Here are some suggestions that may help you if you are one
of these individuals or know someone in this situation:
·
Consider a phased retirement
·
Accept that you may not sell your business for
the price that you think it is worth.
·
Structure the sale to make it more attractive to
the buyer.
·
Be flexible and offer creative financing by
leveraging the business profits to help make the sale and get closer to your target
price.
Let’s say you are 61 years old and your goal was to retire
at 62. You have a catering business that
you believe was worth $1 million three years ago, but now may be worth only
$750,000. You had planned to sell it for
$1.1 million because that is what you believed you needed for a comfortable
retirement. You received an unsolicited
offer from an informed prospective buyer earlier this year for $500,000. You laughed and told her she must be
joking. But by structuring the sale and leveraging
the business profits you may be able to realize close to your goal of $1.1
million. Perhaps the buyer’s offer
assumed that you would no longer be involved in the business, and some loss of
customers would occur due to your absence.
Consider this scenario:
Instead of brushing her offer aside you tell her that her offer is well
below what you would take, but there are some options for making such a
deal. First, and most importantly you
are willing to stay on for a temporary period.
This would assist her in the transition and help to minimize the loss of
any customers. You would make her a
counter offer asking her to pay you the sum of $250,000 for 25% of the
business. You would receive a salary of
$100,000 for the next three years with an agreement requiring you to work 30
hours per week instead of the 60 or so that you have been working. At the end of three years assuming that
certain revenue and profit goals had been achieved, she would pay you $300,000
and you would receive a consulting contract with a non-compete clause for three
more years paying you $50,000 per year.
At that point you would transfer the remainder of the company to
her. In summary your deal would be as
follows:
Salary for three years at $100,000 per
year................................................300,000
Second payment at the end of three
years……….......................................300,000
Three-year consulting/non-compete
contract at $50,000 per year………..150,000
Total $1,000,000
Should the
revenue and profit goals not be met the deal can be modified or possibly
continued for two more years depending upon the wishes of the parties. This is one example of structured deal-making
that would allow the business owner to retire at 65 and receive an additional
$50,000 per year until age 68, allowing more time to accumulate the necessary
funds for his retirement.
Other
variations of this example may also work and often can be uncovered through
continuing negotiations. Installment
buy-outs can often save the seller taxes depending upon the specifics of the
sale. Taxes should always be taken into
account as it is the after-tax proceeds from the sale that will help pay for
the seller’s retirement. Always have
your tax advisor review the proposed transaction.
* *
*
Business
owners should aim to save for retirement outside of the business since they can
never be sure of what the business will fetch when they are ready to
retire. One of the best ways to do this
is through the use of a tax advantaged retirement plan for the business owner
and his employees. In many cases
retirement plans can be designed to benefit owners and key employees without
violating IRS non-discrimination rules.