Selling to an inside buyer such as one or more of your business partners or employees can be deeply rewarding. Long-term, valued co-workers become like extended family to many owners. To see the business continue forward under the leaders that you helped develop acknowledges all your efforts, and launches your business legacy. In some situations, your employees may be the best potential buyer. They know the business, and would rather own it after your exit than go work for somebody else.
Despite these advantages, successfully selling to an insider buyer can be difficult. There are nearly a dozen major issues that may arise which could prevent the successful completion of an internal sale. Based on our experience, below are the four biggest mistakes to avoid when selling your business to an inside buyer:Internal sales are no different. However, what is different with an internal sale is the buyer (which we will assume is one or more key employees) already works for the company. With the buyer already working at the company, waiting until the time of sale to determine the purchase price and terms risks several negative outcomes:
Selling a business to an internal buyer presents several financial challenges, any one of which can undermine everybody’s success:
If there is only one key employee buyer involved in a potential transaction, then things are straightforward—that one key employee will presumably purchase 100% of the company. More commonly however, there are two or more key employees in the picture as a potential team of buyers. This changes the situation considerably. Employees who work well alongside one another may have different feelings about being a business co-owner with the other person or persons. Being business partners with somebody is commonly compared to marriage, for good reasons.
The financial, legal, emotional and practical ties between co-owners are real and serious. In our experience, once the current owner leaves the room and key employees feel free to speak openly, it is not unusual for us to hear “Oh, I want to buy into the company, but not if Joe (or Jane) is part of the deal…I would never want to be business partners with him!” Even if the employees genuinely get along well, two or more employees coming together as a buying team will need to determine issues like ownership structure, voting rights and control, and compensation—all issues which could derail their ability to come to harmony as an ownership team. It is generally better for everybody involved if the current owner and all the potential key employee buyers address these matters well in advance, rather than risk coming to roadblocks late in the process.
By definition, key employees are high performers in their current roles and responsibilities. That alone does not guarantee that the key employee buyer(s) can run and ultimately grow the business going forward on their own. First, the current owner may have played an important role in the company, and after he or she is gone it may be difficult to replace that person. Additionally, just because the key employee buyer(s) are high performers in their current roles does not mean they will succeed when they are in charge. Too many owners simply assume that their key employee buyer(s) will be able to get the job done after a sale, and never test that assumption. Testing the assumption prior to a sale is not complicated—the current owner simply has to delegate a high level of authority to the key employees, monitor their performance, and periodically unplug from the business for several weeks or more at a time to test how well things run without that owner. Many owners do not take these steps prior to sale however, at their peril.
Because selling to an inside buyer is difficult, owners considering this strategy need to start as soon as possible working on their exit plan. If your desired exit timeframe is five years or less, you are in the homeward stretch to prepare for a successful exit.