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ETA

30 Days to ETA | Day #21 – ETA Mistakes

June 21, 2021 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

If you’ve been reading along in this 30 Days to ETA series, you know that in the Day #20 post I discussed how as Acquisition Entrepreneurs you can identify and hire the most vital part of your Professional ETA Team — ETA Business Law. No matter how many jokes you’ve heard about lawyers, good attorneys can save you hundreds of thousands — or even millions — of dollars when it comes time for you to acquire a business (You can read the previous post by CLICKING HERE). Another ETA difficulty is the opportunity to make mistakes. You are going to make mistakes, but how you recover from them will make a massive difference. So, in today’s 30 Days to ETA post, we’re going to explore ETA Mistakes… Enjoy!

30 Days to ETA - ETA Mistakes

ETA Mistakes

At Tip of the Spear Ventures’ Mergers & Acquisitions practice, we have a quality goal – “No Mistakes!” While it’s a great goal to have, as Managing Director I know that it is 100% unrealistic. We are going to make mistakes when we set out to look for businesses to merge or acquire. I like that it’s a high goal, so we’ve kept it from the inception of the practice area.

Mistakes are a part of business. Your ability to risk mitigate, or go into damage recovery after you identify that you have made a mistake, will make all the difference. We also make a habit of backing up and identifying how we don’t make similar mistakes in the future if at all possible.

So if mistakes are a matter of “if” and not “when” for the Acquisition Entrepreneur, I wanted to share in this 30 Days to ETA post some of my most proud mistakes.

You’re going to make mistakes. Your ability to recover from them is the part to focus on.

Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director @ Tip of the Spear Ventures

Emotional ETA Mistakes

The seller of a business, be they an individual or a group, is not and does not personally care about your business goals and aspirations, but you do and can often be mislead to believe that they do too. Come time to sign the Purchase Agreement (PA), you’ve put years of blood, sweat, and spears into buying a business based on their value. The majority of your personal worth will most likely be tied up in the new company after acquisition. So, buying it will be hard, scary, and emotionally exhausting. You don’t want the seller to interpret your emotional ups/downs as weakness. Demonstrating a halfhearted attempt to buy a company at your valuation-derived asking price could prove devastating. If you’ve assessed the Minimum Viable Acquisition (MVA) price, you need to stay strong and fight for the price you identified regardless of your emotional state.

The ETA Mistake of Going All-In

Once you provide a buyer’s offer, you can do several things to exude an air of confidence you may not feel. You don’t want to walk into a sale with weakness and work from anywhere but a position of strength. So, what can you do to ensure a successful purchase happens?

  1. Have courage. – Pull yourself up by the bootstraps, and man up! The minute you decide to sell, jump in or stay out.
  2. Assemble your Professional ETA Team. – Now is the time to bring in your ETA Professional Team in for some much needed counsel. A well-rounded team will help you stay strong and vigilant during the ETA process.
  3. Build the Exit Plan. – Choose one of your four professional players to oversee the ETA process with precision.

A Rookie ETA Mistake

As you prepare to show a strong, united front in the face of your potential seller, you don’t want to make rookie ETA mistakes, such as:

  1. Don’t stop working on other Mergers & Acquisitions deal flow.
  2. Don’t take any counter-offer just because it’s their first business sale.
  3. Reign in your eagerness to buy.
  4. Don’t quit in the middle.

SUMMARY

I’ve heard it said that buying a business is 80% emotional and 20% business. As we’ve identified in this 30 Days to ETA post, the largest hurdles you face will be ETA Mistakes that derive from emotional errors. You are going to make mistakes, but how you recover from them will make a massive difference. While you won’t be able to avoid making ETA Mistakes, your ability to plan for the recovery afterwards will be beneficial.

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: 30 days to eta, acquisition entrepreneur, acquisitions, Buy a business, entrepreneur, entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, ETA Mistakes, mergers, Mergers & Acquisitions, sam palazzolo, tip of the spear ventures

30 Days to ETA | Day #18 – The ETA Conglomerate

June 18, 2021 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

If you’ve been reading along in this 30 Days to ETA series, you know that in the Day #17 post I discussed how as Acquisition Entrepreneurs we need to have focus on the end with The ETA Exit Plan. While you need to buy your business via Mergers & Acquisitions at the right strike-price, it’s equally important as a part of due diligence to sell the business right as well as a part of your Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition journey (You can read the previous post by CLICKING HERE). But what if you get into this as an entrepreneur and you find out you really enjoy owning a business? I mean, what’s better than owning a single business? Two or more businesses! So, in today’s 30 Days to ETA post, we’re going to explore how you can expand/create an empire by owning multiple companies — The ETA Conglomerate… Enjoy!

30 Days to ETA The ETA Conglomerate

The ETA Conglomerate

As Managing Director at Tip of the Spear Ventures, one of the most amazing things I see during an entrepreneur’s journey in Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition is owners walking away from a buyer’s dream offer. If we’ve spent all of these years building a business to sell it, why wouldn’t we want not to explore taking it? What makes some business owners take the money and run, so to speak? And what causes others to turn down millions of dollars to keep working their fingers to the bone?

Ultimately, I find that some business owners are scared of their lives after leaving. All they’ve known is business, and they don’t know what else to do. That makes their future-after-business-ownership extremely precarious. But it also gives them an advantage: They shouldn’t just own one business… Enter the ETA Conglomerate!

3 Decisions Owners Make as the ETA Conglomerate

Essentially, Acquisition Entrepreneurs will do one of three things in order to excel as The ETA Conglomerate. Two decisions we make can lead to life and prosperity after the business sale. However, one decision could lead down a path of self-destruction before the business acquisition or in life after the business sale.

Here are three decisions we owners typically make when it comes time for The ETA Conglomerate:

  1. Take the money and run! We want more challenges, we need more challenges, but we take the money and run rather than investing those Benjamins in additional businesses where they can make more!
  2. Make an offer but make a calculated decision not to buy at that time. This decision has the potential to be rewarding. Maybe we invest the time and energy into exploring other business for sale, and it becomes so highly efficient that we don’t have to be in the office every day. With a highly functioning business, we find time to relax AND run the company. Or maybe we want more time to save for our ideal retirement goals. Sometimes, we want to spend more time building the business’s value to get a better offer later. Either way we go, we can still get to a sale’s table at another point in our business’s life and take more time to prepare ourselves to leave the business.
  3. Walk away from the Letter of Intent (LOI) prior to Purchase Agreement. This is a dangerous decision we ETAs often make. We perceive value in a company and make the offer we want via LOI. But when it is time to sign on the dotted line, we change our minds. It seems unlikely, but so many of us make this mistake that the Exit Planning Institute has done studies with the results that 80% of companies making below $50 Million in revenue never sell.

Questions That Determine The ETA Conglomerate Path

So you have an ETA Conglomerate Plan that’s been in the works for months, years, or decades? What makes you hesitate just long enough to back out? In my business at Tip of the Spear Ventures, I typically find that the deals that we’ve walk away from a business mergers or acquisitions scenario haven’t been the ones that we’re mentally prepared for. In other words, we get too attached to the company.

Ultimately, though, our answers to two questions tend to determine whether we can achieve The ETA Conglomerate dream:

How Much Money Will I Get?

Money can fix a lot of problems, but it can’t fix everything. I’ve witnessed Acquisition Entrepreneurs with lots of money self-destruct before they ever get to the sale of the business — Just as quickly as businesses with little/no cash flow. When it comes time to acquire businesses (multiple) though, money will be a deciding factor or the deciding factor.

Almost without exception, we Acquisition Entrepreneurs know how much we want for our business and how much we actually need to earn from the sale of our company in the future.  If we’ve planned our business sale for years and worked with professionals to come up with a realistic company valuation, we’ll balk if a buyer offers us significantly less. For instance, we’ll walk away if we’ve valued our company at $5 Million, but an outsider only offers us $1 Million. Alternatively, if we think our company is worth $1 Million and someone offers us $5 Million, we’d likely take that money and run before they change their mind. This scenario is with one business, and diversification or exponential growth/sales figures can be achieved with multiple businesses. So how much money you receive from selling The ETA Conglomerate is a crucial metric/KPI to consider!

What’s the WHY?

As an Entrepreneur Through Acquisition, and you know this all too well by Day #18 in the 30 Days to ETA series, you will face many ups and downs on your journey. Money, while a considerable factor to consider may not be enough to drive every decision you make. I’m going to ask you to dig deep… Deeper than you probably feel comfortable with and ask yourself why you are doing this whole ETA journey for in the first place. Is it to live the lifestyle that you’ve always dreamed of? Is it to provide generational wealth for you/your family? Is it to better your community/state/country?

If you strip away the exterior and are stuck with the interior decisions that you are attempting this ETA climb, you’ll find your WHY.

SUMMARY

So what will we business owners do when we get to the future moment of selling your organization? Will you take the money and run, or will you stay put? In this ETA Conglomerate post we’ve looked at why some Acquisition Entrepreneurs decide to do just that. My answer: Build an empire! If you can take one business and scale it, several businesses will allow you to better diversify and get to your endpoints of money or WHY.

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: acquisition entrepreneurship, acquisitions, entrepreneur, entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, mergers, Mergers & Acquisitions, sam palazzolo, The ETA Conglomerate, tip of the spear ventures

30 Days to ETA | Day #17 – The ETA Exit Plan

June 17, 2021 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

If you’ve been reading along in this 30 Days to ETA series, you know that in the Day #16 post I discussed how to maximize ETA Deal Flow. You need to analyze a lot of businesses in order to get one to purchase in your journey to Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (You can read the previous post by CLICKING HERE). But even though you’ve found the perfect business and were fortunate to purchase it, I’m going to encourage you to focus on the end. In today’s 30 Days to ETA post, we’re going to explore how that end-game focus — The ETA Exit Plan — can provide you with all kinds of benefits, especially financial benefits if you do things right… Enjoy!

30 Days to ETA The ETA Exit Plan

The ETA Exit Plan

Entrepreneurs Through Acquisition (ETA) have to have a plan in place for how to get where we want to go — Something I refer to as the ETA Exit Plan. The future sale of your company is your ETA Exit Plan destination. I wish I could tell you that the road from where you are now (Acquisition Entrepreneur) to successfully selling your business in the future with generational wealth (The ETA Exit Plan) is a linear-shortest-distance-between-two-points line. Unfortunately, it rarely is a straight line! Instead, you can anticipate experiencing some type of setback along the way.

I typically refer to these setbacks as roadblocks. Your objective when you come across them, is to get on the other side (Either up/over/under or around) as quickly as possible. Here’s where the ETA Exit Plan gets good — You can anticipate coming up to another roadblock after you clear one, and another after that one, and so on. Not that that is “good” news, but it might come as news to you in general. Most of the Acquisition Entrepreneurs I work with at Tip of the Spear Ventures believe that they will not have to encounter any roadblocks on their ETA journey — WRONG! No matter how much planning you do. No matter how well you execute those plans. There will always be a roadblock along the way to the ETA Exit Plan accomplishment.

Making the ETA Exit Plan

By this point in our series, you should already have a business plan in place and be following that plan to find your future business through Mergers & Acquisitions. You’ve been preparing for this business acquisition since you discovered ETA, so it only makes sense to also focus on the sale of that business not only from day one of ownership, but before you even purchase the business! If you don’t have a business plan, drop everything and do that first. You’re not ready to acquire or consider how you will sell the business. You need to go back to the beginning of your business and identify how you want the end to occur!

How to Prepare for The ETA Exit Plan

No matter how good your original business plan is, you’ll never be able to walk away from this amazing company you’ve developed if you’re not mentally prepared. If you haven’t come to terms with letting someone else buy your business, you might even pass up millions of dollars. At Tip of the Spear Ventures Mergers & Acquisitions practice, we often speak with owners of businesses that tell us the all too often sad story about how they should have sold two-three years ago at triple the price they’re talking with us about selling their business. But there are things you can do now to prepare for the ETA Exit Plan.

What to Include in The ETA Exit Plan

  1. Decide what you’ll do after you sell – Make personal plans to travel, golf, take care of grandkids, spend time on a hobby, or begin another business before you leave this one.
  2. Gather your ETA Professional Team – Let your professional consultants, employees, family members, and friends know what your personal exit goals are so that they can hold you accountable for reaching them.
  3. Establish a Timeline – Decide what age you want to be when you “retire” or sell your company so that you can make appropriate personal and financial plans.
  4. Make a step-by-step Financial Agenda – If you know when you want to sell, you’ll know how much money you need to set back monthly in personal retirement accounts or savings accounts. If you lay out a detailed financial agenda, you’ll have the money you need to enjoy your life of leisure or your next big venture. Any profit from the sale will just be the icing on your financial cake.
  5. Hold your ETA Team Accountable – Just as your ETA Team is holding you accountable, hold them accountable as well. Don’t let anything slip through the cracks that could leave you or your company vulnerable at its time.

Which ETA Business Owner Are You?

You may be a person who constantly develops plans, but you can’t start or implement them. Maybe you’re the person who starts 20 things but can’t finish one thing. Or you might be the person who has his hand in 1001 different things. Whether acting, finishing, or prioritizing is your weakness, I have the same word of caution for you. It’s WAY too risky to jump right into ETA or into the sale of your future without having a plan. Many times, it’s impossible.

Creating the ETA Exit Plan can provide you with timelines, agendas, financial estimates, and accountability. Walking through these contingency scenarios for the time after we leave our business can help us prepare for our next step in life. Additionally, if we’re preparing to leave, we’re stepping back from day-to-day operations. That leads to a business’s self-sustainability and scalability which we previously discussed.

SUMMARY

The best-designed plans don’t do us any good unless we act. So, get the ETA Exit Plan down now as you conduct your search as an Acquisition Entrepreneur and you’ll find it easier when you go to exit the business.

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: acquisition entrepreneur, acquisitions, Buy a business, entrepreneur, entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, mergers, Mergers & Acquisitions, sam palazzolo, The ETA Exit Plan, tip of the spear ventures

30 Days to ETA | Day #15 – The ETA Business Team

June 15, 2021 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

If you’ve been reading along in this 30 Days to ETA series, you know that in the Day #14 post I discussed how to achieve ETA Engagement amongst your future employees. Why? It’s awfully difficult — Impossible! — to achieve happy customers if you have unhappy team members, and happy team members are engaged team members in your journey to Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (You can read the previous post by CLICKING HERE). But what if there was a way to build the company of your dreams with an ETA Business Team? An awesome ETA Business Team that pulls just as hard as you do towards the business goal of not only acquiring, but building a company in order to sell it for maximum profit. In today’s 30 Days to ETA post, we’re going to explore how we can assemble our dream ETA Business Team of employees and executives, and in doing so how we can cultivate company culture and add employee incentive programs to ensure our ETA Engagement adds to company success… Enjoy!

The ETA Business Team

I shared a career opportunity post on my LInkedIn feed a few months back, searching for a team member to fill an executive position in my company. Sure enough, I had a few candidates present themselves who seemed to fit the position profile. During one of their interviews, I asked the candidate, “Where do you see yourself in a couple of years?” I’ll never forget his reply. With no shame, the young man said, “You know, I’ve always wanted to start my own private equity business. I thought working with you would give me enough information to go out and start my own business one day.”

What? Was I being punked here?? If you’re an ETA business owner, you might consider that answer to lead to an instant “no-hire!” However, I’m curious by nature so I asked the candidate, “Tell me about that answer. What about working here with me will allow you to start your own business?” He said, “I view what you’re doing here Mr. Palazzolo to be best-in-class, and if I was going to go out and attempt to start my own business I know I’d learn the ins/outs of running a business the right way from you.” Flattery will get you far, but not that far with me…

Why is the Grass Greener?

We all know that Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (ETA) is a tough business model. Perhaps you can look at it and say that it’s not as tough as a Startup Entrepreneur might have it, but it’s tough nonetheless. So in your search for a business and in screening the ETA Business Team, why should you invest all of your time, energy, and money training and equipping what will inevitably be another company’s future employee? The short-answer, we shouldn’t. The long-answer, we should! If we train our ETA Business Team members and they leave to be part of a competitor’s workforce, or even worse, become our competition, we are doing what you probably did to get to the point where you’re exploring Acquisition Entrepreneurship. 

Know that even with the best incentives in place, competing companies will attempt to lure your ETA Business Team members with promises of greener grass. Sometimes, you’ll have to gently prod your employees back in the right direction — Although it’s my best practice to let an employee leave if they’ve made up their mind and they’ve approached me on the topic. By the time your ETA Business Team member gets to you, they’ve probably thought long and hard about their search for/attainment of another opportunity. In other words, they’re already one foot out the door, so let them leave. They will quickly learn that the reason the grass is greener on the other side is because of the enhanced fertilizer being deployed!

Can You Encourage ETA Business Team Loyalty?

If your competitors do happen to catch employees’ eyes with those green pastures a plenty, what can you do to guide your ETA Business Team members gently back to the company? Is a healthy fear of ramifications possible to lead ETA Business Team members in the right direction to back?

While as I previously stated, one foot out the door should be followed by two. However, you may want to consider agreements or restrictions that you can put in place to help keep your ETA Business Team employees from becoming the competitions employees?

  • A Non-Compete Agreement may help keep your employees from working with — or as — your competition.
  • Non-Solicit Agreements prevent your employees from soliciting customers away from you — They also prevent vendors from soliciting your employees.
  • A Confidentiality Agreement keeps ETA Business Team employees from revealing company secrets if they leave or talk to other business owners.
  • Intellectual Property Agreements keep work employees did for a company within that company if the ETA Business Team employee leaves.

We all want to build a strong team of ETA Business Team employees who have our best interests at heart. There’s a fine line between making ETA Business Team employees fearful and establishing healthy protections against employee retribution or employee turnover. Before enforcing any employee agreements, consult with your attorney to protect yourself from any known or unknown business risks — In one instance I can recall, our attorney partner recommended that a noncompete would be worthless and not to initiate. It’s important to keep in mind that not all court jurisdictions honor employer-employee agreements, so check with a legal professional before you implement any of them to be sure they actually protect you.

SUMMARY

ETA Business Team turnover and ETA Engagement (i.e., Employee unhappiness or dissatisfaction) can hurt a company’s operations and value from the future buyer’s perspective. If as a buyer you notice that the organization you’re conducting due diligence on has current employees that don’t want to be at work or have already left via turnover data, why would you want to buy that business? If you decide to buy it, you’ll probably refuse to offer top dollar or valuation multiple for that business. On the other hand, if you discover a business that is treating employees the way you would want to be treated — An ETA Business that offered clearly defined long-term and short-term incentives — you’re willing to pay top dollar.

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: acquisition entrepreneurship, acquisitions, Buy a business, entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, eta business team, mergers, Mergers & Acquisitions, sam palazzolo, tip of the spear ventures

30 Days to ETA | Day #10 – ETA Culture

June 10, 2021 By Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director

In our last post in this 30 Days to ETA series, we discussed your ETA Mission, Vision, & Values (You can read the previous post by CLICKING HERE). Having clarity in the Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition strategy is paramount, and nothing signals that more than your identification of where you want to go with your future business. In this post, we’re going to explore the backbone of how you will get to that future destination via ETA Culture. ETA Culture is your business’ values and culture that will shape owner-employee relations. The business that has outstanding values and inviting culture can help bring top dollar at the time you want to eventually sell… Enjoy!

30 Days to ETA - ETA Culture

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The ETA Culture of Helping

I once met with a small business owner as part of our Mergers & Acquisitions initiative at Tip of the Spear Ventures. From all outward appearances and secured financial information received, this was a very successful organization and I was looking forward to meeting with the owner. They employed several technology advancements (rare for a small business), and these served as their differentiators in the market. On top of the entity/individual credentials, the organization was referred to me by a colleague with whom I’d been looking to do a project together with.

It appeared to be great all the way around! Great company doing great work referred to me by a great person. And then I walked into their office. Actually, let me backup and share that I couldn’t get into their office at 7:45am. I come from one of those “To be early is on time, to be on time is to be late” cultures. Our meeting was at 8:00am and I typically show up fifteen minutes early. However, when I got to their office the doors were locked. Located in an urban-sprawl setting, I initially thought this was a security reason (Yes, it was a sketchy part of town!) But surely the owner knew I was arriving and would either be there himself or have alerted his staff. Surely not!

On top of the owner not being ready for my arrival, my colleague was running late. I called him and found out that there was an employee in the building and that he’d have them come unlock the door so as to let me in. They arrived at the door, unlocked it, and looked totally inconvenienced by the whole process/procedure as I stood there without them so much as addressing me (No “Good morning” – No nothing!) I said thank you and asked where we’d be meeting. Their overall lack of hospitality was unbelievable. On top of this one individual who should never be public-facing I found the office in total disarray – Trash cans overflowing, disorganization everywhere you looked, and dirty. The final straw was an etched pillow on a chair in the entryway that said on it, “I’m not always a Bitch… Just kidding, go f—- yourself!”

I left the office. Meeting over. ETA exploration done. The ETA Culture of helping was not present, and neither would I be! Everyone has been to a store/place of business and been shrugged off by an uncaring employee. We’ve all seen the dark side of business customer service and it stems from ETA Culture.

You can feel the difference between exciting companies and those with discontent, unmotivated cultures in ETA due diligence. Know that the companies with happy, motivated cultures have significant value, both today and in the future.

Sam Palazzolo, Managing Director @ Tip of the Spear Ventures

ETA Culture and Leadership

I’ve worked with hundreds of business owners over the years, and most of those owners want to talk about money or the problems they’re having with employees. They’ll talk about how to gain more customers and more market share. Yet, I can count on one hand the conversations brought up by business owners about values and culture. Sure, they want to talk about owner-employee relations, and they love to complain about poor employee work ethic or disrespectful employees, rather than asking me how to add value to their team or improve employee morale.

Owners focus on their own grievances rather than how to rectify employee grievances. Oftentimes, those business owners feel they get a bad rap with employees who mistake their drive for greed. They think that all the proprietors care about is money or the next big sale, and the team members hold an unfounded grudge against the owners. Rather than working hard to change employee misconceptions and rebuild owner-employee relations, owners tend to play the victim.

Additionally, those business owners complain about feeling used. A “friend” will call them up and want “free advice.” He’ll pick their brain and secure their professional knowledge and then never talk to them again (or will outreach when the wheels have fallen off the vehicle and they’re in real trouble). That “friend” will ask for discounts just because they went to the same school, and while none of us likes to feel used or abused, Acquisition Entrepreneurs need to know that they shouldn’t feel taken advantage of, and neither should their team members. I’m convinced after working with over 1,000+ leaders in organizations all across the USA and internationally that bad employee problems stem from culture problems, and those stem from leader problems.

Cultivate the E Culture of Kindness

It goes without saying, your people in the business you secure whether it’s from acquisitions or mergers are people — Not objects. We shouldn’t follow the Instagram-narrative that we’re a self-serving culture. Instead, you as an Entrepreneur Through Acquisition should look to cultivate a culture of kindness in our company. What do I mean by kindness? Words like respect, trust, and fairness should lay the groundwork for owner-employee relations. Employees who feel appreciated, valued, well-compensated, and respected will most likely provide respectful and courteous service to your customers. Therefore, I believe that everything in our business blooms out of our values and those values reflect your culture.

3 Rules for ETA Culture Success

While you’re cultivating this harmonious ETA Culture of owner-employee respect and loyalty, as a business owner you should be on your guard against known dangers. I’ve developed three rules for ETA Culture success, and if you don’t guard against them you’ll exhibit poor culture, poor employee relations, and bad leadership.

Rule #1 – Say What You’ll Do & Do What You Say

If you tell customers that you value open communication and employee loyalty, but you do the opposite by scanning through emails on your phone when your customers or team members voice better ideas on how to operate, what good does that do for you? If you’re no willing to say what you’ll do and do what you say, you’re going to lose good team members and customers.

Rule #2 – Get Greedy

I once say a business owner that could care less about their profits or their employees, and it showed all throughout the organization. If you want to be a great Entrepreneur Through Acquisition, get greedy! Let your customers and employees know that you value them and are willing to do whatever it takes to keep them satisfied.

Rule #3 – Get Help

Entrepreneurs Through Acquisition are great at a lot of things, but building company-wide morale may not be one of your particular strengths. Know your strengths, and your weaknesses. My best advice when it comes to weakness management is to off-load the responsibility. In other words, hire someone that has your weakness as a strength of their own.

The ETA Culture Strategy

ETA Culture for owner-employee relationship success exposes your company’s core values. So how do we cultivate or build good culture habits and values within your company? We take care of our employees. Here are some ways you can build-up their morale:

  • Reward the behavior you want to encourage
  • Applaud those who portray the values you want to achieve
  • Promote positive re-enforcement instead of punishment
  • Recognize and increase responsibility
  • Be kind
  • Keep it real up in the ETA field

SUMMARY

You love the idea of being an Entrepreneur Through Acquisition. It’s a complicated landscape to try and navigate. In this post we’ve explored ETA Culture and the rules for success and strategy for making employee-owner relations a success. A company with strong values and a strong culture, one that promotes strong owner-employee relations, will make more money and more reward than a company who has poor values or culture.

Sam Palazzolo

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: acquisition entrepreneur, acquisitions, entrepreneur, entrepreneurship through acquisition, ETA, ETA Culture, mergers, Mergers & Acquisitions, sam palazzolo, tip of the spear ventures

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