit.
  2. Structural Faults encompass 4 main areas of fault when a business lacks a management culture, and fails to understand the associated tax implications of the ownership structure of a business, particularly when exiting.  To protect yourself against structural faults I can’t emphasize strongly enough that you need to use a team of specialist advisers to collaborate and mitigate the 6 D’s of Succession.
  3. Situational Errors takes into account the 6 identifiable situations that, without adequate contingency planning, can impact your business value and move your financial success beyond your control.
  4. Sustainability Breakdown comprises the 3 factors that impede effective business continuity and your ability to handover your business whilst receiving full financial benefit for a lifetime of effort.
  5. Steering Off Course involves leadership and management challenges and embodies the 4 business succession leadership challenges that you must overcome to ensure your business remains on track for maximum profits and income from enhanced business valuation and sale price when you exit your business.

How ready are you to take on the challenge of overcoming the 5 reasons too many business owners fail to achieve the profitable exit they had hoped for?

Business Succession Planning | Strategies to Maximize Your Retirement Income

Business exit strategies to achieve maximum income for your retirement

  1. Take the Business Exit Quiz (2 mins of your time) and find out where your exit strategy may be letting you down, and how to improve your chances of building a business for maximum profits and cash flow
  2. Read my book “Your Business Succession” to discover what you want to do to ensure you will not become one of the poor statistics outlined earlier in this article
  3. Contact our Business Succession Strategy office to plan your business succession strategy, so we can eliminate the stress of making the right decisions for your best chance of maximizing your business valuation for a profitable exit.

To Your Profitable Succession,

Leigh Riley

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Business Exit Strategy For A Sole Trader

Sole traders deserve a profitable exit strategy too

If  your business has no employees, and your family members are not interested in taking over your business when you leave, what is your best exit strategy to make sure you actually receive the cash flow and profits you’ve worked so hard to earn?

If you are a sole trader you may believe that you are at a disadvantage when leaving your business, but there are many options to help you  maximize the value of your business and therefore maximize the return on your investment.

Sole Trader Business Exit Strategy Tips by Leigh Riley

7 tips for a profitable sole trader exit strategy:

  • Make sure your business has a proven track record with financial accounts  and tax statements to verify the income and profits of your business.
  • Keep your place of business organized and attractive.
  • Document all client records, including contact details
  • Establish and document systems for all procedures and processes to make it easy for someone else to fulfill your role when you exit your business.
  • Communicate your success to your business associations, competitors and trading partners to make it a well known that your business is an attractive purchase proposition.
  • When considering potential buyers don’t overlook the newer graduates and trainees that you meet at business associations. They may currently be working with your competitors, but aspiring to own their own business one day.  You can portray your business as an easier path to owing their own business with instant income, rather than building a business from scratch.
  • When you’re comfortable, approach someone in your network to enter into an agreement with you to buy your business one day upon specified events occurring.  The events can be agreed with terms to include retirement or another matter causing you to leave the business,and the term should also include events such as sudden illness, accident or death.

This strategy will allow you to agree on a price for the time when you exit the business. Your agreement should include the terms of sale, and can even make provision for funding the purchase price.  This is known as the ‘friendly rival’ strategy.

Business Exit Tips For Sole Traders From Leigh Riley

Benefits of the ‘friendly rival’ exit strategy for sole traders

Any agreement you set up should be arranged by a team of experienced business exit strategy specialists and should make provision for the changing value of your business.

Due diligence must be given to the tax implications upon changeover.  The agreement should also provide for terms to protect your business asset from the contingencies, with insurance to cover sudden illness, accidents and death.

Putting a ‘friendly rival’ exit strategy in place will allow you the comfort of knowing you have a certain buyer when the time comes for you to leave your business, no matter what the circumstances. This will also provide you with assured financial security in the form of both cash flow and profit int the future and remove the pressure of finding a buyer if you ever have to leave suddenly.

FREE online tool to evaluate your exit strategy:

Start with the end in mind and sharpen your business strategy in a way that will enhance your proitable exit . Invest just 3 minutes to complete the FREE Business Succession Readiness Quiz and receive your FREE customized evaluation, plus a ‘To Do’ list of specific actions you want to take to ensure your profitable exit from your business.

Take the quiz now

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Leigh Riley, author of "Your Business Succession", provides strategic, tactical, practical and educational support for business owners who want to exit their business with maximum cash flow and profits. For speaking engagements or Succession Plan Audits contact Leigh here.