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Selling Your Business, Keep the Vultures Away

Hey honey, come look at this, this is weird.” My wife, Emily (her real name), was looking out toward our backyard from the kitchen window. “This is unbelievable, kinda spooky,” she said. I looked out to see vultures in my backyard. Big, black, scary-looking creatures. The fact that it was dusk made the scene even more ominous. I counted 21, there may have been more. From my vantage point, it looked like they were feasting on something in the creek bed about 100 feet behind our house. Most of the birds were standing guard while a few were picking at something. It looked organized, even orderly, which made the whole scene even weirder.

The next morning the birds were gone, so I walked back to see what had happened. I saw in the dry creek bed a completely clean deer skeleton. No mess, no residue, just a clean skeleton. It would seem the birds had a very good dinner.

You know what’s interesting? Vultures are not predators. They don’t attack and kill their prey, they wait for the animal to die, then flock in to pick the carcass clean. Once they start their work, they get it done with amazing speed and thoroughness.

I see vultures in business. You know the type, buyers who are waiting to pick clean the carcass of a business owner, or his/her heirs. These vultures are not necessarily mean or disrespectful, but they have a sense to know when a business owner is in trouble. These vultures don’t wait until the prey is dead though. They can be creative and persistent in looking for a state of weakness, and then they’ll pounce.

The business owner can find him/herself in a state of weaknesses because of failing health, boredom, frustration, or internal division. Of course, there are times an owner can identify and fix these weaknesses, and move on to success. But in my experience, that is the exception, not the rule. Though I hate to say it, from what I observed over thirty-plus years, once a business owner enters a state of weaknesses, it’s rare to work out of it. Thats why I caution owners to do a regular assessment of their state of ownership. Instead of waiting to sell a business because of weakness, consider selling before the weaknesses are manifested and the vultures are circling. Sell before you have tois one of my common mantras when speaking before groups of business owners. That comment is not intended to fear monger an owner who doesnt want to sell into selling, but I do encourage business owners to be vigilant to recognize circumstances that could cause weakness in the business. Without a plan to address and reverse the weakness, the vultures will be nearby, waiting to pick your carcass clean.

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Tennessee Valley Group

Jim is an attorney (non-resident status with the Missouri Bar) and though he no longer practices law, he has read and negotiated enough legal documents to fill a cargo tanker. He has an MBA from Harvard Business School and knows how Wall Street and private equity operates. Jim is a Tennessee Supreme Court Rule 31 listed general civil mediator with tons of experience helping business owners (large and small) work through sensitive problems to achieve winning results. He is the author of "Home Run, A Pro's Guide to Selling Your Business, Seven Principles to Make Your Company Irresistible."

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