When Is The Perfect Time To Buy A Business?

When will the time be right for you to take the entrepreneurial plunge and buy a business?

 

This is obviously a very big question. It’s also a bad question.

 

This question is based on the notion that there is such a thing as perfection in life. There isn’t. There will never be a perfect business. There will never be a perfect time. Perfection implies an absence of risk – and like many things in life that are worth doing becoming a business owner comes with a healthy dose of risk. You might not succeed.

 

 

Guess what? You might not fail either.

 

Entrepreneurs buy businesses every day. Most of them work hard and achieve the goals they have for business ownership. You could too.

 

That first step – deciding now is as good a time as any – can seem like an impossible step if you cling to the idea that the perfect time will eventually come. It won’t. Instead, you have to decide that the goals you have for your life – to be your own boss, to follow your passions, to make a better life for yourself and your family – those things are worth taking a bit of a risk.

 

So how do you start? Maybe you’ve had an idea of the type of business you’d like to own for a long time, maybe you aren’t sure what kind of business would work for you. Either way the first step is to have a conversation with an experienced and qualified business broker.

 

That first conversation should be about a couple of very important things. What are your goals for business ownership? How many hours do you want to work per day or week? Where do you want your business to be located? How much money do you need your business to make? Do you have a passion for a particular industry? In what areas/industries do you have practical experience that you could draw on as a business owner? How much capital do you have to invest in your new business venture? Would you need financing and what types of financing would you be comfortable with?

 

The answers to these questions can help a good broker find businesses for you to consider. These questions can also help you figure out what you really want to get out of owning your own business. Knowing what your goals are will be instrumental in making an educated and thoroughly researched decision about which business you buy.

 

It can be scary to walk away from a steady paycheck that you get from someone else, but if you aren’t happy working for that someone else don’t wait for a perfect time that’s never going to come. Take a well-considered yet imperfect jump instead.

 

Have you always wanted to own your own business but were waiting for the perfect time? Do you have questions about what types of businesses would fit your goals? Ask us! Leave any questions or comments and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
5111 Ocean Boulevard, Suite E
Siesta Key, FL 34242

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Selling Your Business? Why You Should Keep Your Employees In The Dark

 

We get it. When you have employees, it can be hard to see them as just employees. They’re trusted colleagues who may have been working with you for a long time.

 

When it’s time to list your business for sale, it can be tempting to keep everyone in the loop. They should know that the business is potentially changing hands in the near future, right?

 

Unfortunately, no. Here’s why:

 

No one likes change. Particularly when that change could upset or derail someone’s paycheck or career plans. Employees who find out their place of employment is for sale invariably panic and a good number of them quit before a sale even happens. Think an entire kitchen staff including the head chef leaving en masse. Or an entire salon staff walking out and taking their regular clientele with them.

 

A huge staffing issue like this, at a time when prospective buyers will be scrutinizing your business and it’s sustainability will obviously kill any potential deals. It can cause massive issues for your bottom line and has tanked businesses completely before they got anywhere near a closing table.

 

Don’t do this to yourself, your business and your chances of successfully reaching a closing table. You have to keep your employees in the dark about the for-sale status of the business until after closing. 

 

What about someone pivotal to the business, like a head chef or manager? Can’t I tell them what’s happening?

 

It depends. There are some instances where a key employee can be in the loop, but for the most part you need to keep anyone who is on your payroll out of the business transaction itself. We realize that it can feel like you’re deceiving the people who trust you – but what you’re actually doing is protecting the integrity of the place where they work. Keeping the business in good standing will keep them employed, and employees who are good at their jobs have little to worry about if they continue to be good employees under new ownership. No one wants to take over a successful business and toss out the people who make that business successful.

 

Talk to your business broker about the employees you have, the roles they play and whether or not you’d like some of them to know about the sale before it happens. Your broker will be able to help you decide if it’s worth the risk to your business to let some of your staff know what’s going on. In almost all cases, the answer will likely be that it’s better if no one knows.

 

Have you considered selling your business but are concerned about the future of your employees after a sale? Do you have questions about what types of employees should be kept in the loop? Feel free to leave any questions or comments and we would be happy to help.

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
5111 Ocean Boulevard, Suite E
Siesta Key, FL 34242

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Why Feedback Matters: Helping Your Business Broker Help You

 

Are you just beginning your business search? Your first step should be talking to an experienced and qualified business broker about what you are hoping to get out of business ownership.

 

What do you want your life to look like? How much money would you like to spend and how much do you need your new business to earn? Where do you want your business to be located? A good broker will take your answers to these first and basic questions and put together a list of listings for you to consider.

 

Here’s an important point in the process that some buyers miss:

 

Once you have those initial listings take a good, hard look at them and then decide not only if you like or dislike a business – but WHY.

 

Was it the location? The net/gross earning? The number of employees? By giving very specific feedback your broker can fine-tune the search, giving you better choices as the search process progresses. If you are vague with your feedback or give none at all, you will more than likely just continue getting businesses you don’t like – a counterproductive waste of time.

 

A good business broker can point you in the right direction and help you find the right listings, but they can only be effective in that capacity if you give them feedback. Lots of feedback.

 

Why can’t I just look at everything? Why do I have to keep giving feedback?

 

Giving very specific feedback on why you did or didn’t like a business will make your business search more efficient – weeding out listings that you wouldn’t have liked well before you have to take a deep dive. It also helps show your business broker that you are a serious buyer who is willing to put in the work required to get a deal done. No one wants to work with someone that isn’t going to participate – and buying a business is a complicated process best traversed by someone who is willing to do what’s needed to see it through.

 

Another note here. Negative feedback about why you disliked or hated something about a business is important, as you don’t want to end up with a business that will make you unhappy – but feedback about why you liked something is also pivotal to success. Did you really like that a particular business had X number of employees or did you love the type of area where a business was located? Don’t just give your broker the negative feedback. Telling them what you liked about businesses will be just as important as what you didn’t.

 

Are you beginning your business search and want to know more about how feedback can help streamline the listings you see? Would you like to know what businesses are currently available that would meet your goals for business ownership? Ask us! Please feel free to leave any questions or comments and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
5111 Ocean Boulevard, Suite E
Siesta Key, FL 34242

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

 

 

 

 

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Buying A Business? Don’t Sign A Million NDAs (Do This Instead)

If you’re excited about buying a business it might be tempting to spend your days scouring the internet for business listings and then requesting information on everything that even slightly matches what you’re looking for.

 

 

Don’t do that. Here’s why:

 

Businesses are bought and sold under a veil of confidentiality. That confidentiality exists to protect the business while it is being sold (you can read more about why here). What this means for you as a buyer is you can’t just look up a listing and immediately get all of the information on a business for sale. There’s a layer of legal protection that you need to get past before you can gain access to the information you need. That layer involves signing a non-disclosure agreement (NDA).

 

Signing the NDA means you can’t disclose the name of a business, the location of a business, any proprietary information you will now have access to – even the for-sale status of a business. You will have to sign a NDA for each business listing individually. If the business brokers involved are doing their job, you shouldn’t be able to sign the NDA until you’ve had a conversation about why this business fits with your goals for business ownership and if you actually have the funds necessary to make a sale happen. The importance of keeping the for-sale status of a business under wraps means a broker should only be allowing NDAs to be signed by potential buyers who could actually be buyers – not hundreds of random tire-kickers.

 

The necessity of confidentiality might initially seem frustrating as a buyer, but it’s not just the business itself this process helps. As a buyer, you don’t need to be wasting your time signing dozens and dozens of NDAs for businesses that would never have suited you in the first place. It’s a colossal waste of your own time and energy.

 

Here’s what you should do instead. Call a few business brokers. Have conversations with them about what you hope to get out of business ownership. Talk to them honestly about the amount of funds you have available for your new venture. See if you think you and a broker would work well together.

 

This initial conversation will help a good broker find listings that will actually check all of your boxes. Then you can efficiently sign NDAs for businesses that may work for you.

 

A very important note here. Once you have a broker you like – don’t go and sign NDAs on any listings without them. Once you’ve signed another broker’s NDA your broker can’t help you anymore. NDAs are tied to specific businesses, and are therefore tied to the listing and the listing broker. Your broker can request the NDA on your behalf for a listing that isn’t theirs and still maintain the buyer-broker relationship with you. If you go around your broker and sign a NDA they didn’t request they legally and ethically can’t even give you advice. The relationship has now shifted to whatever broker has the listing – a broker you don’t know and who doesn’t know you. 

 

The message here is although the process of searching for businesses has a few more steps than other big purchases like a house or car – those steps exist to make the process more efficient for everyone – including you. Find yourself a good broker, maintain that relationship by only having your broker request NDAs and be patient with the process.

 

Are you shopping for businesses and weren’t aware that signing NDAs tied you to listing brokers? Do you have questions about what businesses currently for sale you meet your goals for business ownership? Ask us! Leave any questions or comments and we would be happy to help you on your business search.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
5111 Ocean Boulevard, Suite E
Siesta Key, FL 34242

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

 

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3 Important Points Every Business Buyer Should Know

Businesses are inherently complicated. You are dealing with staff, vendors, clientele, a location or locations, possibly vehicles, inventory, computer systems and software, operating procedures, leases, licensing requirements, permitting requirements, inspections, certifications – the list goes on.

 

If you are considering becoming a business owner and entering the world of entrepreneurship by buying an existing business, then the complicated nature of businesses not only includes the business itself but also the process to buy it.

 

If this is your first time in the business for sale market, then there are a few things about the process you must understand in order to be successful.

 

 

This Will Be Nothing Like Buying A House

This one is the biggest misconception. It will cause major problems between you as a buyer and the sellers and business brokers involved if you don’t immediately banish this thought from your mind. You don’t search “businesses for sale” on the internet, see pictures and collect addresses, then drive around with a business broker for tours. That is what you would do if you were buying a house. Businesses for sale keep that fact completely confidential, and as such you can’t call up a business broker and ask him to “show you some businesses”. In the business sale process, there are many more steps. You will first be required to sign non-disclosure agreements, then you will likely have conference calls and/or meetings with the sellers and brokers off-premises long before you get a “tour” of the business. The non-disclosure agreements also mean that you will not be able to tell anyone outside of the transaction what business you are considering buying until after you get to the closing table.

 

Most “Buyers” Don’t Buy Anything

If you are really serious about buying a business, then you will need to be prepared for the reality that those who are already in the business market – think sellers and brokers – are unlikely to give you the time of day. Sure, you are poised to write a very big check to someone for their business, but the fact is only about 10% of buyers who initially look at businesses actually end up buying one – so the other players in the game will initially have a hard time taking you seriously. What’s important here is not to be offended. If you worked in an industry where only one in ten people who vied for your attention actually followed through, you would be a bit picky about who you chose to spend your time on too. You can pull away from the tire-kicking pack by staying motivated, being honest and upfront about the finances you are intending to invest in a business (particularly with your own business broker) and by making good offers on the businesses you like.

 

Patience, Patience, Patience

We have all become very accustomed to instant communication and instant gratification in our technological world, but the complexity of businesses means you can’t get or do everything you want immediately. You can’t show up on a Thursday and expect your broker to be able to line up three or four businesses for you to “see” on Friday. When you request information from sellers, you need to be aware that in addition to dealing with you they are also trying to run a business, so it may take them a few days to get things back to you. You are (one would hope) not your broker’s only client, so if they don’t answer the phone or immediately return your call it doesn’t mean that they are blowing you off. When you send financial records off to a CPA or contracts off to an attorney to be reviewed, you will have to give it some time to get those documents back. If you are dealing with licensing and permitting issues, you need to be aware that government agencies are not known for their speed. Just be patient with the process and everything should fall into place.

 

If you really want to buy a business know that with a good dose of patience, good offers and the understanding from the start that this process can be pretty complex, you have a great chance of finding the right business for you.

 

Are you a buyer who’s had trouble getting anyone to take you seriously? Do you feel like the process couldn’t be any slower? Do you have more questions about confidentiality or any other part of the process? Ask us! Please feel free to leave your comments or questions here and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
5111 Ocean Boulevard, Suite E
Siesta Key, FL 34242

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

 

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Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

9040 Town Center Parkway
Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202




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