Business & Economics Books:

Hire Your Buyer

a Philosophy of Value Creation
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Description

From the Introduction: What Is Hiring Your Buyer? This book offers a solution to a substantial crisis facing business owners between the ages of 50 and 70. In the United States there are six million of these owners and in Canada there are 550,000. It is estimated that 55% of these businesses will transfer or disappear as a result of a calamity. The ensuing fiscal carnage will be a threat to the entire economy. Many small business owners operate in a blissful state, assuming they can always sell their businesses. But the average price of a business listed on the largest business sale website in the US is $155,000, and that's not going to cut it. It comes as quite a surprise to many owners that the same business that pays them $200,000 a year may have zero transfer value. Further, some estimates say that only 30% of businesses go to family members. That leaves millions of businesses in the danger zone. Aside from selling, business owners have only a few options. The most readily available option for those with a solid business foundation and the right team-building skills is to hire your buyer. That is, work with the people in your business; form a team; strategize; clarify your purpose, vision and values; and build more value in your business. Train your successor or team of successors and then watch your business flourish and share in the value created as you transfer it to the new ownership team. That's hiring your buyer. The actual buyer, or team of buyers, may be existing employees, one or more of your children, or you may have to go out and find them. If you are an owner you need to decide whether this option is for you and if it is, you need to take the active steps to make it happen. This book shows you how. The Second E-Myth Over 25 years ago, Michael E. Gerber wrote a bestselling business book called The E-Myth: Why Most Businesses Don't Work and What to Do About It. The e-myth (that is, the entrepreneur myth) is the mistaken belief that most businesses are started by people with tangible business skills, when in fact most are started by "technicians" who know nothing about running a business. Hence, most fail. By contrast, consider that almost every business owner between 50 and 70 is one of the 20% who survived the cut. And most are successful entrepreneurs supporting a decent lifestyle. There are millions of owners who have spent decades building a solid business foundation. This is significant; it means something. Creating a solid business foundation is the most difficult stage of a business. The site has been excavated, the forms put in, the concrete poured and set. But then what happens? For most of these owners, the answer is nothing - they stop building the business at the foundation stage. Why? Because the business satisfies their lifestyle needs. But there is a second e-myth, one that Gerber did not talk about. Most entrepreneurs believe this second myth: they believe they are creating value in their business. This is a myth. A business is something separate from the owner; a business is something that has value and can be sold. What most entrepreneurs have created is a lucrative, interesting job for themselves, but not a business with significant value that they can sell. These entrepreneurs are lifestyle business owners. Their businesses are designed to be the foundation of a decent lifestyle, to generate a good salary and to serve as a vehicle for freedom and expression. The problem is that there is no way that selling that business will support a decent lifestyle in retirement. These businesses are not professionally managed - the entrepreneur covers almost all management functions and makes all the decisions. And these decisions are made for the convenience and comfort of the owner, not for the purpose of maximizing the value of the business. This book sets out a well defined path for creating a team and building value on top of your solid business foundation so that everyone can wi

Author Biography:

I did not intend to be a lawyer, I intended to be in business. I read dozens of books on business. One of them was J. Paul Getty's How to be a Successful Executive. Getty said that being in business was about solving problems and that your business would go as far as your ability to solve those problems. Today we describe this as change and the need for innovation. This meant that training for business should be about learning to solve problems - every kind of problem. To learn to solve every kind of problem you needed to learn about everything (or at least try). Getty recommended law school rather than business school because he said law school was about everything, whereas business school was too narrowly focused. In writing this book I researched and wrote a story about how badly J. Paul treated his own sons in business, driving one of them to suicide. I didn't know this story when I read his book and set the path for my life. It is interesting to consider whether I might have done things differently had I known. But in his defense, J. Paul lived before the social consciousness movement of the 1960s - in his time, abstract ideals like "the business is the priority" still reigned. Fortunately, we have learned better ways. We can manage loving relationships and build a business at the same time. After graduation, I started my own law practice. I was attracted to corporate/tax litigation because of its complexity and the deep, intimate knowledge you have to gain about your clients and their situations. Complex corporate/tax litigation also involves teams of professionals: accountants, valuators, brokers and more. One aspect I enjoyed was the uniquely deep and respectful relationships that can form among those fighting together in the battle for justice. Over time I migrated to tax law and in 2002 I obtained a Master of Laws degree in international tax. More than 30 years after finishing Getty's book and with 25 years of tax planning, business law and litigation problem-solving under my belt, I turned my attention to business succession planning. Why succession planning? Because it's about everything, so it's well suited to my skill set. Moreover, effective succession planning involves a similar deep knowledge of each client, as well as the assembling of professional teams driven by the satisfaction of a job well done. Please feel free to contact me at (519) 973-1223 or john@johnmilltax.com if you have questions about working with your own buyer.
Release date NZ
September 18th, 2014
Author
Audience
  • General (US: Trade)
Pages
206
Dimensions
152x229x12
ISBN-13
9780993843105
Product ID
23772543

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