
- 264 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
The essential guide to selling your business—and walking away with maximum wealth Nearly every entrepreneur dreams of one day selling their business for big bucks, but far too many aren’t aware of exactly what it takes to do so. The sobering truth is that it’s very easy for the entrepreneurs who don’t know what they’re doing to walk away from a sale without the financial freedom they hoped for. In fact, only about 20 percent of businesses for sale will successfully transfer to another owner!In Walk Away Wealthy, Mark Tepper--a leading authority on wealth management and financial planning for entrepreneurs--shows you how to build a strong exit plan, an absolute requirement if you hope to get the full value from a sale. Tepper’s twelve secrets debunk myths and deliver practical advice as he walks you through what most people don’t know (or refuse to believe) about the process of planning their exit. And although it’s best to start planning the exit as early as possible, the book also delivers advice for those who may have waited too long and feel lost in the face of a rapidly approaching sale.Selling the business you worked so hard to build can be a confusing and intimidating proposition. Let Mark Tepper clear away the misconceptions, steer you clear of common mistakes, and help you walk away wealthy!
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Information

SECRET #1
CREATE YOUR EXIT PLAN BEFORE YOU NEED IT
âPAUL SAMUELSON, ECONOMIST
THE FACTS
- Those who treat their businesses as investments and make decisions that build sustainable long-term value, including putting a solid exit plan in place
- Those who operate their businesses as cash-generating engines to fund their lifestyles, with little or no thought or planning beyond the next quarter
- They assume that when they are ready to sell, a buyer will appear.
- They donât understand the complexity of selling a business.
- They donât like thinking about retirement or mortality.
- They assume they will just pass the company on to their kids or sell to a group of employees.
THE SECRET
- Find the heart of your exit team. Youâll need a certified public accountant (CPA) and a CFPÂŽ professional who have managed multiple successful owner exits. (Iâll explain later why a CFPÂŽ professional is likely your best choice.) Selling a business is extremely complex and will impact your tax burden and wealth for the rest of your life. While you may never have sold a business before, an experienced CPA or CFPÂŽ professional will have presided over numerous sales and transfers. With these advisors on your teamâpeople who will become as familiar with your business as you areâyouâll be better equipped to set sound goals, enact systems that will increase the companyâs value, and make business decisions based on facts, not emotions.
You may already have relationships with a CPA and a financial advisor. But if they donât have experience selling businesses, consider replacing them now with experienced people. Youâll avoid having to replace them later in the process. - Develop an operational model that keeps the company running smoothly with minimal daily involvement from you. Some entrepreneurs fail to find buyers because they spend years working in their businesses while not working on them. Theyâre neck-deep in every department and every transaction; nothing moves without their say-so. While this can be satisfying for the ego, itâs poison for the bank account. From the outset, a smart owner puts in place people, technology, and processes that encourage the business to grow even when he or she is not part of everyday operations. This makes the business more attractive to buyers who arenât interested in buying you along with your company.
- Balance todayâs need for comfort with tomorrowâs demand for value. Some businesses wind up becoming little more than an ATM designed to generate cash flow to fund their ownerâs lifestyle. Revenues go to cover payments for luxury cars, country club membership fees, family vacations, and the like. Thereâs nothing wrong with any of those things; if youâre going to work an entrepreneurâs long hours, you deserve some R & R. But some decisions that increase cash flow in the presentâsuch as taking on lucrative but resource-draining clients, giving away patents and trademarks, or going for cheap benefits packages that cripple your ability to attract the best peopleâcan conflict with your real goal: building sellable value in the long term.
- Develop your personal exit plan, and build your company to serve that plan. Do you know your ânumberââthe amount of money youâll need to fund your dream retirement? If you want to pass your company to your heirs, how will you ensure that they are ready to run it? What will you do with all that time you currently put into your business? Transferring your company brings up questions about investing, taxation, lifestyle, family, and even your lifeâs purpose. Knowing your goals and asking critical questions early on allows you to develop a business model that serves your financial, family, and personal goals.
HOW YOUâLL BENEFIT
- Youâll know your businessâs sellability. Wanting to sell your company doesnât mean an investor will be interested in buying it. By planning in advance, you and your team will find out if your business has sellable value. If it doesnât, you can choose to make changes that increase value, or you can leave things as they are and make other plans to fund your retirement. Either way, youâre not flying blind.
- You wonât fear the ups and downs of the mergers and acquisitions market. The M&A market (the market for buying and selling privately held companies) tends to run in three-to-five-year cycles, during which multiples and valuations expand and contract depending on the stage of the cycle. If the time comes to sell and the market is in a trough, you wonât get the amount you want. Sometimes, a successful exit isnât about when youâre ready; itâs about when ...
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Title
- Copyright
- dedication
- Contents
- FOREWORD by John Warrillow
- INTRODUCTION
- PART I: Building Value
- SECRET #1: Create Your Exit Plan Before You Need It
- SECRET #2: Know the Value of Your Business
- SECRET #3: Value Is About More Than Cash Flow
- SECRET #4: Make Yourself Expendable
- PART II: Monetizing Value
- SECRET #5: Selling Is Your Best Exit Option
- SECRET #6: If You Canât (or Wonât) Sell, Consider an Internal Transfer
- SECRET #7: Never Sell Your Business Yourself
- SECRET #8: Thereâs More to a Good Deal Than the Sale Price
- PART III: Preserving Value
- SECRET #9: Have a Financial Advisor Create Your Personal Financial Plan
- SECRET #10: Plan for the Unexpected
- SECRET #11: Donât Bet Your Retirement on Starting Another Successful Business
- SECRET #12: Find Something to Fill the Void After Your Liquidity Event
- CONCLUSION: Your Exit-Plan Checklist
- ENDNOTES
- INDEX
- ABOUT THE AUTHOR