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Don’t Sell Yourself Short
Ron Davis, Contributing writer,
Selling your alarm company can be a
grueling process fraught
with technical and legal difficulties, not to mention psychological
ambiguities
about whether selling is the right thing to do. Find out what you need
to know
about assembling a seasoned and professional team to guide you through
a
profitable transaction.
Whenever independent alarm company
owners get together,
whether in small groups or large, invariably the question comes up:
“Does
anyone know what are the multiples?” Or, “Does
anyone know if this is a good
time to sell?” These questions and more are ubiquitous
wherever and whenever
alarm dealers gather at a seminar or talk.
Anyone who’s ever engaged
in an acquisition or divestiture
knows what it’s like to buy and sell. The turmoil and lack of
knowledge on both
sides of a transaction can cause what seems to be a
“paralysis by analysis.”
The accumulated wisdom generated by
these transactions can
provide today’s seller with the right knowledge to better
evaluate the
opportunities that are there. It can also help an owner fully
understand the
questions that should be answered before a decision is made.
The following represents an overview
checklist that alarm
dealers refer to when getting ready to make a decision about selling
their
company. It is by no means complete, but it does cover all the bases
that
require consideration.
Be
Sure That Selling Is the Right
Thing to Do
The first step is to examine why you
are selling. Think
about it. Ask yourself what will happen if you do sell, or conversely,
if you
don’t sell. Are you considering selling only because
something caused you to
become momentarily frustrated? Is this the best time in your business
career to
sell, i.e. are you on an upcycle or a downcycle? Most importantly, if
you did
decide to sell, how would you feel deep down inside once the
transaction was
complete?
Next, consider whether your business
is really ready to
sell. Look at your company through the eyes of a potential buyer.
It’s not
unlike getting ready to sell a house, boat or car. After all, you want
any of
these items to look their best to make sure a buyer is in fact going to
get what
he or she is looking for.
Take
Great Care in Assembling Your
Transaction Team
Now it is time to assemble your
transaction team. Think of
the term “all stars” when selecting the members of
your team — you only want
the best. The members of your team should include the business
“broker” (who is
usually not a broker in the legal sense, but rather a
“finder”) who is
primarily concerned with the process of bringing you together with a
potential
buyer.
Once you’ve found the buyer
and the outline of a deal is put
together, the next most important member of your “dream
team” is the lawyer.
And it is here when most sellers make their biggest mistake. They go to
their
family practitioner who has helped them with everything from
incorporation to
unemployment compensation, disputes, traffic tickets, marital disputes
and
everything else of a legal nature.
However, the only thing that is
important in this process is
the knowledge of transactional law and, more specifically,
transactional law as
it applies in the alarm industry. Transactions in the industry are
different
and truly require specialists who have an understanding of both the
process and
the application of that process.
This is not to suggest that your own
lawyer is not useful.
Very frequently the industry lawyer and your own corporate attorney
will work
together to protect you during and after the process is completed.
The financial guy, accountant,
financial planner, CPA, or
whatever you call him or her is the next player on your
“dream team.” He or she
will help you to structure a transaction in the most advantageous way
so as to
minimize, legally, the consequences of any taxes that may be due as a
result of
selling your company.
Taxation percentages can go as high
as 55 percent of the
proceeds of a transaction. When you couple that with the standard
holdback and
other charge backs, such as deferred revenue, it can mean very little
money in
your pocket.
The “financial
guy” can help not only structure the deal to
minimize the impact of taxes, but also help you plan for the future in
a way
that will allow you to accomplish your financial goals (and in case you
don’t
have those financial goals clearly identified, the financial planner
can help
you lay them out).
The final member of your
“dream team” is the administrator,
the person who makes sure that all of the files are in order, the
financials
are up to date, the office looks right and is ready for due diligence
(more
about that later). This must be someone who you will take into your
confidence
about the proposed sale to help you accomplish your mission in as quiet
and
expeditious a manner as possible.
Send
Your Team to Find a Buyer and
Initiate the Sale
At this point, the seller and his or
her team can start the
process of determining the best way to structure a transaction. Will it
be a
stock sale (sometimes difficult to do), or an asset sale (more common
and
certainly the preferred method by most buyers)? The lawyer should be
notified
that the process is beginning and to be prepared for questions that may
come up
about the letter of intent (LOI).
The finder or broker goes out and
finds a potential buyer,
negotiates an acceptable price, and agrees upon the general terms of a
LOI. The
agreed upon price, in this industry, is usually a multiple of recurring
monthly
revenue (RMR), and can hide many little “gotchas”
that a
less-than-knowledgeable advisory team might not pick up.
Get
Up to Speed on Multiples, Where
40X RMR Now Not Unusual
The multiple is then agreed upon and
the LOI is prepared.
This brings up a whole discussion on what kinds of multiples are being
paid in
the alarm industry today. Since many transactions are confidential, the
data in
this area is rather unscientific and can only be estimated from known
transaction figures and conversations throughout the industry.
The most important fact is that
multiples are high, perhaps
higher than they’ve been in years. Transactions are taking
place where the
multiples are in the 40X range for companies that have at least $50,000
a month
RMR. This number may conflict with other reports that suggest multiples
are
considerably lower. However, there are documented deals where the
numbers are
for the most part in the upper 30s minimum, 40 on average and north of
40 on
occasion.
The variables may include the quality
of the accounts, the
number of the accounts, the location of the company and the accounts,
and the
“hair” on the transaction, i.e. lack of contracts,
lack of owned telephone
lines, etc.
Once the LOI has been accepted, the
lawyer takes over and
negotiates the terms and conditions of the transaction with the other
side.
Simultaneously taking place is another thing known as due diligence.
This is
the time and the process that permits a due diligence team to come in
and
review all aspects of the business.
Of particular interest are the
customer files that should
include the entire histor
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