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Acquisition Entrepreneurship – Selecting Professional Advisors

June 19, 2020 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

If you’re a leader thinking about making a change in your career, a new MBA looking to launch into leadership, or maybe a seasoned entrepreneur through acquisition you know that the road to identifying an organization to purchase is littered with the corpses of  those that did not conduct thorough enough due diligence. In this series, Acquisition Entrepreneurship, I’ll tackle the topics that will make your journey on that road less risky on the way towards successful acquisition of a new entity. In this post, we’ll explore the Professional Advisors recommended to assist you towards acquisition… Enjoy!

Acquisition Entrepreneurship Selecting Professional Advisors

Selecting Professional Advisors

An Accountant and a Lawyer are two of the most important advisors you’ll want to engage during your due diligence phase in acquisitions. You should look for those accountants and lawyers skilled in working with similarly sized firms as the one you’re exploring (Typically, those that work with smaller firms).

The accountant should have familiarity with smaller firm’s accounting practices, including payroll taxes, sales tax, and noncash expenses such as bad debt reserves or accruals for sales force bonuses earned yet paid. The accountant should have well established protocols to quickly determine if the company has accurately accounted for these expenses.

The lawyer should know which contracts are successfully in play at the acquisition and typical terms and conditions therein. This could be the same lawyer that assisted with creating your Letter of Intent (LOI) as well as prepares the final acquisition documents.

Professional Advisor Fees

While accountant and lawyer fees typically vary, depending on geography and especially with the purchase of an organization that can last several months to a year, you could expect that accounting due diligence will cost somewhere between $20,000 to $50,000. The reason there is such a large range provided is that the cliché “it depends” is in play regarding how much work needs to be done to understand the company’s true financial picture.

Legal due diligence is more tightly focused and includes the cost to prepare purchase agreements and related documents. The fees one can anticipate typically are in the $50,000 to $75,000 range.

One last note on professional advisor fees, specifically contingency. In other words, you may want to see if both accountants and lawyers will work on a contingent basis and therefore get paid at the time of closing so that you won’t have to come out of pocket during the due diligence phase. Keep in mind that some professional advisors will do so, some won’t work on contingency. The bottom line is that you typically get what you pay for so select wisely but don’t eliminate these all too important professional advisors!

Other Professional Advisors to Consider

In addition to accountants and lawyers, there may be other professional advisors that you want to bring in while conducting due diligence. I’ve hired engineers to come and inspect manufacturing equipment, IT consultants to inspect software development, Environment consultants to gage appropriateness of the wet excavation procedures, and Marketing consultants to ensure accuracy in market potential was accounted for. Depending on your entrepreneur through acquisition strategy and the organizations you’re considering, it’s important to bring in the professionals at time of due diligence well before you officially take ownership (Again, it’s better to walk away from the acquisitions table because of issues identified by professional advisors than to sit at it and go hungry for a period of time because you didn’t employ them!)

SUMMARY

Acquisition Entrepreneurship is a great way to explore your entrepreneurial spirit and look to “buy then build” an organization (As opposed to the typically thought of entrepreneurial methodology of a startup). Regardless of the industry you’re looking in and the size of the organization therein, you want to ensure that you have the best team of professional advisors employed to serve you. This will help with risk mitigation regarding your entrepreneur through acquisition strategy.

Sam Palazzolo

PS – I’m typically asked what our Acquisitions Strategy is at Tip of the Spear. As such, we have summarized our Acquisitions Criteria here on our website: https://tipofthespearventures.com/acquisitions/. Please review and let me know if I can be of service.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: accountant, acquisition, acquisition entrepreneurship, acquisitions, entrepreneur, entrepreneur through acquisition, lawyer, professional advisors

The Leadership Challenge: Launching a New Business – 3 Tips!

May 5, 2017 By Tip of the Spear

The Point: We all love the success stories associated with launching a new business that are bantered about in the media. 20-30x returns are often reported to those early investors who were daring enough to participate in fund raising. However, what happens to the ideas that don’t get launched successfully? What becomes of the leaders who fail(ed)? Where do the investors turn for investment lost? In this post we’ll take a look at the leadership challenge of launching a new business from a 30,000 foot perspective and provide three tips to help insure success at a foundational-level is achieved… Enjoy!

The Leadership Challenge: Launching a New Business – 3 Tips!

I Have a New Business Idea!

Being an Entrepreneur can be an easy living. You come up with an idea, market/sell it to the masses, and reap your financial rewards. Easy, right? Wrong! The leadership challenge associated with launching a new business venture can be daunting (Read that as long hours spent performing what amounts to tedious in nature tasks with little/no reward the potential outcome). I knot this unfortunately first-hand as a result of both launching several new business ventures as well as from an investment perspective helping entrepreneurs raise seed funding when either they drain their own funds or those of friends/family.

Just because you have an entrepreneurial idea there is no guaranteed success quotient that lies on the other side of that idea. So what can you do to dramatically increase your odds of success? I recently sat on a panel to discuss just what an entrepreneur can do to greatly enhance their odds, resulting in the following three tips to launching a new business:

Three Tips to Launching a New Business

Tip #1: Have an Awesome Team

I’m a firm believer that you can do it alone, but why would you? With today’s new economy and access to international talent for little/no cost, why would you not want to employ the talents of others to assist you on your journey. Look to hire the best, brightest, and passionate people. Remember, Rome wasn’t built in a day (#SPQR), but that’s because they didn’t have the internet!

Tip #2: Vet the Idea

Often times I’m approached to invest in a “thought” or more likely a “dream” that the founder(s) had one evening. Make certain that the idea you are pursuing in your new business venture has “legs” and can stand on its own outside of you and your startup-team. In other words, go out and conduct your market studies to insure that what you have to offer is (a) desired and (b) someone is willing to pay for it.

Tip #3: Make Certain You Love

It’s extremely important that you absolutely/positively love the new business concept. Notice I said “love” in that last sentence, not “I like it” or “I can live with it” or even “That’s a quick way to make a buck!” Here’s why love is paramount: You are going to spend countless hours away from those that truly do love you. So in those solitaire moments you’ll want to insure that your passion outperforms all others in pursuing your new business venture. If you are not 100% committed with mind, body and sole you will not be successful. (PERIOD)

SUMMARY

In this post we’ve taken a look at the leadership challenge associated with launching a new business, as well as provided three tips to assist in creating a foundation of success. It’s important to remember that not every idea you come up with as an entrepreneur will turn out successful. However, it only takes one idea to propel you to the front page of INC Magazine once success occurs!

 

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: entrepreneur, launching a new business, sam palazzolo, the leadership challenge, venture

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