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Elevating Exit Planning and XPX Atlanta, with XPX Atlanta President Maria Forbes and President-Elect Anthony Chen

May 2, 2024 by John Ray

Maria Forbes and Anthony Chen, XPX Atlanta, elevating exit planning
North Fulton Studio
Elevating Exit Planning and XPX Atlanta, with XPX Atlanta President Maria Forbes and President-Elect Anthony Chen
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Maria Forbes and Anthony Chen, XPX Atlanta, elevating exit planning

Elevating Exit Planning and XPX Atlanta, with XPX Atlanta President Maria Forbes and President-Elect Anthony Chen (The Exit Exchange, Episode 17)

On this episode of The Exit Exchange, host John Ray welcomes Maria Forbes, President of XPX Atlanta, and Anthony Chen, President-elect. They discuss the formation of XPX Atlanta chapter in 2018 as part of the global Exit Planning Exchange based in Boston, highlighting its mission of innovating and elevating exit planning services in Atlanta. The organization attracts a diverse range of professionals who seek to work collaboratively to improve business owners’ exit strategies. They emphasize the essential need for interdisciplinary cooperation among professionals to successfully plan and execute business exits, focusing on low- to mid-market, privately held businesses. The episode also covers the evolution of XPX Atlanta over the years, its shift towards member-led initiatives, and upcoming events such as mastermind groups and a major conference in November. The discussion underscores the importance of early and strategic planning for business exits and the role of XPX Atlanta in facilitating this through collaboration, education, and promoting long-term thinking among professionals.

The host of The Exit Exchange is John Ray, and the show is produced by John Ray and the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX®. John Ray and Business RadioX are Gold Sponsors of XPX Atlanta.

Maria Forbes, President, XPX Atlanta

Maria Forbes
Maria Forbes

Maria is the President of XPX Atlanta and was a founding board member of the chapter.

In her professional practice, Maria Forbes is the Founder and President of FIREPOWER Business Catalyst, LLC. Maria’s thirty-year consulting career serves privately held business owners in financial services and related fields across the U.S. Our mission is to integrate financial capital with human capital in planning for organizational growth and continuity. Maria’s work frames the long-term trajectory of business growth and succession through people-powered structures that enable an ongoing positive impact of talent through all business life cycles.

Maria and her teams provide expertise in expanding internal capacity through creative alignment of human values, making it possible for owners and key decision-makers to lead both their people and their businesses confidently toward the future. As a committed strategic partner to her clients, Maria makes visible the arrangement of human strengths as part of an innovative business strategy. This work optimizes organizational performance and builds transferable value as owners look toward a role transition and business succession.

Maria conducts a summer mentor program for college graduates and seasoned professionals who are navigating career transitions. The mentor process develops personal advantage in the career marketplace and fosters confidence in communicating the best roles for a successful new career.

Maria is a Kolbe Certified Consultant, Faculty member of The Life Transitions University™, mentor, and member of the Catholic Charities Atlanta Georgia Leadership Program.

LinkedIn

Anthony Chen, President-Elect, XPX Atlanta

Anthony Chen, Lighthouse Financial, and host of Family Business Radio
Anthony Chen

Anthony Chen is the President-Elect of XPX Atlanta. He will begin his term as President of the chapter in January 2025.

In his professional practice, Anthony is a financial advisor with Lighthouse Financial. He is also the host of Family Business Radio.

Anthony Chen started his career in financial services with MetLife in Buffalo, NY, in 2008. Born and raised in Elmhurst, Queens, he considers himself a full-blooded New Yorker while now enjoying his Atlanta, GA, home. Specializing in family businesses and their owners, Anthony works to protect what is most important to them. From preserving to creating wealth, Anthony partners with CPAs and attorneys to help address all of the concerns and help clients achieve their goals. By using a combination of financial products ranging from life, disability, and long-term care insurance to many investment options through Royal Alliance, Anthony looks to be the eyes and ears for his client’s financial foundation.

In his spare time, Anthony is an avid long-distance runner.

LinkedIn

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Welcome to the Exit Exchange: Introducing XPX Atlanta
01:11 The Mission and Vision of XPX Atlanta
02:39 Addressing the Core Needs of Business Owners
04:44 The Importance of a Multidisciplinary Approach
12:07 The Evolution and Growth of XPX Atlanta
14:48 Member-Led Initiatives and Future Directions
22:52 Maximizing Member Engagement and Utilizing Resources
25:44 Reviving the Exit Exchange Show: A New Focus
28:31 Joining and Benefiting from XPX Atlanta

The Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta

The Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta (XPX) is a diverse group of professionals with a common goal: working collaboratively to assist business owners with a sale or business transition. XPX Atlanta is an association of advisors who provide professionalism, principles, and education to the heart of the middle market. Our members work with business owners through all stages of the private company life cycle: business value growth, business value transfer, and owner life and legacy. Our Vision: To fundamentally changing the trajectory of exit planning services in the Southeast United States. XPX Atlanta delivers a collaborative-based networking exchange with broad representation of exit planning competencies. Learn more about XPX Atlanta and why you should consider joining our community: https://exitplanningexchange.com/atlanta.

The Exit Exchange is produced by John Ray in the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta. The show archive can be found at xpxatlantaradio.com.

John Ray and Business RadioX are Gold Sponsors of XPX Atlanta.

Tagged With: Anthony Chen, exit planning, Exit Planning Exchange, Family Business Radio, Firepower Teams, Lighthouse Financial, Maria Forbes, The Exit Planning Exchange Atlanta, XPX Atlanta

Don’t Be Afraid to Ask for Help, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

April 8, 2024 by John Ray

Anthony Chen, Lighthouse Financial, Don't Be Afraid to Ask for Help
Family Business Radio
Don't Be Afraid to Ask for Help, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio
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Anthony Chen, Lighthouse Financial, Don't Be Afraid to Ask for Help

Don’t Be Afraid to Ask for Help, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

In a commentary from a recent Family Business Radio episode, host Anthony Chen discusses why it’s vital to not be afraid to ask for help as you plan your financial journey.

Anthony’s commentary was taken from this episode of Family Business Radio. Family Business Radio is underwritten by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network.

Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

Family Business Radio is sponsored and brought to you by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network. Securities and advisory services are offered through OSAIC, member FINRA/SIPC. RAA is separately owned, and other entities and/or marketing names, products, or services referenced here are independent of OSAIC. The main office address is 575 Broadhollow Rd., Melville, NY 11747. You can reach Anthony at 631-465-9090, ext. 5075, or by email at anthonychen@lfnllc.com.

Anthony Chen started his career in financial services with MetLife in Buffalo, NY, in 2008. Born and raised in Elmhurst, Queens, he considers himself a full-blooded New Yorker while now enjoying his Atlanta, GA, home. Specializing in family businesses and their owners, Anthony works to protect what is most important to them. From preserving to creating wealth, Anthony partners with CPAs and attorneys to help address all of the concerns and help clients achieve their goals. By using a combination of financial products ranging from life, disability, and long-term care insurance to many investment options through Royal Alliance, Anthony looks to be the eyes and ears for his client’s financial foundation. In his spare time, Anthony is an avid long-distance runner.

The complete show archive of Family Business Radio can be found by following this link.

Tagged With: Anthony Chen, exit planning, Family Business Radio, financial planning

Maximizing Value in Your Business Exit, with Joe Farach, Revenue Igniter Group and Neri Capital Partners

December 18, 2023 by John Ray

Joe Farach
North Fulton Business Radio
Maximizing Value in Your Business Exit, with Joe Farach, Revenue Igniter Group and Neri Capital Partners
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Joe Farach

Maximizing Value in Your Business Exit, with Joe Farach, Revenue Igniter Group and Neri Capital Partners (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 734)

On this North Fulton Business Radio episode, host John Ray welcomed Joe Farach, a seasoned expert in business growth and exit planning. Joe’s remarks centered on preparing businesses for sale, process optimization, handling due diligence, and building a robust management team. He further highlighted the need to start considering exit planning as early in the business’s inception as possible to anticipate challenges and ensure a more seamless transition. Other key topics Joe addressed include business valuation, leadership development, overcoming challenges in the selling process, the role of strategic thinking in business growth, and success stories from his work.

North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Joe Farach, Revenue Igniter Group and Neri Capital Partners

Joe Farach brings over 35 years of experience in strategy formulation, business development, market expansion, operations improvement, leadership development, and M&A. He has diverse experience working for global Fortune 500 companies, private family-owned companies, ESOPs, and starting his own business.

His career highlights include starting a manufacturing and service company in Brazil, acquiring and integrating a $200 million multi-plant business in the U.S., turning around a Mexican subsidiary, developing international capital investment projects, and formulating and implementing a global M&A strategy. He also led and grew P&L in companies and divisions ranging from $1 million to $300 million. Joe started his career as a nuclear submarine officer in the U.S. Navy.

Joe is a Certified Exit Planning Advisor and a Certified Mergers and Acquisition Advisor. He holds a B.S. Mechanical Engineering degree from California Polytechnic University, Pomona, and an M.B.A. from Villanova University. In addition to English, he has native fluency in Spanish and Portuguese.

Joe’s LinkedIn Profile | Revenue Igniter Group LinkedIn | Neri Capital Partners website

Questions and Topics in this Interview

00:04 Introduction and Welcome
01:15 Introduction of Guest: Joe Farach
01:27 Discussion on Business Exit Planning
02:58 Joe’s Personal and Professional Journey
08:04 Insights on Business Valuation and Exit Planning
10:47 Challenges in Business Selling and Exit Planning
24:24 Success Stories and Client Experiences
28:02 Contact Information and Closing Remarks

 

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Tagged With: Business Exit Planning, business selling, business valuation, exit planning, Joe Farach, John Ray, Neri Capital, Neri Capital Partners, North Fulton Business Radio, Revenue Igniter Group, selling a business, strategy

What’s Standing in the Way of Your Business Exit?, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

October 31, 2023 by John Ray

Business Exit
North Fulton Studio
What’s Standing in the Way of Your Business Exit?, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense
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Business Exit

What’s Standing in the Way of Your Business Exit?, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

In this commentary from a recent episode of ProfitSense, Bill McDermott laid out several factors that can influence how and when a business owner exits.

Bill’s commentary was taken from this episode of ProfitSense.

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Bill McDermott: I want to take a moment right now and ask my business owner audience the question, What’s standing in the way of your business exit? Recent surveys show that 80 percent of business owners will exit their business in the next ten years, yet only 25 percent have created any sort of plans in writing for a successful outcome.

I’m working with quite a few firms that are considering an exit. One situation includes a majority owner who has several partners and maybe discovering those partners don’t think like business owners and may just prefer to remain employees. Another owner is a very successful business. He’s a baby boomer and is ready to retire, but is having a hard time removing himself from day-to-day operations.

So, what are some things that could be standing in the way of our exit? First, the economy. In a recession, the value of a business may decline making it more difficult to sell. Also, if the economy is weak, it may be more difficult to find a buyer. Industry trends. If the industry is declining, the value of a business in that industry may decline. If the industry is changing, it may be difficult to find a buyer who is willing to take on the challenges of a changing industry. Third thing is taxes. This is one component that’s very complex. In almost every case, selling a business for a gain will trigger either capital gains or ordinary income tax.

So, what can we do as owners? Time the sale of our business carefully, plan carefully, and seek advice from your professional advisors, and know that alternatives such as merging with another company also exists. With careful planning and execution, it is possible to sell a business at a fair price, even in challenging economic or industry conditions.

About ProfitSense and Your Host, Bill McDermott

Bill McDermott
Bill McDermott

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and owners and the professionals that advise them. This show helps local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. The show is presented by McDermott Financial Solutions. McDermott Financial helps business owners improve cash flow and profitability, find financing, break through barriers to expansion, and financially prepare to exit their business. The show archive can be found at profitsenseradio.com.

Bill McDermott is the Founder and CEO of McDermott Financial Solutions. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do. Bill leverages his knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill currently serves as Treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum and has held previous positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity and Treasurer for CEO NetWeavers. Bill is a graduate of Wake Forest University and he and his wife, Martha have called Atlanta home for over 40 years. Outside of work, Bill enjoys golf, traveling, and gardening.

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn and Twitter and follow McDermott Financial Solutions on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: Bill McDermott, business exit, business succession planning, economy, exit planning, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, recession, The Profitability Coach

Chris Caldwell, Highland Trust Partners, and Aaron Wynn, Hunter Recruitment Advisors

October 12, 2023 by John Ray

HIghland Trust Partners
North Fulton Studio
Chris Caldwell, Highland Trust Partners, and Aaron Wynn, Hunter Recruitment Advisors
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HIghland Trust Partners

Chris Caldwell, Highland Trust Partners, and Aaron Wynn, Hunter Recruitment Advisors (ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, Episode 50)

Chris Caldwell, Partner at Highland Trust Partners, and Aaron Wynn, President of Hunter Recruitment Advisors, were Bill McDermott’s guests on this episode of ProfitSense with Bill McDermott. Chris discussed how he got into financial planning, who they most often work with, the business owner’s level of preparedness for the future, how business planning unfolds, and much more.

Aaron began with a very personal reason he started Hunter Recruitment Advisors and went on to discuss recruitment marketing, working with trades recruiting, why talent leaves a position, and more.

Bill concluded with his thoughts on a question for business owners:  “What’s Standing in the Way of Your Business Exit?”

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

Highland Trust Partners

Highland Trust Partners is a team of experienced financial advisors located in Athens, Georgia, bringing more than 60 years of combined experience in the finance industry to each client engagement. Their independent wealth management practice was established with the goal to help individuals and organizations manage, preserve, and enhance their wealth as they seek to attain and maintain financial independence.

Their client-centered, team approach combines experience and insight from a comprehensive, independent perspective as they develop customized strategies to help address the unique challenges and opportunities you face. Highland’s clients are individuals, families, business owners and corporations seeking experienced guidance and a personalized approach to attaining and maintaining financial independence.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook

Chris Caldwell CFP®, AIF®, CRC®, AEP®, ChSNC®, MBA, Partner, Financial Planner, Highland Trust Partners

Chris Caldwell CFP®, AIF®, CRC®, AEP®, ChSNC®, MBA, Partner, Financial Planner, Highland Trust Partners

Chris is a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional, Accredited Investment Fiduciary®, Certified Retirement Counselor® (CRC conferred by InFRE®), Accredited Estate Planner ®, Chartered Special Needs Consultant ®, and a founding partner of Highland Trust Partners. Chris seeks to help families reduce financial stress by organizing their finances and developing strategies aligned with their goals and values.

He helps businesses design retirement plans that are noticed and appreciated by employees with the goal of helping workers retire on time with the assets they require for retirement. Based on experience, Chris knows that financial independence is the number one goal most people have for their lives in retirement. His clients rely on him to help them identify and overcome challenges along the path to retirement, anticipating and seeking to avoid obstacles that could come between them and their goals.

Chris received both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia. He began his financial services career in 1996 and has experience in trusts, investments, insurance, and banking. Chris has concentrated his efforts over the years on enhancing his financial knowledge to assist clients by earning four accredited professional designations, which combined require more than 30 hours of continuing education each year.

Chris has been an adjunct professor at Piedmont College, teaching several business courses and occasionally lectures to classes at the University of Georgia. He has served as a board member for St. Mary’s Hospital, Highland Hills Retirement Village, Athens Rotary Club, Athens Rotary Foundation, Food Bank of NEGA, Athens-Clarke Library, and Piedmont College.  Chris is a member of the Estate Planning Council of Northeast Georgia and the National Association of Financial Planners.

Chris and his wife, Heather, were married in 1999 and have two children, Seth and Natalie.  In spare time, Chris enjoys travel, running, hiking, golf, reading, and of course the Georgia Bulldawgs.

LinkedIn

Hunter Recruitment Advisors

Hunter Recruitment Advisors (HRA) is a minority-owned, Recruitment Process Outsource (RPO) provider and recruitment marketing expert. They mobilize the right people, skills, and technologies to help organizations improve their business performance.

Hunter provides key staff to employers allowing them to meet diversity goals and to promote equal opportunity in employment.

HRA is committed to creating innovative, flexible solutions for government and commercial clients.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | YouTube

Aaron Wynn, President, Hunter Recruitment Advisors

Aaron Wynn, President, Hunter Recruitment Advisors

Aaron Wynn has spent his professional life helping his clients overcome the distress of not being able to grow their businesses. By applying his personal experiences and professional knowledge, he provides the proven tools and techniques needed to identify, attract, and retain the right employees at the right time. This strategic alignment of talent and resources then becomes the catalyst for the organization’s strength and growth trajectory.

Aaron understands you cannot achieve your company’s full potential without bringing in the right people to help manage the processes and operations, while giving you the ability to focus on growth and profitability. Hunter Recruitment Advisors (HRA) began as a one-man shop, and Aaron has successfully grown it into a 25-member talent consultancy firm.

While his focus has always been centered around talent management, his specialty within the field is really Recruitment Marketing. Hunter Recruitment Advisors has helped more than a hundred companies across the United States recognize recruiting is no longer solely an HR function, but it is a Marketing one as well. Each company is unique and carries with it its own culture and values, and similarly, there is not a a single approach to recruitment. HRA creates uniquely designed recruitment marketing plans, identifies recruitment practices, and can recruit as an outsourced resource to maximize a client’s exceptionality and specific needs.

Aaron has been in the Talent Management field for 20+ years. He received his BA in Human Resources from The George Washington University and his MBA from Benedictine University and founded HRA in 2015. He is an avid student of all things related to the workforce and professional development and is recognized as an expert authority within the field.

Aaron is currently the President of Hunter Recruitment Advisors based in Atlanta, GA where he lives with his wife and children.

LinkedIn

About ProfitSense and Your Host, Bill McDermott

Bill McDermott
Bill McDermott

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and business owners and the professionals that advise them. This show helps local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. The show is presented by McDermott Financial Solutions. McDermott Financial helps business owners improve cash flow and profitability, find financing, break through barriers to expansion, and financially prepare to exit their business. The show archive can be found at profitsenseradio.com.

Bill McDermott is the Founder and CEO of McDermott Financial Solutions. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do. Bill leverages his knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill currently serves as Treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum and has held previous positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity and Treasurer for CEO NetWeavers. Bill is a graduate of Wake Forest University and he and his wife, Martha have called Atlanta home for over 40 years. Outside of work, Bill enjoys golf, traveling, and gardening.

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn and Twitter and follow McDermott Financial Solutions on LinkedIn.

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:03] Broadcasting from the Business RadioX Studio in Alpharetta, it’s time for ProfitSense with Bill McDermott.

Bill McDermott: [00:00:17] Good morning. Welcome to ProfitSense. This podcast dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and business owners and the professionals that advise them. We help local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession, as well as discuss current issues that business owners are facing today across a wide variety of industries.

Bill McDermott: [00:00:44] I’m your host, Bill McDermott, and this show is presented by The Profitability Coach. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they often don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do. I leverage my knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill McDermott: [00:01:07] We have two great guests on the show today. I want to welcome Chris Caldwell with Highland Trust Partners. Chris, welcome.

Chris Caldwell: [00:01:14] Thank you, Bill.

Bill McDermott: [00:01:15] And I also wanted to welcome Aaron Wynn with Hunter Recruitment Advisors. Aaron, welcome to ProfitSense.

Aaron Wynn: [00:01:21] Thank you so much. Excited to be here.

Bill McDermott: [00:01:23] Chris, I’m going to start with you. You and I both have a topic that’s near and dear to our hearts, helping business owners exit their business, and not only exit it and have a plan. But before we jump to that topic, I’d love to know why are you in the profession you are as a financial planner?

Chris Caldwell: [00:01:44] Well, that’s a great question. I get that fairly often. So, I always say, and I think everybody does this when they coach other people, is that you do what you’re passionate for. You do what you love to do. You do what you feel that you can provide value to others. So, financial planning was that for me.

Chris Caldwell: [00:01:59] When people ask me what I do, I tell them that I’m passionate about reducing stresses in the lives of families and business owners, and they want to know what that means with financial planning. So, financial planning is not about finances. That’s my background. That’s what I studied. I’m pretty good with math. I love statistics. I love analytics. I love strategies. That’s part of it. But what I really love to do is to get involved with people’s lives and find out what they are worried about, what they don’t know, and try to find ways that we can structure a plan with a bunch of strategies to make sure that they’re successful in whatever their endeavors are.

Chris Caldwell: [00:02:35] So, I think when we have conversations with people, we can all say this, that we have a look back. If I could go back in time, ten years ago if I knew what I knew today, 20 years ago if I knew what I knew today, I think what we bring to the table as planners in our firm is that we can share all of our experiences with clients to help them not do that later. So, 10 years from now, 20 years from now, they don’t look back on had I known, had I done, had somebody told me that we’d be in a better situation, we’re passing on all the experiences that we’ve worked with other people, sharing their stories of sometimes mistakes they’ve made so others don’t make those mistakes. That’s really what financial planning is, is life planning.

Bill McDermott: [00:03:15] Yeah. And I’ve found just in my experience, while I don’t do financial planning, I do help business owners with an exit, and so the things that I’m thinking about as a business owner in my 60s is I don’t know how to do this. How do I do it? I know you work with different types of businesses in figuring that out, so share with me and our audience what type of businesses do you and Highland Trust Partners work with most often?

Chris Caldwell: [00:03:44] Sure. So, a lot of our businesses look like us. We are an independent financial planning firm. We have a partner. There’s two of us as partners in our practice. We have nine total people as part of our practice. We are in growth mode, so we’re looking to recruit and possibly add. We may get up to 20 as our max. We may hit around 15, it’s probably a good number for our firm going forward. So, we are a business owner, so the businesses that gravitate to us most is one of five partners, maybe they have less than 100 employees, but they live the same issues, the same stress points that we live as owning a business. So, we’re good about talking to them with the things that we do with the business.

Chris Caldwell: [00:04:29] And no matter what industry you’re in, whether you’re in construction or health care or engineering or law, we have different products and services and different things we do as a business, but we have a lot of the same foundation things to run a business. So, the business that gravitate to us are small businesses that look like us because we can share our stories with them as far as the stress points we go through and what we’re working on to make ourselves better.

Bill McDermott: [00:04:53] Yeah. That is great. We’re talking this morning with Chris Caldwell. He’s the founding partner with Highland Trust Partners. Chris is a certified financial planner. Chris seeks to help families reduce financial stress by organizing their finances and developing strategies aligned with their goals and their values.

Bill McDermott: [00:05:12] So, I want to switch to a question that’s very near and dear to my heart, when you first meet a business owner, what surprises you most with how they’ve prepared for their future or the future of their businesses?

Chris Caldwell: [00:05:27] So, it depends a lot on what stage of the business cycle they’re in their business. A lot of it for, say, a young business owner, I don’t want to say this surprises me anymore because I expect a young business owner – not young in age, but young in the business venture – not to know a lot yet. But even things like having an operating agreement in place, we’ve seen business owners who’ve done their own or not done any at all, whether they’re a single shop or two or three person practice or firm.

Chris Caldwell: [00:05:51] We’ve seen where they haven’t organized maybe how, really, they’re running the business. I don’t want to say they’re winging it, but they have a good idea, a good service, a good product, and they’re just doing the best they possibly can to get that to market and sell it. So, they haven’t put a lot of emphasis in how do we take this from A to B and what do we think of personally to protect ourselves. They haven’t done a lot of the organization or the structures. They’re not near an exit yet at all.

Chris Caldwell: [00:06:19] But I tell everybody that opens a door in a business, they need to already start talking about succession planning at some point because it’s going to come about. Don’t wait. Do it now. Let’s go ahead and start the conversation. So, the young business owner or young businesses, we see a lot they haven’t adopted those things quite yet as far as structuring the business.

Chris Caldwell: [00:06:36] So, for the growth businesses, now they’re full board, their sales are up, they’re adding employees, they’re in full growth mode, and they are focused only pretty much on the business at that point, they’re the owner or owners and so they’re putting all their time and energy into the business, what I see most that surprises me there is they’re neglecting the other stakeholders, and a lot of those may be their own family. Not neglecting time per se from family, which is part of it, but it is Are they doing the things to protect their families if something happens to them? And are they protecting their business?

Chris Caldwell: [00:07:09] So, if they’re the owner and they’re basically the reason why the business is in growth mode and doing so well, does the business succeed or continue to succeed if they’re not there, whether it’s time off, a sickness, an injury, a disability, or – God forbid – death. So, are they putting things in place to make sure that the business is taken care of in their absence and the family’s taken care of in their absence?

Bill McDermott: [00:07:32] Yeah. I actually had one experience myself where two partners had a buy-sell agreement, but it never got funded with insurance, and the owner died, and all of a sudden that owner never anticipated having the spouse as a partner. And so, that type of planning is so critical.

Chris Caldwell: [00:07:53] And we see that for those who are in the growth stage as well as the mature stage, those who are ready to exit. And your show has said several times and you’ve mentioned it and we buy into this, is, you got to think like a buyer. So, we have a lot of clients that are in the mature stage of ownership that are getting closer to exit strategy. They aren’t thinking like buyers. They’re not ready. They’re not getting their house ready for the best valuation and best sale they can get out of it.

Bill McDermott: [00:08:16] Yeah. Yeah. And typically it is the largest asset that they have on their personal financial statement based on how they value it. And so, I want to switch a little bit and go in a similar direction, but different type of question. A hundred percent of the businesses are going to pass one way or another. But yet, studies show that probably only 20 percent have any kind of a financial plan that’s in writing, 80 percent don’t. So, what do you discuss to convince a business owner to focus time, energy, and money towards business planning?

Chris Caldwell: [00:08:53] So, that 80 percent – from what I’ve experienced – is business owners not willing to or able to take the time to put the work into it. They feel like the process is going to take much longer than it is. Again, those growth in the middle stages of the business cycle, they’re dedicated to the business primarily, of course they have family, they have social life. So, for them to fear to spend the time to do this is money out of their pocket. Not even dollars. It’s just opportunity cost.

Chris Caldwell: [00:09:21] So, what we do for them, again, we’re business owners, I have limited time in my day. I know that. I convey that to my clients and say, “Look, I understand that you don’t have the ability to pull away from work for three or four or five hours a week to work with somebody on developing all these strategies.” What we’re really good at, besides conveying that time issue, is do the things behind the scenes for them.

Chris Caldwell: [00:09:47] So, I am a network person. I naturally just want to introduce people to people. I got plumbers. I got electricians. I got gardeners. I got people who do work for people and just give them free pro bono referrals all the time. So, for me to build a team for a client, to make sure that they have a CPA, a corporate attorney, and a state attorney, an insurance agent, maybe an investment advisor, somewhere else, all the bankers, but these people, they may have them, but they’re not talking to each other in a lot of cases. They’re working in silos for what they do for that individual.

Chris Caldwell: [00:10:18] My role as a planner is to basically bring this team to the table, not really at a table, but to talk to each other about the different circumstances our client is going through and how can we pull resources together to make this stuff happen for them to fix what’s broken or what’s not being done. So, I can do a lot of the information gathering and discovery for a client to do succession planning and other things, estate planning without engaging the client. All that we need from them is letters of authorizations from these different professionals to work with them to gather information.

Chris Caldwell: [00:10:51] And we come up with a strategy solution, basically get it ready to sign almost in some cases. And they’re not pulling a lot of time away from work to do that. Energy is natural. Once they see we don’t take their time, they’re energized. That’s pretty easy. They’re excited to know they don’t have to do a lot. But we’re going to get to know them personally and ask them personal questions. We’re also going to get to know their families well. So, I think importantly, for planning for a business owners, also knowing what they need in their family, knowing their spouse, knowing what they have to bring home one day, so that energizes them knowing we involve the family with that.

Chris Caldwell: [00:11:27] And then, money, it really never comes down to money. Once they know the time we save them, they know we’re putting the resources together to make sure we reduce the risk in their lives, they know that we’re definitely adding more valuation to the business by doing this, maybe saving on other things, tax strategy, return on investments, and others, they’re going to save money off of it. So, it never comes down to, “Hey, it’s going to cost me money.” They’re worried about costing me time.

Bill McDermott: [00:11:50] Sure. That makes all the sense in the world. We’re talking today with Chris Caldwell with Highland Trust Partners. Highland Trust Partners is a team of experienced financial advisors located in Athens, Georgia, bringing more than 60 years of combined experience in the finance industry to each client engagement.

Bill McDermott: [00:12:09] And, Chris, I want to talk a little bit about I’m a new business owner, I’m coming to you, what are the steps that Highland Trust takes with a new business owner and what do you charge?

Chris Caldwell: [00:12:21] Sure. So, some of that answered in the time. So, when we engage with a new client, we work on 12 month engagements. And that basically means we’re fiduciary obligated to you for this 12 month period, at least, to do everything in your best interest, to work with your other professionals, and that type of thing. So, I’d say within the first month is a lot of discovery. We want to know you as a person and your family, because everybody’s different, so what’s your history, what’s your background, what’s your belief system with money and other things, do you like lawyers, not like lawyers, all those kind of conversations we want to get to.

Chris Caldwell: [00:12:55] And then, get to know their other professionals. I want to make introductions to that list I gave you a second ago, and try to discovery pull all those resources together to begin to build their plan and their strategies from that plan. So, within the first month or two is discovery, getting to know family again. The second, third, or fourth month in combination is actually starting to implement some of those strategies that we put in place.

Chris Caldwell: [00:13:18] With a business owner, particularly multiple partners, because everybody’s involved at this point, it’s not just one partner, it’s everybody, and then it’s their spouses, so it’s a network, we want to make sure that we do it methodically. We don’t go fast. We do it well. So, we’ll do certain strategies with it and finish certain components of it, but finish the plan within a 12 month period. It usually takes some time, two years, which they appreciate because they realize (1) we’re not taking time away and (2) we’re going to do it slow and right.

Chris Caldwell: [00:13:48] But what we want to engage the owner in, essentially, is that we just need to know their direction. What’s your strategic plan with the business? Do you have a business coach? That’s a great one. So, how do we improve your valuation? What do we need to do? What have you done before this failed? Those are the kind of things I have to engage the owner with as far as their time.

Bill McDermott: [00:14:06] Sure, that makes a lot of sense. Chris, this has just been a wealth of information. I’m going to guess we have several business owners that are going to listen in to this, what is the best way for a potential business owner to get in touch with you and Highland Trust Partners?

Chris Caldwell: [00:14:22] So, the best way probably is just go to our website, www.highlandtrustpartners.com, so highlandtrustpartners.com. All of our contact information is on the website so you can easily reach out through the site and get in touch with any of our planners and we can have an introduction call with you.

Bill McDermott: [00:14:40] Well, great wealth of information, good counsel, and thanks again for coming on the show.

Chris Caldwell: [00:14:45] Thanks for having me. I appreciate it. Thanks, Bill.

Bill McDermott: [00:14:47] We’re now going to switch to Aaron Wynn with Hunter Recruitment Advisors. Aaron, I want to just kick off with what was the inspiration for how HRA got started?

Aaron Wynn: [00:14:58] I think most stories there’s a personal and then there’s a professional side of it. For me, the personal side of it was that my wife and I had twin sons that were born about three-and-a-half, four months early, and unfortunately we lost one of our sons about 16 days after he was born. He’s living with the Lord now. And our other son is with us. And I was a director of recruiting for a very large convenience chain, and I would leave to go to work and he would be asleep on oxygen at our house, and I’d come home and he’d be asleep on oxygen in my house. And it was the very real reality of having lost a child, realizing time is precious and I needed to make some changes.

Aaron Wynn: [00:15:43] And so, I wanted to work closer to home. And I was a little frustrated with my work. And my wife – who was amazing – said, “You’re never going to be happy until you do this on your own.” My story is probably no different than most business owners who start out. You’re never going to be happy unless you do this on your own. And sure enough, she was right. But I tell people all the time, especially business owners who might be listening to this for the first time, I failed miserably in my first business. I made so many mistakes and I could have let that knock me out of it altogether. But I took that as an opportunity to say, “You know what? Here’s where I’m going to learn.”

Aaron Wynn: [00:16:20] Originally, I did what was called contingency recruiting. And it’s a great business, it’s the majority of the business that happens in our country when it comes to recruiting. But I felt so frustrated because I was providing a different level of service to our clients and it was really dependent on if the candidate stayed for 90 days. If they left on day 89, it voided all of the work that we had done.

Aaron Wynn: [00:16:44] And so, when I started over again, one of the things that I wanted to bring in, or the principles were corporate recruiting. Most businesses are familiar with corporate recruiting. And the big difference is that you’re paid for the work that you do and the consulting that you provide. And so, when I started Hunter Recruitment Advisors, for me it was just a natural thing. I provided guidance, not just a job order or job taking, but really giving you guidance on what I call the three principles of all recruiting, that you work with the hiring manager and you have to explain to them that recruiting foundationally is always built on the principles of skill, money, and time. And how you directly impact one of those impacts the other two, and helping them understand that while you may want Michael Jordan, sometimes it’s great to settle for a Scottie Pippen and train them to do more.

Aaron Wynn: [00:17:39] And so, when Hunter Recruitment Advisers got started, that’s really how it began. It wasn’t a grand idea that I had to grow into a 24 person company. It was really just me sitting in my basement and realizing that there had to be other options out there in the marketplace. Because a lot of small businesses, they can’t afford to pay 20, 30 percent of first year salary for an individual. That impact would be $20,000, $30,000. So, what we provide is an hourly based recruiting solution that allows them to pay as they go.

Bill McDermott: [00:18:14] And I know building on that foundationally, that’s really the difference in your recruiting, isn’t it?

Aaron Wynn: [00:18:22] It is. A lot of times we’ll get asked, “Well, can you do contingency?” And I always try to explain to people that contingency in its nature is a lot like the spelling test that you have to take. Contingency firms will come by and they’ll say, “Hey, let me work on your job. No charge until you find your person,” which is great. And they do the exact same thing with 60 other businesses. So, they get these 60 jobs and then all of a sudden they go, “All right. I’m going to pick the ten that’s going to be the easiest to fill and I’ll maybe pass on some resumes if I find something to these other 50.”

Aaron Wynn: [00:18:56] What happens then is that you, as the owner, get frustrated – and you hear this all the time in the industry – “They didn’t do a great job or they really didn’t focus on us.” When you do RPO, you’re being paid to focus on that position. Actually, all the hours that we tell you that we’re working on that role, we’re working on that role. And so, I go back to the spelling analogy, if you’re given a spelling test and in one word is cat and the other word is onomatopoeia, and you only have to learn one, you’re going to learn cat.

Bill McDermott: [00:19:26] Sure.

Aaron Wynn: [00:19:26] That’s what contingency firms do. They work on the cat projects. Most of the jobs that people are being asked to recruit for are onomatopoeia. And so, you need somebody who’s going to study it, who’s going to focus and who’s actually going to work on your project for you.

Bill McDermott: [00:19:41] We’re talking today with Aaron Wynn, President of Hunter Recruitment Advisors. Aaron spent his professional life helping his clients overcome the distress of not being able to grow their businesses. By applying his personal experiences and professional knowledge, he provides the proven tools and techniques needed to identify, attract, and retain the right employees at the right time.

Bill McDermott: [00:20:05] And so, Aaron, your business model really is intended not only to be much more effective and efficient, but you’re actually working yourself out of a job through what you call recruitment marketing. So, talk about that a little bit.

Aaron Wynn: [00:20:23] That is true. So, for a lot of businesses, they apply principles that they’ve known their entire career. I put a job posting out. Hopefully, we’ll see some resumes come in and then we’ll see what happens. That worked pretty well when you had a unemployment rate that was 5-1/2, 6, 7 percent. There were people available in the market. Well, for the last – what? – five years, we’ve been at less than four full employment and people are really stretched. And in particular industries where we tend to have a lot of expertise, in the construction or in the trades business, it’s even worse.

Aaron Wynn: [00:20:59] And so, what they found is that all of a sudden that well of resumes has dried up. So, what do you do? Well, that’s really when the smart companies, the bigger companies started employing practices of recruitment marketing. Recruitment marketing is sharing your business to the public as to why they would want to come and work for you versus somebody else. And there’s lots of different avenues where that takes place. One, it’s their career page, that’s a basic for every business owner. Two, most people don’t realize Indeed provides a career page for your company that you don’t even know about. The moment you post a job on Indeed, you get an automatic career page.

Bill McDermott: [00:21:39] I didn’t know that.

Aaron Wynn: [00:21:39] And from there people can rate how much they like your business or don’t like your business. And that’s a really big deal because Indeed bought Glassdoor, so they’re funneling people to give ratings on your organization. Well, I’m telling you, most new candidates are going through there and trying to decide who they want to work for. They’re checking out your rating. And so, if you don’t own that, if you’re not marketing through that, that’s a challenge.

Aaron Wynn: [00:22:07] And with the rest of our clients, we try to teach them how they can use these principles of recruitment marketing for themselves. They can use us to be able to employ those principles, but they themselves can learn to do it. And what happens often is that we’ll do the recruiting as well as the recruitment marketing. And once we help them find their person or people, then we’ll work ourselves out of that opportunity and they have the fundamental tools now to be able to recruit for themselves.

Aaron Wynn: [00:22:33] They could always bring us back in if they’d like to, and we have lots of clients that will phase in and phase out and bring us back in when they have the next set of hiring needs. But for a lot of our clients, they’ve reached that stage where they have 35, 40, 50 people, they need to have an ongoing recruitment process. We will actually help them hire their recruiter and train them on how to execute both recruitment marketing and recruitment practices so they can do it for themselves.

Aaron Wynn: [00:22:57] I tease people, it’s either the worst business model or the best one. I’d like to think it’s probably a really good one because we’ve had now 130 companies just in the last four-and-a-half years all based off of referrals, individuals just sharing with other people this practice of recruitment marketing and recruiting.

Bill McDermott: [00:23:15] Yeah. And I would say 130, it’s a great business model, so congratulations on that.

Aaron Wynn: [00:23:22] I appreciate that.

Bill McDermott: [00:23:22] So, talk to me a little bit about the work in trades recruiting, HVAC, plumbing, electrical.

Aaron Wynn: [00:23:29] It’s really funny, we didn’t start out that way. When we began recruiting, our clients included the Weather Channel, we’ve had Edible Arrangements, we’ve worked with insurance companies, investment groups. And then, one day I got a call from a local Atlanta organization. They had an HVAC and they were looking to explore to do others. And they were running T.V. advertisement and they eventually had to stop because they couldn’t take on any more customers. Wouldn’t that be a great problem to have, you can’t take any more customers on, so I’m just going to have to stop advertising?

Aaron Wynn: [00:24:05] And so, they looked at me and said, “Hey, I hear you’re pretty decent at this recruiting thing. Could you look in to see what it is that we need to do?” And I had never done a trades recruiting before, and so I said, “I can do it, but you’ve got to give me two weeks. One week I’m going to spend in your office actually learning the culture of your company. And then, the second week I’m going to go in a truck with your guys and go with them on installations and go with them on repairs, because I want to understand what it takes to do this role and do it well.”

Aaron Wynn: [00:24:37] Now, not a lot of other companies would take that kind of practice. They would just take the job order and then move on. But for us, because we believe in recruitment marketing, we have to know who our target audience is. And so, after that, we developed an avatar who we targeted all of our recruiting. And I’m really proud of the fact that even on our website, the video testimony is given where we were able to double their revenues in about 18 months. They were at 35 employees and today they’re at 135 employees. And it’s been a great partnership.

Aaron Wynn: [00:25:09] And I think it was a real testimony to the fact that, all of a sudden, now we’re becoming experts in the trades. And that’s a real market that’s stressed. This year alone, there’s a-half-a-million person gap of trades positions that exist and the people that are willing to work. Now, there’s lots of reasons. There’s seven million people who are able to work that don’t want to work or – what I call affectionately – the extended childhood, where men and women who used to go to work in their 20s to support their families, now don’t have to really start until their late 20s and early 30s.

Aaron Wynn: [00:25:43] But suffice it to say, there’s still this gap, and so the trades business, which our plumbers, our electricians, our roofers – excuse me – plumbers, electricians, roofers, HVAC, these businesses really need to find not just individuals who can turn a wrench, but real people who can engage with customers. That’s not an easy feat. And so, all of a sudden, this need for finding that and being able to target with recruitment marketing to help them identify not just possible people, but people who have done this work before, became a premium for a lot of different businesses to be able to succeed.

Aaron Wynn: [00:26:21] And when COVID hit, businesses were screaming to get more people because they had all the business that they could handle, but they couldn’t find enough people to do the work. And so, we started to become experts. It was originally 25 percent of our business, then it became 50 percent, now it’s almost 80 percent of our business is just working in the trades.

Bill McDermott: [00:26:40] Wow. And there’s such a need for it out there. We’re talking today with Aaron Wynn with Hunter Recruitment Advisors. HRA is a minority owned recruitment process outsource provider and recruitment marketing expert. They mobilize the right people skills and technologies to help organizations improve their business performance. They provide key staff to employers, allowing them to meet diversity goals and to promote equal opportunity in employment. HRA is committed to creating innovative, flexible solutions for government and commercial clients.

Bill McDermott: [00:27:15] And so, Recruitment Process Outsourcing, RPO, what is it and why do employers need to be looking into this instead of contingency recruitment?

Aaron Wynn: [00:27:25] Sure. And we touched on this a little bit earlier, but the idea is that contingency recruitment is great, especially if you have a segmentation that you have an expertise in and you have a well of people. But most positions don’t start off that way with people who are actively ready to jump ship. And so, what happens is that you have to be the kind of position that’s easy for them to fill, to be able to move on to the next project.

Aaron Wynn: [00:27:51] If you’re in an organization where this position is not easy to fill and you really need somebody to concentrate on that, contingency can be a challenge because there, as we affectionately said earlier, they’re working on the cat jobs, they’re not working on the onomatopoeia. And so, that’s when you need to have a recruiter that’s devoted to you. Most small businesses that exist can’t afford to have a full time recruiter, that’s just cost prohibitive. And they really can’t afford to do 20 or 30 percent of a first year salary, that’s also cost prohibitive.

Aaron Wynn: [00:28:23] But they can afford to have a fractional recruiter, like somebody has a fractional HR person or a fractional CFO, which is becoming more and more common every single day. And so, fractional recruiting allows somebody to be able to have someone to come in who’s an expert in recruiting that not just does recruiting, but does the recruitment management for you. We literally will take on the role of the company through email as well as through phone. We’ll pick up the phone as that organization will describe the company’s culture. We’ll actually give them insights about the position as a candidate, because so often you have to woo a candidate into an opportunity.

Aaron Wynn: [00:29:02] And so, that’s not somebody who’s just looking at your resume and passing you through. These are business professionals. Our team are business professionals who have been corporate recruiters before, and they’re actually engaging with the candidate. Why it’s advantageous for the client is that, one, they’re really getting corporate recruiting, but they’re also getting it on an hourly basis. When we make the hire, the clock stops. And for most of our clients, they don’t realize this in the beginning, they’re paying probably anywhere between 40 to 50 percent of what they normally would have paid a contingency firm for the same level of service and, in fact, more service when you go with an RPO.

Aaron Wynn: [00:29:44] An RPO also establishes the ability to run your recruiting for you so that you can focus on doing your business. How many business owners have just one job? Nobody does. They’ve got four or five. My week this week is I’m the accountant, I’m the sales guy, the marketing guy, oh, and I happen to do some recruiting. Nobody has time for everything. And so, recruiting gets pushed to the bottom.

Aaron Wynn: [00:30:07] Here, they can outsource it all that the only thing they have to do is look at the write up that we did for them so they can see if this is the kind of candidate they want to talk to, provide the time that they would like to do the interviews and then show up. Everything else is handled by their RPO team.

Bill McDermott: [00:30:23] Yeah. Which is great. And the whole concept of fractional work gives the business owner the ability to have on demand recruiting, and so what a great business model. And everybody needs staff right now. I don’t think I have a client that isn’t looking to fill some kind of positions.

Aaron Wynn: [00:30:43] Well, pass those business cards over. I’ll be happy to take that.

Bill McDermott: [00:30:47] Absolutely. For our business owner listeners out there, just to help them, top three reasons people leave their job and what employers should know and do to attract them to their business.

Aaron Wynn: [00:31:01] In the top three, people often think the number one reason has got to be pay. Pay is in the top three, but it’s not number one, but it’s one that should always be considered. And what I try to tell business owners all the time is that you have to constantly make sure that your position and how it’s being paid is up to market. We usually get settled into a, “Hey, this is what it got paid, so that’s what it’s going to stay.” And the problem is they’ll get wooed by somebody else who’s more current. Every single year, for myself, I look at what we’re paying our employees and making sure that it’s at least up to market, if not better.

Aaron Wynn: [00:31:38] The second reason why people are – in fact, going from three to two, the second reason why people leave their positions is the quality of life. Can’t get to Susie’s recital. Can’t get to Timmy’s ballgame. Or their working hours non-stop and they really just want to be able to take a break, have some balance. That becomes more and more important with every generation that comes through is that balance and being able to convey that you can provide that. It doesn’t mean we don’t want people to work hard, but it means that you have to respect that they have a life outside of this business.

Aaron Wynn: [00:32:12] But the number one reason why people leave their jobs is the managers they work for. Over and over again, it’s the people that they work for. Can they respect them? Can they be somebody who listens to them and respects what they have to say? Will they actually contribute to their development as an individual?

Aaron Wynn: [00:32:34] And so, whenever I try to help companies reduce turnover, the first three things I investigate with them is, let’s see how well the pay is. And base it based off of the skills that you’re asking them to do, let’s get an internal survey or quality of life and understand how well that’s actually working. And then, three – and this usually makes people’s head spin when they originally think about it – is what’s the turnover rate per manager? And how well are we actually bonusing towards turnover rates? It’s not to keep people in positions that they shouldn’t be there, but if it’s apparent that one or two of your managers has a really high turnover rate in comparison to everybody else, then there’s an opportunity to help them to become a better manager, for no other reason than to become a better retention tool.

Bill McDermott: [00:33:24] What a great point. Aaron, if someone wants to get in touch with you, if they have some recruiting needs, what’s the best way to get in touch with you or with Hunter Recruitment Advisors?

Aaron Wynn: [00:33:37] There’s lots of different avenues. We have a pretty strong LinkedIn channel that we do a lot of our communication with the public. But they can also give us a call at 413-367-4868. That’s where our Solutions team will be able to take their call and really try to provide a solution that’s going to work best for them. Because it’s not a cookie cutter, every business is different, and so you need a different solution. And, obviously, they can check us out at hunterrecruitment.net where they can provide their information and see video testimonials of clients that have worked with us to get a sense of who we are as a company and to see if it would work well for them.

Bill McDermott: [00:34:15] Well, you’ve got a great business model and a great business, I’m excited about your future. Thanks again for coming on ProfitSense today.

Aaron Wynn: [00:34:22] The pleasure was all mine. Thank you.

Bill McDermott: [00:34:26] I want to take a moment right now and ask my business owner audience the question, What’s standing in the way of your business exit? Recent surveys show that 80 percent of business owners will exit their business in the next ten years, yet only 25 percent have created any sort of plans in writing for a successful outcome.

Bill McDermott: [00:34:48] I’m working with quite a few firms that are considering an exit. One situation includes a majority owner who has several partners and maybe discovering those partners don’t think like business owners and may just prefer to remain employees. Another owner is a very successful business. He’s a baby boomer and is ready to retire, but is having a hard time removing himself from day-to-day operations.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:14] So, what are some things that could be standing in the way of our exit? First, the economy. In a recession, the value of a business may decline making it more difficult to sell. Also, if the economy is weak, it may be more difficult to find a buyer. Industry trends. If the industry is declining, the value of a business in that industry may decline. If the industry is changing, it may be difficult to find a buyer who is willing to take on the challenges of a changing industry. Third thing is taxes. This is one component that’s very complex. In almost every case, selling a business for a gain will trigger either capital gains or ordinary income tax.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:58] So, what can we do as owners? Time the sale of our business carefully, plan carefully, and seek advice from your professional advisors, and know that alternatives such as merging with another company also exists. With careful planning and execution, it is possible to sell a business at a fair price, even in challenging economic or industry conditions.

Bill McDermott: [00:36:26] If you want to keep up with the latest in pro business news, follow us on LinkedIn and Instagram at The Profitability Coach. If you want to listen to past or future ProfitSense episodes, you can find us on profitsenseradio.com. This is ProfitSense with Bill McDermott signing off. Make it a great day.

 

 

Tagged With: Aaron Wynn, Bill McDermott, Business Succession, certified financial planner, employment, exit planning, HIghland, Hunter Recruitment Advisors, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, Recruiting, retirement, Succession Planning, Talent Management, talent retention, The Profitability Coach

Using an Outside CFO in a Business Transition, with Art Bottoms, B2B CFO

August 8, 2023 by John Ray

B2B CFO
North Fulton Business Radio
Using an Outside CFO in a Business Transition, with Art Bottoms, B2B CFO
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B2B CFO

Using an Outside CFO in a Business Transition, with Art Bottoms, B2B CFO (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 689)

Art Bottoms, a partner with B2B CFO, joined host John Ray on this edition of North Fulton Business Radio. Art discussed what B2B CFO does, their expertise and experience, the tools they provide to support a business owner during a sale or exit, success stories, and much more.

North Fulton Business Radio is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

B2B CFO

B2B CFO is “the alternative” to the typical professional services on an exit or buy transition. They use unique tools, talents, and processes to help the business owner(s) through the transition.

Not only are their professionals qualified, but they have published books and software to help with these transitions.

Clients discover that B2B CFO not only has the tenure (in business since 1987) but the tools, talent, and processes to qualify them to be unique in the industry. This becomes a significant advantage to a client’s company and/or to someone they know.

Website

Art Bottoms, Partner, B2B CFO

Art Bottoms, Partner, B2B CFO

As a B2B CFO Partner, Art helps the owners of privately-held businesses reach their personal and business goals.

For over 34 years, he has been helping business owners:
– Navigate Successful Business Transitions
– Increase Company Value
– Increase Personal Wealth
– Reduce Stress
– Reduce Cashflow Worries
– Provide Security for Loved Ones
– Create More Free Time
– Build a Solid Retirement Plan

Art provides his consulting services on an as-needed basis. This helps privately-held businesses benefit from his experience, without the cost of a full-time employee. Art’s specialty is working with businesses whose sales are in the $2M-$75M range.

His areas of expertise include:
– Leading Financial Operations
– Accounting, Audit, and Tax Strategies
– Financial Planning and Budget Management
– Cash Planning and Managing Bank Relationships
– Financial Controls Implementation and Improvement
– Mergers and Acquisitions
– Financial Systems Design and Implementation

When Art is not working, he enjoys spending time with family, playing golf, and indulging his love for seeing new places.

LinkedIn 

Questions and Topics in this Interview:

  • What is B2B CFO?
  • How are you different than a fractional CFO?
  • What are the advantages to using B2B CFO?
  • The resources B2B CFO can provide
  • Planning for an exit and the mistakes business owners make
  • The Exit Strategy Handbook and Software
  • Success stories

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

 

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Since 2000, Office Angels® has been restoring joy to the life of small business owners, enabling them to focus on what they do best. At the same time, we honor and support at-home experts who wish to continue working on an as-needed basis. Not a temp firm or a placement service, Office Angels matches a business owner’s support needs with Angels who have the talent and experience necessary to handle work that is essential to creating and maintaining a successful small business. Need help with administrative tasks, bookkeeping, marketing, presentations, workshops, speaking engagements, and more? Visit us at https://officeangels.us/.

Tagged With: Art Bottoms, B2B CFO, business exit, Business Owners, Chief Financial Officer, exit planning, Fractional CFO, John Ray, North Fulton Business Radio, Office Angels, outside cfo, renasant bank

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach and Host of ProfitSense

January 25, 2023 by John Ray

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach and Host of ProfitSense
North Fulton Business Radio
Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach and Host of ProfitSense
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Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach and Host of ProfitSense

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach and Host of ProfitSense (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 603)

Bill McDermott, Founder and CEO of The Profitability Coach and host of ProfitSense, joined host John Ray on this episode of North Fulton Business Radio. Bill discussed his work as a profitability coach, how one client’s request for help pulled him into exit planning, what differentiates his exit planning advisory services, success stories, and much more.

North Fulton Business Radio is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The Profitability Coach

When a business owner imagines the business of their dreams, they want to do everything they can to make it happen. In order to do that, they need to understand the operational side of the business, knowing where the money flows and the potential pitfalls that surface when you want to be all things to all people. It shouldn’t be so hard to have a business that bring in more money than it spends.

The Profitability Coach simplifies complex financial concepts and break them down into easy to understand knowledge.

Website | LinkedIn | Instagram

Bill McDermott, Founder and CEO, The Profitability Coach

Bill McDermott, Founder and CEO, The Profitability Coach

Bill McDermott is the Founder and CEO of The Profitability Coach. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do.

Bill leverages his knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill currently serves as Treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum and has held previous positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity and Treasurer for CEO NetWeavers. Bill is a graduate of Wake Forest University and he and his wife, Martha have called Atlanta home for over 40 years. Outside of work, Bill enjoys golf, traveling, and gardening.

Bill is also the host of ProfitSense, a podcast produced by North Fulton Business RadioX.

LinkedIn | Twitter

Questions and Topics in this Interview

  • How Bill’s practice started after a three decade plus career in banking
  • How he works with businesses as their profitability coach
  • How one client’s request for his help in exit planning pulled him in that direction
  • What Bill’s exit planning services involve and what differentiates him
  • The need for exit planning
  • Success stories

North Fulton Business Radio is hosted by John Ray and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

RenasantBank

Renasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has grown to become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions with over $13 billion in assets and more than 190 banking, lending, wealth management and financial services offices in Mississippi, Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia and Florida. All of Renasant’s success stems from each of their banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way of better understanding the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Since 2000, Office Angels® has been restoring joy to the life of small business owners, enabling them to focus on what they do best. At the same time, we honor and support at-home experts who wish to continue working on an as-needed basis. Not a temp firm or a placement service, Office Angels matches a business owner’s support needs with Angels who have the talent and experience necessary to handle work that is essential to creating and maintaining a successful small business. Need help with administrative tasks, bookkeeping, marketing, presentations, workshops, speaking engagements, and more? Visit us at https://officeangels.us/.

Tagged With: Bill McDermott, business transition, exit planning, management transistion, profitability, profitability coach, Profitability Coach Bill McDermott, ProfitSense, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott

How to Modernize Your Business to Sell at Maximum Value, with Jason Beutler, RoboSource

January 3, 2023 by John Ray

RoboSource
How to Sell a Business
How to Modernize Your Business to Sell at Maximum Value, with Jason Beutler, RoboSource
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RoboSource

How to Modernize Your Business to Sell at Maximum Value, with Jason Beutler, RoboSource (How To Sell a Business Podcast, Episode 5)

Jason Beutler, CEO of RoboSource, joined Ed Mysogland to discuss various kinds of business automation, why RoboSource uses bots, what’s involved in automating processes, what industries benefit from it most, how it maximizes value and reduces overhead, the return on investment, and much more.

How To Sell a Business Podcast is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Atlanta.

RoboSource

RoboSource bots work 24 hours a day, completing monotonous tasks for their clients.

Process Automation is the future of work. Soon every business will have a digital workforce alongside its human workforce. Automated processes get work through faster, more efficiently, and more accurately.

So what is process automation? Think of all the jobs around the office that your team has to complete every day (or week) to keep the business operational – things like entering information into multiple systems, manning email inboxes, pulling down the same information from a website over and over again. With Robotic Process Automation (RPA), software engineers teach digital bots how to perform those jobs for you.

RoboSource can provide process-writing and support for those using RPA on premises. But with their “as-a-service” model, they can also do it all in house, for a low monthly payment, eliminating the usual expense associated with investing in the infrastructure, software, and training. Your cloud-based solution will scale with you, as you find new ways to save time and increase accuracy.

With their “as-a-service” model, process automation is more affordable than you’d think.

Company website | Instagram | LinkedIn

Jason Beutler, CEO, RoboSource

Jason Beutler, CEO, RoboSource

Several years ago, Jason Beutler was teaching a college computer engineering class when he realized that his students were writing better code than an outsourced team he was supervising at the same time. And that’s how RoboSource was born.

With almost 20 years of professional programming experience, you might expect Jason to spend his free time reading fantasy fiction, playing board games, or drinking Mountain Dew. He does. But he also spends a fair amount of time playing competitive sand volleyball and fanning hard-core at Notre Dame football games. His passion for Notre Dame extended to completing his MBA there in 2009.

Professionally, Jason is passionate about process improvement and using accountability to grow young developers. He speaks often on this topic, to audiences as diverse as coding conference attendees, classes full of university students, and computer science educators.

LinkedIn

Ed Mysogland, Host of How To Sell a Business Podcast

Ed Mysogland, Host of “How To Sell a Business”

The How To Sell a Business Podcast combines 30 years of exit planning, valuation, and exit execution working with business owners. Ed Mysogland has a mission and vision to help business owners understand the value of their business and what makes it salable. Most of the small business owner’s net worth is locked in the company; to unlock it, a business owner has to sell it. Unfortunately, the odds are against business owners that they won’t be able to sell their companies because they don’t know what creates a saleable asset.

Ed interviews battle-tested experts who help business owners prepare, build, preserve, and one-day transfer value with the sale of the business for maximum value.

How To Sell a Business Podcast is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.  The show can be found on all the major podcast apps and a full archive can be found here.

Ed is the Managing Partner of Indiana Business Advisors. He guides the development of the organization, its knowledge strategy, and the IBA initiative, which is to continue to be Indiana’s premier business brokerage by bringing investment-banker-caliber of transactional advisory services to small and mid-sized businesses. Over the last 29 years, Ed has been appraising and providing pre-sale consulting services for small and medium-size privately-held businesses as part of the brokerage process. He has worked with entrepreneurs of every pedigree and offers a unique insight into consulting with them toward a successful outcome.

Connect with Ed: LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:00] Business owners likely will have only one shot to sell a business. Most don’t understand what drives value and how buyers look at a business. Until now. Welcome to the How To Sell A Business Podcast, where every week we talk to the subject matter experts, advisors, and those around the deal table about how to sell at maximum value. Every business will go to sell one day. It’s only a matter of when. We’re glad you’re here. The podcast starts now.

Ed Mysogland: [00:00:35] In today’s podcast, I had the opportunity to interview Jason Beutler of RoboSource. I’ve known him for a while. He’s a friend and we’ve known each other through an organization called Truth at Work. So, I know him professionally as well as personally. And I can tell you he is probably one of the smartest people I have ever, ever plowed into.

Ed Mysogland: [00:01:01] And so, today we’re going to be talking about automation and what that means for a seller to sell the company or a buyer that may be buying the company and how to maximize that investment. He talked a lot about where to identify those opportunities to automate the business. So, I am certain that you will get a lot from this episode. So, enjoy my conversation with Jason Beutler of RoboSource.

Ed Mysogland: [00:01:40] Welcome to another episode of How To Sell A Business Podcast. I’m your host, Ed Mysogland. I help business owners identify what creates value in their companies so that one day that they can sell at maximum value. Today, I have a good buddy of mine, Jason Beutler from RoboSource. So, Jason, tell us a little bit about RoboSource, and not too long because I got lots of questions for you.

Jason Beutler: [00:02:07] Thanks, Ed. So, RoboSource is a process automation company. We basically help businesses automate mundane, repetitive tasks within their business to maximize their time and get their people working on things that are more important and strategic to the business.

Ed Mysogland: [00:02:25] Well, as I was saying when we first got started, you know, there’s so much here and I guess I’m looking first, define automation for everybody.

Jason Beutler: [00:02:40] So, automation is essentially taking the work out of a human’s hands. So, letting the computer do the task that needs to be accomplished. So, it can be simple things such as one of our clients puts invoices into QuickBooks and they need to classify those invoices by salesperson. So, instead of having a human go through and classify that, the computer automates that process and does that for them.

Ed Mysogland: [00:03:10] Okay. So, from the standpoint of that automation, because like I was telling you, I was beating up on one of our guys here today on you and I had an opportunity to work together and I couldn’t sell it to my partners. They were just fearful of what this meant to the business and the risk associated with it. So, where we ended up with was offshoring a lot of what we were talking about with automation.

Ed Mysogland: [00:03:43] So, I know like Zapier and If This Then That, and then you have your custom work, and then, in our case, offshoring. Is that kind of the lifecycle of automation that I’m scared to automate so I’m going to hire somebody at a lower cost and then I’m going to back into automation? Because at least I think that is our trajectory, you know what I mean? Go ahead.

Jason Beutler: [00:04:21] And I would say a lot of companies are doing that. So, let’s talk specifically about the different kinds of automation. So, there are three specific kinds, and RoboSource does all of them. So, to start, first, we’ve got the traditional software. So, traditional software is what we’ve been doing since, like, the ’50s, right? It’s building software that manages data and processes and helps you sort of automate the day-to-day. That’s where the warehouse systems, the ERPs, all of those came about. That was a form of automation and it’s still something that’s done a lot today.

Jason Beutler: [00:04:52] The second and more recent form of automation that’s come about are these low-code and no-code tools that you talked about, the Zapiers, the If This Then That, the Microsoft Make or Power Automate platforms. Those tools are, essentially, drag and drop so that you don’t have to have any concept on how to code, but you can still kind of automate and build in. They operate off of triggers. So, if something happens in one system, it will trigger this automation to happen and do something from there. So, you could say watch an inbox for an incoming email and trigger it to do something for you.

Ed Mysogland: [00:05:24] I got it.

Jason Beutler: [00:05:26] The last form of automation is what’s referred to as robotic process automation, and that’s a very new technology that’s come about where essentially you can mimic clicking on a desktop the way that a human would click on the desktop. So, if a human can click on buttons and move around on a website or an application, you now can write a software bot that will automate that for you.

Jason Beutler: [00:05:50] So, I say all of that in answering your question around how do we have these conversations and what’s the trajectory of adopting automation. Most people already are adopting automation in some way, shape, or form because they’re using software as a traditional form of software. It’s an area that they feel comfortable because we spent the last 20 years looking at it and dealing with that kind of automation. Where people get uncomfortable is when they see the bot clicking on the buttons for a human. That’s when they start to think, “Oh, where are humans making decisions that I would be uncomfortable having a bot make a decision.”

Jason Beutler: [00:06:29] And the problem is most people don’t know that. They don’t know the decisions that are being made, that a human’s being made when they’re clicking those buttons. And as a result they get a little bit uncomfortable. And so, that’s really where I start in those conversations, is, digging into what are the real decisions that are being made when you’re clicking these buttons.

Ed Mysogland: [00:06:46] Yeah. Give me an example of that. And I’m totally transparent, you can beat up on us all you want. I mean, when we were talking, I’m sitting here going, “All right. I can see it, but am I willing to risk it?” You know what I mean? I can see what you’re talking about, but am I willing to put, in this case, we were talking about inbound confidentiality agreements. We get about a thousand a month and we’re using DocuSign and this, that, and the other. And it’s like, “Okay.” What’s the risk and how do I understand what you’re talking about as far as the bot doing what it does to replace the person that is physically doing it for us now. So, how do I get comfortable with that?

Jason Beutler: [00:07:40] So, some of it is just mindset. The reason you’re comfortable having a human do that is because you trust the human’s decision making process. What’s interesting is the bot is going to make the same decision every time because it’s software. So, there are rules going to be defined around that that are going to have the bot make the same decision. It’s just uncomfortable for us because we’re not used to it.

Jason Beutler: [00:08:03] And this is the transition that’s happening I think in the ’20s right now, is, there’s starting to become more and more comfort with the fact that computers can actually make the decisions that humans have been making on issues like what you’re dealing with. And so, at the end of the day, those NDAs are vital to your organization and your business. It’s like a cornerstone of what you’re doing. Having the human click that button gives you a sense of warm fuzzies that you know someone had to sit there and make the right decision.

Ed Mysogland: [00:08:33] You’re right. But at the same time, I mean, after I hear you say that, I’m like, that is such a nice guy that’s doing it. But, you know, I’m sitting here going, “Well?” Because I can’t remember what the savings was. I mean, it was probably – I don’t know – ten bucks an hour or whatever doing all the processing. And I can’t remember what the financial mechanics were, but it was about a 95 percent savings, I think, something like that.

Jason Beutler: [00:09:11] Yeah. Probably.

Ed Mysogland: [00:09:11] And so, hearing myself say this, I’m like, “Oh, my gosh.” But you’re totally right. And I wanted to feel better about the decision. Like, if there was a problem, that guy was going to call me. And I’m afraid with a bot, the whole damn place falls apart before I know it. And so, how does that work? Where’s the tripwire to prevent my infrastructure to fall apart?

Jason Beutler: [00:09:49] Yeah. So, when looking at automation, one of the first things you want to look at is what happens on – what we call – the non-happy path, what happens in the exception cases. And really that’s where we plan our automations around, is, we know that the happy path, that’s going to work. But what happens when it’s not following that. So, that’s how you build the process. That’s where you want to make sure you’ve got the automation defined.

Jason Beutler: [00:10:15] So, in this instance, it would have been like here are the boundaries. Here are the scenarios, where if it falls within these boundaries, we’re going to go ahead and send out the NDA because we feel confident that we’re operating effectively. If it’s outside of this range, either there’s some form of maybe AI decision making we can go through to come to a better decision or we’re going to send it to a human to click the button for us.

Ed Mysogland: [00:10:39] Okay.

Jason Beutler: [00:10:40] Because not all automation has to be 100 percent hands off, and I think that’s another area that people don’t understand. The 80/20 rule applies here. How much more time would you get if we could get rid of 80 percent of the scenario and you only have to deal with 20 percent of it?

Ed Mysogland: [00:10:58] You’re right. I mean, you’re totally right. But at the same time, I’m looking at it like in our process. The NDA came in, RoboSource was going to write the NDA to our CRM, but that’s where it stopped. Because we had 16 people, whose client does that belong to? And that’s where the rub was, was how does the bot know? And now, after I’ve gotten away from it, you were like, “Well, simple. You just see whose client was tagged and you’re off to the races and then it’ll do it for you.” And that leads me to my next question of, how much of a process can this be automated? I mean, how many steps is a typical automation?

Jason Beutler: [00:12:04] So, we’ve done automations that are as small as two to three steps, just because they do them in high volume, to we’ve done automations that have as many as about 400 steps, and that’s more on the mortgage side. And we’ve also done some work with a nonprofit processing incoming transcripts, where they’re extracting content out of a high school transcript and putting it into a system and running them through some approval processes. So, those are massive processes that are very long running, potentially running three, four months even.

Ed Mysogland: [00:12:43] Okay. So, you just said, a bot is scanning a transcript and extracting the paragraph. What are they extracting?

Jason Beutler: [00:12:55] It’s extracting the semester, the class, and the grade, as well as the grade point average, what school they went to.

Ed Mysogland: [00:13:02] I got it. I got it. But it’s not, like, reading the essay and pulling –

Jason Beutler: [00:13:09] Oh. No.

Ed Mysogland: [00:13:10] I got it. I was like, “Oh, my gosh.” So, one of the biggest reasons I wanted you on here was we have the baby boomers that are looking to sell businesses, and you hear it all the time. And the challenge we have is coming from the other side, the buyers are looking at it on, “Hey, I want a really well operated business.” But at the same time, I got to figure out, not only how I get my money back from the acquisition, but how do I grow this.

Ed Mysogland: [00:13:55] And they’re finding good companies, and that’s part of the problem. When I say problem, that’s part of the challenge. From the buy side, it’s like, “Okay. I want a really good company. But at the same time, I’m trying to elongate a business that is perhaps on the mature side of the company lifecycle.” From the seller’s side, I’m sitting here saying, “Okay. If I have enough runway, I want to put some of this in so I can maximize, not only the earnings pre-sale, but also it’s already set up for the next guy.”

Ed Mysogland: [00:14:34] I mean, you can look at it both ways. Well, from my standpoint, I think I would look at it from the buyer standpoint. When I’m looking at a business, how do I look at automation? Are there industries that are ripe for it? Are there processes that this is the low lying fruit that you can have immediate value impact?

Jason Beutler: [00:14:58] Yeah. Talking to that specifically, I have a client that ended up selling their business in the industry they were in. And the reason being is there was a PE firm that was coming in and looking to buy something in their industry. And because we’d been working with them, their overhead was 35 percent less than their competitors. And they got sucked up as a result of it and he had a pretty good exit.

Jason Beutler: [00:15:22] So, it is something that’s of a lot of value. And you can create scenarios where the automation is actually a differentiator. I think from the buy standpoint, the things that I would be looking for are places where there is human repetitive action. I mean, at the end of the day, computers are going to be better at that. Computers are really good at doing repetitive tasks, that’s what they’re made to do.

Jason Beutler: [00:15:50] And so, if we’re seeing things where people are taking paper and keying it into systems or people are having to key in two or three different systems – which is common. I run into that probably three or four times a week – where we’ve got to put it into our inventory system, our CRM, and our ERP in some way, shape, or form, or our finance system. So, we’re literally putting the same client in three different places. Those are areas where you’re going to see a lot of automation opportunities show up very quickly and you’re going to save quite a bit of time and money off of that.

Ed Mysogland: [00:16:19] So then, it begs the question, what do I deploy? Like, for example, I am a Mac guy. I have Text Expander. I’ve got this thing called Hazel that moves my files and stuff like that. When do you say, “You know what? I need custom. I need somebody to come in, evaluate, and build this thing out.” As opposed to, “I think I’m going to try this Zapier thing. I’m going to click on it and here’s my trigger and here’s the next step.” But it’s just one step. So, how do I – I don’t want to say work with someone like you, but how do I know what I don’t know? Because, truly, most people don’t have no clue about this stuff.

Jason Beutler: [00:17:21] Yeah. So, tools like Zapier are extremely powerful and they do make it available for individuals who don’t understand necessarily all the intricate behind the scenes working of a computer to be able to do some basic automations. It’s when you start to get into the more complex decision making processes that you’re probably going to want to bring in somebody who understands.

Jason Beutler: [00:17:44] Automation is the intersection between data, business, and software. You’ve got to understand data analytics, which gets into artificial intelligence. You’ve got to understand how to build software. Because at the end of the day, a computer is going to operate in a different way than a human would operate, and understanding how that works makes sense. But if you don’t understand business, then automation is just going to be a waste of your time. So, you’re at that intersection point.

Jason Beutler: [00:18:10] I would say if you’re doing automation and you’re getting to the point where you’re like, “Wow. There are acronyms coming up that I don’t know what they mean. Things like O off, things like APIs, they’re starting to show up because I’m trying to do more complicated things.” That’s when you probably want to bring in somebody who’s been there.

Ed Mysogland: [00:18:27] I got it. And for somebody like me mixing and matching a RoboSource with my dabbling of Zapier and stuff like that, that’s probably a bad idea, isn’t it?

Jason Beutler: [00:18:47] There’s some advantage to putting it all into a single location, but there’s nothing that’s going to keep you from being successful in that environment. So, a lot of automations are now operating inside the Cloud. And by the Cloud, we basically just mean someone else’s computer on the internet, which is really all that that’s meaning. So, as a result, you can use Zapier to do some of your more basic things.

Jason Beutler: [00:19:11] And when you get into what we refer to as intelligent automation or hyper automation, where you’re really trying to accelerate some things or make some decisions, you might want to send it off to maybe an Azure with a cognitive services behind the scenes. And I just went all geeky on people, but, you know.

Ed Mysogland: [00:19:25] I got it. And, again, this isn’t an ad for Zapier even though it sounds like it. It’s more from the standpoint of I don’t know what I don’t know, but I read all this. And not many people are saying these are the people that will come in, evaluate your process, and automate it. Versus, “Hey, gain five hours to your day by using Zapier.” So, I’m with you.

Ed Mysogland: [00:20:10] So, one of the things that I was writing about is, in business valuation, recurring revenue is pretty high up on the value hierarchy. Conversely, if I look at automation, I am optimizing, basically, the engine of the company. So, I know you were saying what’s a human doing, the data entry, and so on and so forth. I’m assuming accounting is right off the bat because I heard you mentioned QuickBooks. Where else should I be looking? Let’s just take a manufacturing company. Where am I looking for a manufacturing company?

Jason Beutler: [00:21:13] Work orders, what that work order process look like, how is that coming through. We do a lot with purchase orders. We do a lot on invoice processing. Finance comes up quite often. And specifically also, when you start getting into debt reconciliations across banks, credit card processing across banks, making sure that you’re standardizing all those accounts and everything all lines up, that’s a lot of manual work that can be automated and those decisions can be made.

Ed Mysogland: [00:21:46] I got it. I was interviewing a guy that optimizes CPA practices. And one of the things that he was saying that was coming down the pike is taking a person’s tax return, scanning it in, extracting the tax return for the next guy to do their analysis. And I assume the IRS does something like that already. I mean, from a procedural standpoint, it’s looking at the image and it’s looking at a particular area and it’s extracting what is in that pixel. I mean, is that how it does it?

Jason Beutler: [00:22:45] So, that’s hard to explain without getting into the science behind it all. But, essentially, yes, that’s basically what it’s doing, is, it is looking at the image structure and it’s an array of pixels, so it’s an array of colors. And it’s looking at those colors and it’s identifying patterns around those.

Jason Beutler: [00:23:06] Now, something to note on PDFs is not all PDFs are scans. A lot of PDFs are actually printed. And that’s actually a different underlying structure. So, if it’s a printed PDF from, like, an application and you print it to file, that actually has the text embedded in it and that text is a lot easier to pull out.

Ed Mysogland: [00:23:28] That’s the OCR or no?

Jason Beutler: [00:23:31] OCR is going to work off of the scanned images because that’s doing optical character recognition. And that’s where you’re going to take a scan or a picture and it’s going to figure out what the words are. And that’s pretty accurate but it’s going to run into some issues. Then, I’d say most PDFs that are received these days now are in QuickBooks. You hit print a PDF and it comes out as a really pretty formatted PDF. That’s actually not an image. That’s actually a text embedded document that you can go behind the scenes and pull that text out directly.

Ed Mysogland: [00:24:03] I had no idea. And that’s how you’re able to do it with purchase orders. I get it.

Jason Beutler: [00:24:14] Yes.

Ed Mysogland: [00:24:15] Okay. So, everybody gets all shook up about employees that the employees are being replaced by robots. I mean, I know it’s true. But I’m trying to figure out whether or not that’s a bad thing, you know?

Jason Beutler: [00:24:40] Yeah. And one of the thoughts I’ve had around that recently is we’ve had recently The Great Resignation, and now we have quiet quitting. So, we’ve got our workforce saying, I don’t want to do things that I don’t feel are important. I don’t want to work in a place or work on work that isn’t meaningful and impactful. I want my day to matter. And then, we say, “Okay. Let’s automate some of the meaningless work.” And everyone’s up in arms about we’re replacing jobs. I’m not seeing it line up. And I see the workforce basically begging to work on more important things. So, why wouldn’t we automate away the things that, basically, they’re already saying they don’t want to do?

Ed Mysogland: [00:25:24] Wow. Out of everything you’ve said, that’s probably the most impactful for me. Because you’re exactly right, you know, if you can take away the mundane and give them the opportunity to maximize whether it be creativity or whatever, I got to imagine it’ll improve corporate culture and retention. I never looked at it that way. That’s a great way to look at it.

Ed Mysogland: [00:26:02] So, I’m trying to determine if I have two businesses and one has automation, one has people doing it. I’m trying to determine risk. You follow? I mean, on the automated side, you’re saying, “Look. I got a bot doing all this. There is no risk. The only risk is it breaking.” On this side, I have people, and they do break, they make mistakes. But yet I’m trying to determine if I’m the buyer looking at the business, am I intuitively thinking that the business with people is less risky than the automated one? You know what I mean?

Ed Mysogland: [00:26:57] Like, if you have a buyer that shows up and they see the automation, am I sitting here going, “You know, I think that’s a business for me” versus I got these people. I’m great at managing people. I’m great at maximizing their efficiency, and so on and so forth. What do you say to that? I mean, that’s a hard one, right?

Jason Beutler: [00:27:27] Yeah, it is. And, to me, I guess it comes down to how far out you’re looking. So, if you’re looking out just a couple of years, then, yeah, go with what you’re comfortable with. But if you look back at history, and let’s just take Stud, Studebaker, Duesenberg, they could build cars, but they’re not around. Why? Because someone came along and made it more efficient and figured out how to do things more efficiently than they were able to do things. And, eventually, it got to the point where, competitively, they couldn’t keep up.

Jason Beutler: [00:28:04] And I guess the question I would have is, if you’re looking at a business that is primarily people driven versus one that has a lot of automation driving it, how long out are you looking? Because if you’re looking at long term, your competitive advantage is going to come with automation. And why is that? It’s an asset you own and it’s an asset that’s scalable. So, if you need to go twice as fast, it’s a bot. You literally can push buttons and have it go twice as fast.

Jason Beutler: [00:28:31] If you all of a sudden are like I need to scale way back because recession or something’s hit, you can push buttons and scale it way back. You’ve got flexibility that you wouldn’t have with people necessarily. Not to say that the people aren’t vital because there’s strategic and relational and things that really only people can do that you want to make sure you got the right people doing that. But in terms of the day-to-day operations, I would say it depends on your duration.

Ed Mysogland: [00:28:57] You know what? It’s fascinating that you say that, because the holding period for a business tends to be long. And you talk about getting financing to buy companies and you’re talking about a ten year amortization. And if you think about what has transpired in the last ten years – and I can’t remember what the term is about technology, how fast it’s changing – but there’s some —

Jason Beutler: [00:29:30] Doubles every seven years.

Ed Mysogland: [00:29:31] Yeah, that too. So, if I’m a buyer, I mean, you’re exactly right. As I look at business owners, especially the ones that are looking to retire, buyers are evaluating where are they on that lifecycle. And I would imagine that there’s a lot of businesses that aren’t marketable because of where they’re at in the life cycle as opposed to, “Hey. I think I can fix this.”

Ed Mysogland: [00:30:07] Now, I’ll tell you, there’s some guys that are rolling up foundries. And these guys, I love watching what they’re doing and that’s exactly what they’re doing. I mean, the foundries, that business hasn’t changed in decades. And they’re coming in and just retooling it, make it more efficient economies of scale. Those are the type of buyers, I think, are probably we’re going to see more of over the next half-a-decade or so.

Ed Mysogland: [00:30:46] As a vendor, it’s one thing for me to hire you to fix my stuff. It’s another thing having somebody on site to be – I call it and I’m seeing more and more – chief automation officers. Do I need that or is an outsourced vendor like yourself adequate? You know what I mean?

Jason Beutler: [00:31:11] Yeah. I would say, right now you’re not going to find a lot of people that are going to be qualified to be a chief automation officer. It’s a relatively new concept. And it is going to be a unique skill set, as we talked earlier about that blend between data analytics and AI, having software development background and process orientation, but also having enough business acumen to know how to automate and run the business.

Jason Beutler: [00:31:37] So, what I find works best is to take the AI and software component and outsource that, but keep the business acumen in-house. So, take a subject matter expert, somebody operationally that understands what’s going on, and partner them with somebody, like us, that can provide the technical oversight and the technical aspects. Most businesses will have some form of technology on staff, but not necessarily the automation technology. And these days you don’t need it to be in-house. You can leave that outsourced. Personally, I think you’ll be better served that way because you’ll be able to get some economies of scale off of that.

Jason Beutler: [00:32:18] So, with a partnership between your in-house subject matter expert and outsourced or consultative help on the technology front, I think you can accomplish the technology and the support of it in a very effective manner without having to go bring in a chief automation officer, which is frankly going to increase all your infrastructure costs as well.

Ed Mysogland: [00:32:42] I got it. So, I’m certain every buyer that is listening to this is going to say, what are the industries that are ripe for me to go target? And you said, those that are heavy in paper. But are there any particular businesses or industries or the types of businesses that – I know you said – paper heavy, but any industries that come to mind that if I’m a buyer, because you may be a buyer, Jason, where are you looking to buy?

Jason Beutler: [00:33:27] Right now, the clients I’m running into the most often are insurance. Mortgage is actually coming up all the time right now. I’m running into mortgage applications and mortgage underwriting almost daily on that front. So, those are two areas that I’m hitting often. Banking is starting to show up a lot more, though they do have more of their internal systems that they’re able to run on. The other on I’m hitting is health care, health care billing. It is the Wild West out there. And the opportunity to standardize and automate on that is huge.

Ed Mysogland: [00:34:07] I also heard HOA, so that was one that kind of caught me by surprise. I didn’t think of that in my research for our talk. It seems as though anything that has an application, whether some use Google forms and that will bring it in. Others, especially like apartments, where somebody comes in and actually fills out an application. Those are our candidates. We talked a little bit about manufacturing. CPAs are definitely trying to automate. Yeah, so that’s really interesting.

Ed Mysogland: [00:35:03] So, you said something earlier about you own this process. Does it have to be updated? What’s the security? How do I protect, like whatever, open source? You know, that’s open to the world, right? So, I have this proprietary. I engage you. I have a proprietary process. How do I protect that? And is it really mine or is it yours?

Jason Beutler: [00:35:37] So, the process is yours. That being said, it is implemented inside of a piece of software. So, most of these tools nowadays are built inside of tools. You’ll hear things called UiPath, Blue Prism, Microsoft Power Automate, Logic Apps. There’s a whole series of these tools that you will implement the automation inside of. So, while the process is your intellectual property and how it executes is specific to you, it is somewhat proprietary to the software that it’s been built inside of. That being said, you could take that software, implement it in another location, and move that process into that, and have no trouble at all running it.

Jason Beutler: [00:36:20] So, just to make sure we’re clear on that, security, that is a challenge. Now, we talked about the different kinds of automation, right? The low-code, no-code, the traditional software, and the RPA. RPA security, which is the desktop automation, that’s a little more straightforward because it’s literally logging in like a human one. So, it’s the same security that you have. If you put a username and password in and navigate a site or navigate an application, that’s the way the software bot is going to go. So, you can control the security the same way you would on a user.

Jason Beutler: [00:36:52] When you get into the traditional software and some of the low-code stuff, security gets to be pretty challenging. There are what are referred to as application programming interfaces or APIs. Those have a series of security, they’re called tokens. You use tools like OAuth, which is open authentication to integrate with them all. If you’re starting to get into a lot of that, you probably want to call a software guy because you’re getting into some pretty low level security type of things. But those are all built into these tools these days, so you’re not having to necessarily figure it out. You just have to know how to implement it.

Ed Mysogland: [00:37:31] So, I’m a consumer and I sit here and go, “All right. Exactly what does RoboSource do for me? What does a guy like Jason do?” You know, it’s being protected, so it’s design. So, I know you’re designing it. I don’t know why I’m talking for you. So, let me turn it over to you, what is Jason doing in my world? What are you doing for me?

Jason Beutler: [00:38:05] So, first and foremost is, we’ve built a ton of these, so we understand the pitfalls. So, when we sit down and work with on a process with you, we’re going to essentially know how to make this process operate and we’ll build from that standpoint. Second is we build it. Most of our clients do not know how to build out software. They don’t know the appropriate ways, the best way to build that automation. So, with our architects and our experience, we build that out for you.

Jason Beutler: [00:38:31] So, not only do we plan out how it should look, we build it for you, and then we support it. Meaning, you don’t have to worry about it at all. We just take care of it. We’ll specifically give you an app that shows you real time what your software bot is doing. And if anything breaks, we’re looking at it. So, we’re writing software and tools to handle all those scenarios you said earlier where it’s like, “I want to know this thing broke before it breaks. I want to be ahead of it.” We’re doing all of that.

Jason Beutler: [00:38:59] That’s the monitoring and systems that we put in place, and that’s the platform that we’re building out, is to make sure that all that is safe and secure and that somebody is looking at it. We can catch the anomalies before they happen. If something breaks, we got it fixed as quickly as we can to keep your business up and running. So, that’s what we’re doing on that front is we’re essentially providing automation as a service for you so you don’t have to know anything about how to automate. You just have to know that you’ve got something that you want automated, and we’ll take it from there.

Ed Mysogland: [00:39:27] And if I’m not mistaken, how you get paid is based on the automate the event, right.

Jason Beutler: [00:39:37] Correct. Yeah. So, similar to electricity, we scale by usage.

Ed Mysogland: [00:39:45] Okay. I get it. So, have you done any studies on the ROI to this stuff? Knowing you, you probably have. So, what kind of ROI should someone expect by doing it?

Jason Beutler: [00:40:02] So, the ROI that we’ve seen, let’s kind of break down how the costs look. Typically, there’s an upfront cost that comes into building out the process in some way, shape, or form. Similar to if you were to onboard somebody, you’re going to have an upfront training cost, right? Getting up to speed. You’re going to have that same type of cost with getting the software built or getting the automation built. After that, then there is sort of the monthly recurring usage based fees that come out of it.

Jason Beutler: [00:40:30] What we’ve seen is we’re saving anywhere between 35 and 50 percent from a human on that monthly recurring level. Depending upon the automation, it can get as high as, like, 80, 90 percent. But conservatively, we’re saying between 35 and 50. So, given that, what I see across most of my clients is about a six month payback period, six to nine months at the most in year one. But, remember, that includes the implementation fee. So, by year two, your savings are phenomenal. And so, we’re seeing in the second year, you’re often spending a quarter of what you were the year before.

Ed Mysogland: [00:41:10] I got it. All right. I want to be sensitive to your time, so at the end of every episode I always ask, what’s the one piece of advice that you could give our listeners that would make the most immediate impact on their business? Go ahead, I dare you to say automate.

Jason Beutler: [00:41:32] I mean, along those lines, though, I guess I would say busy is the new broke. So, when you’re broke, you don’t have enough money to focus on and to put towards the things you should, let alone the things you want to do. The same is true when you’re busy. So, if you’re busy, you don’t have enough time to focus on the things you should be focusing on, let alone the things that you want to be focusing on.

Jason Beutler: [00:41:57] And you really only have two options. You can delegate and you can automate. Those are your only two options in order to get your time back. And really, at the end of the day, time is the resource we’re managing as business owners and business leaders. So, I guess automation is a new thing. You need to learn it. It’s half your solution. It’s half the possible solutions that are out there. And I think that’s an important aspect and something to think about.

Ed Mysogland: [00:42:24] Yeah, you’re exactly right. And I really appreciate how you look at that, that this is not so much about costs as it is about time. I get it. So, what’s the best way that we can find you?

Jason Beutler: [00:42:49] Website, robosource.us. You can always email me, jason.beutler@robosource.us. And then, my phone number as well.

Ed Mysogland: [00:43:01] Okay. And we’ll have all of that in the show notes. Super easy. All right, oh, buddy. Thanks for taking the time. I know this is the future. And I’ve been following along for quite some time about buyers and what’s inducing them to buy businesses. And so, I am so grateful for your generosity to spend some time with us today and and talk about how we can make businesses either more marketable, or post sale, how to maximize the buy. So, thanks so much for hanging out with me.

Jason Beutler: [00:43:45] Hey, it was fun. I appreciate it. And I look forward to talking to you again soon.

Ed Mysogland: [00:43:49] Sounds good. Thanks, buddy.

Outro: [00:43:52] Thank you for joining us today on the How To Sell A Business Podcast. If you want more episodes packed with strategies to help sell your business for the maximum value, visit howtosellabusinesspodcast.com for tips and best practices to make your exit life changing. Better yet, subscribe now so you never miss future episodes. This program is copyrighted by Myso, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

 

Tagged With: automation, bots, Business Owners, business process, business value, Ed Mysogland, exit planning, How to Sell a Business Podcast, how to sell my business, how to sell your business, Jason Beutler, Notre Dame, process improvement, RoboSource, Sell my business

How to Improve Earnings to Maximize Business Value, with Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

December 27, 2022 by John Ray

maximize business value
How to Sell a Business
How to Improve Earnings to Maximize Business Value, with Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach
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How to Improve Earnings to Maximize Business Value, with Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach (How To Sell a Business Podcast, Episode 4)

Improving earnings to maximize business value was the focus of this episode with guest Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach. He and host Ed Mysogland discussed key things business owners can do to improve earnings, strategies to improve profitability, the need for delegation, financial management, planning your exit strategy, and much more.

How To Sell a Business Podcast is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Atlanta.

The Profitability Coach

Every business owner has a big dream for their company and wants to make it happen. The problem is many business owners don’t know how to manage the finances of their business leaving them frustrated and confused.

The Profitability Coach comes alongside the business owner and analyzes the financial health of the business and develops a plan to take them from financial confusion to clarity. Then he executes the plan focusing on areas of financial growth. Together they travel the road of financial success to profitability and healthy cash flow.

Company website | Instagram | LinkedIn

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

Bill McDermott graduated from Wake Forest University and launched a banking career that spanned 32 years. He was laid off from his position as Chief Commercial Lender in the Great Recession of 2009. With a treasure trove of banking knowledge and analytical skills, Bill launched the Profitability Coach with the purpose of making business owners better financial managers.

Over the past 13 years, Bill has helped over 200 clients by delivering results-oriented insights, taking them from financial confusion to clarity.

Bill is also the host of ProfitSense with Bill McDermott. ProfitSense dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and business owners and the professionals that advise them. This show helps local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. You can subscribe to the show on all the major podcast apps, and the show archive can be found here.

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Ed Mysogland, Host of How To Sell a Business Podcast

Ed Mysogland, Host of “How To Sell a Business”

The How To Sell a Business Podcast combines 30 years of exit planning, valuation, and exit execution working with business owners. Ed Mysogland has a mission and vision to help business owners understand the value of their business and what makes it salable. Most of the small business owner’s net worth is locked in the company; to unlock it, a business owner has to sell it. Unfortunately, the odds are against business owners that they won’t be able to sell their companies because they don’t know what creates a saleable asset.

Ed interviews battle-tested experts who help business owners prepare, build, preserve, and one-day transfer value with the sale of the business for maximum value.

How To Sell a Business Podcast is produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.  The show can be found on all the major podcast apps and a full archive can be found here.

Ed is the Managing Partner of Indiana Business Advisors. He guides the development of the organization, its knowledge strategy, and the IBA initiative, which is to continue to be Indiana’s premier business brokerage by bringing investment-banker-caliber of transactional advisory services to small and mid-sized businesses. Over the last 29 years, Ed has been appraising and providing pre-sale consulting services for small and medium-size privately-held businesses as part of the brokerage process. He has worked with entrepreneurs of every pedigree and offers a unique insight into consulting with them toward a successful outcome.

Connect with Ed: LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:00] Business owners likely will have only one shot to sell a business. Most don’t understand what drives value and how buyers look at a business. Until now. Welcome to the How to Sell a Business Podcast, where every week we talk to the subject matter experts, advisors, and those around the deal table about how to sell at maximum value. Every business will go to sell one day. It’s only a matter of when. We’re glad you’re here. The podcast starts now.

Ed Mysogland: [00:00:35] Welcome to another episode of How to Sell Your Business Podcast. I had the opportunity to visit with Bill McDermott, who’s known as The Profitability Coach. And, you know, I’m really skeptical on those consultants and people like that. And it came from a referral from Business RadioX, John Ray. And the first thing he said was what a quality guy he is, and this is such an understatement.

Ed Mysogland: [00:01:11] And so, I’m thrilled to death about the time that you’re getting ready to spend here on the podcast because Bill really helped provide some clarity on, number one, how to identify an advisor. If you’re going to hire somebody, what’s the difference between signal and noise? When should you expect a return on your investment? And so, as we went through the podcast, you know, not only was he well versed in so many different attributes of the selling process of what creates value to actually the whole exit process.

Ed Mysogland: [00:01:56] So, I think you’re going to find that Bill, as The Profitability Coach, really helped provide some really helpful nuggets on how you can make some immediate changes to your business to increase the transferable value. So, I hope you enjoy my conversation with Bill McDermott of The Profitability Coach.

Ed Mysogland: [00:02:22] I’m your host, Ed Mysogland. I teach business owners how to build value, and identify and remove risks in their business so that one day they can sell at maximum value how they want, to whom they want, and at maximum value.

Ed Mysogland: [00:02:36] On today’s show, I’m so excited to welcome Bill McDermott, who is known as The Profitability Coach. And for anybody that are small business owners, they know how important profitability and earnings are to the success of their business. And so, I am so fortunate to have this guy. I was connected by another mutual friend, John Ray from Business RadioX, and he connected us. And, boy, what a great opportunity this is. And I’m looking so forward to learning a lot about earnings.

Ed Mysogland: [00:03:17] And so, Bill, welcome. At the beginning I shared a little bit about your bio before we started recording, so can you just kind of give just a little bit of the lay of the land how you got to be The Profitability Coach?

Bill McDermott: [00:03:34] Sure. Sure. Absolutely. Well, Ed, first, let me say thank you for having me. The excitement is mutual on both sides. I was excited when you invited me to come on the show. And so, yeah, my background is I was a Wake Forest University grad. I spent 32 years in the banking industry. And then, all of a sudden 2009 hit, the Great Recession hit, and so I was laid off from my banking career. I was scared to death. But I also realized looking back, it was the best thing that had happened to me.

Bill McDermott: [00:04:17] During my banking time, I really discovered that business owners really struggled with the financial management aspect of their business. I had built up a treasure trove of banking and financial knowledge in my career as a banker, and so I launched The Profitability Coach, really helping business owners drive earnings through becoming better financial managers.

Bill McDermott: [00:04:45] You know, every business owner has a big dream for their company and wants to make it happen. What happens sometimes, though, is they don’t really know if the decisions they’re making are helping or hurting. They may not know exactly how to manage the finances of their business. And so, we have a process where we identify the hurdles that are getting in the way and to deliver to them a company that has profitability that, honestly, they never thought was possible. And so, excited to talk about that with you today. You’re absolutely right, it is all about earnings, and I would love to dive into that with you.

Ed Mysogland: [00:05:27] Well then, that’s where we’ll get started. Most of my career has been centered around working with owners and business value. I mean, ultimately when we start the process of selling a company, that’s what everybody wants to know. And everybody gets so hung up on multiples that they hear. They’re at the club and they hear the multiples. They’re watching the news and they hear price to earnings ratios and different things like that.

Ed Mysogland: [00:06:03] And I guess the longer I’ve been in the business, and I’d been in it 30 years now, it is all about earnings. And I guess that’s where I’d like to start. It seems so fundamental that value is based on profitability, but it doesn’t seem to resonate with business owners. Or, you know, they’re so caught up in working the business and if I’m able to pay myself, if I’m able to do the things I want to do, and have the freedom I want, no big deal. Up until the part where they think they want to sell. So, why is that component so glossed over?

Bill McDermott: [00:06:48] You know, I think you hit on it – by the way, absolutely great question and great topic – you mentioned it a little bit yourself. You know, I hold the view that business owners are so busy working in the business. They don’t really take time out to work on the business. They don’t have that time where they’re really looking at strategy. And so, honestly, I think every business owner should take time to stop working in the business and work on it.

Bill McDermott: [00:07:22] To your point on earnings, I share with my clients that generally speaking, a one percent increase in your top line is equivalent to a ten percent increase in your bottom line. You know, revenue is vanity, but profit is sanity. And so, in order to be sane, we really need to be focusing on driving earnings, but also by driving revenue.

Bill McDermott: [00:07:51] We could go down the path of, you know, generally speaking, clients I talked to, their prices are too low. They have more value to their product or to their service than they think they do. Or, second, they maybe haven’t figured out a way to actually increase volume. But both are equally important and both can equally drive revenue, therefore drive earnings.

Ed Mysogland: [00:08:13] Yeah. But, boy, I’ll tell you, it’s hard to make that leap of faith. Like, I’m going to increase prices and, oh, my gosh, if I do this what’s the likelihood I’m going to lose customers? So, I totally see that that’s low lying fruit that you can do. But, I mean, if I’m a business owner, how do you coach me into just go ahead and throw caution to the wind and let’s increase price by 15 percent. How do you do that?

Bill McDermott: [00:08:49] Yeah. Well, excellent question. So, the way I approach that with my clients is, let’s pretend I go to Walmart. When I go to Walmart, I’m prepared and I go there because I’m going to get the lowest price. But I’m generally not going to be able to find any kind of help in the service aisle, so I have to know exactly where it is. And then, when I get to the checkout, I have to wait a long time in line because the lines are so long. And by the way, because the parking lot is so full, I even have a hard time finding a parking spot. But, by golly, they’ve got the cheapest prices.

Bill McDermott: [00:09:31] On the other hand, if I go to Ace Hardware, the guy meets me at the door, “What are you looking for?” “Well, I need some fertilizer for my garden.” “Okay. It’s on Aisle 3. And by the way, these are the three types that we have. This one has a fertilizer and a weed killer in it.” And by the way, most of my clients like that one, I get a whole lot of service, a whole lot of value. And so, therefore, I go to Ace Hardware because I want the help, I want the expertise, and I pay for that in the price.

Bill McDermott: [00:10:05] So, we, as business owners, have two choices. We can either be a Walmart or we can be an Ace Hardware. And the value that we create for our clients, either in time savings or money savings, is worth the increase in price. So, a lot of business owners, I think, position themselves as providing a commodity and not really diving into the value that they’re creating for their clients. And they’re afraid to price accordingly.

Bill McDermott: [00:10:39] And I think a lot of that is a mindset issue. And we all have self-limiting beliefs that maybe our business, our product or service just isn’t worth the price. And everybody else is telling us we’re silly because it really is. And so, I think it really boils down to more of a mindset issue. Not raising prices is a scarcity mindset. And the reality is, there’s an abundance of clients out there that appreciate you and value the product or service that you offer.

Ed Mysogland: [00:11:10] Yeah, I get that. And I’m an Ace Hardware guy. I love Ace Hardware. And one of the things I recognize is that I’m willing to pay a premium for that. But I guess the follow up to that is, I’m already paying a premium because Lowe’s and Home Depot and Menards, you know, they’ve got lower prices, but, like you said, I’m paying for the service. So, if I’m that Ace Hardware, I’m already doing service, how do I stress test what that threshold is before I start losing customers? You know what I mean?

Bill McDermott: [00:11:55] Yeah, absolutely. So, I adopt the idea that I’m going to ask my clients, Am I continuing to deliver the value that they expected when they first hired me? And, also, as I’m putting my services or putting my products out there, if no one is telling me I’m too high, I’m going to automatically assume I’m too low.

Ed Mysogland: [00:12:26] That’s a good point. That’s really good.

Bill McDermott: [00:12:27] So, where is that area? Back when I was in banking – it was great – this client told me, “Bill, my loyalty to you ends with a quarter of a point on my interest rate.”

Ed Mysogland: [00:12:44] It totally makes sense.

Bill McDermott: [00:12:46] Yeah. And so, I knew that I could get another quarter, but I wasn’t going to get a half. And, by golly, I’d better be right on with that loan fee as well.

Ed Mysogland: [00:12:56] Yeah. I’m with you on the scarcity versus abundant mindset. I think the race to the bottom is always a losing proposition. And I know it’s the default position for a lot of owners that they feel that they have to compete. But, boy, but like you were saying on mindset, that is a real big ask for some of the change.

Bill McDermott: [00:13:20] Yeah, it is. And so, to your point earlier, if we kind of reverse engineer the conversation, those business owners that aren’t driving earnings through revenue want the multiple to be higher to make up for the profit that they could be getting by charging more, but they’re not. The reality is, it doesn’t matter what multiple I use, if I have a dollar’s worth of net profit that equates in a five times multiple, $5 of business value. And so, if I’m not driving the earnings, I want the multiple to be high. But that’s the wrong focus, to your earlier point, the focus on earnings.

Ed Mysogland: [00:14:09] Yeah. So, when you focus on earnings and you increase it to a 20 percent increase and you put a five multiple on that, versus put the same increase on the multiple, I mean, it’s two entirely different results. So, the earnings taking advantage of the number of turns on the multiple is always superior.

Ed Mysogland: [00:14:38] Okay. So, there’s four areas of profitability improvement that we typically see. So, it’s reducing costs, increasing inventory turnover, increasing productivity, and increasing efficiency. Those are big, big components of a business. But what do you think is the biggest area I should focus? If I’m a business owner, I should focus on this? And I suppose it’s company specific. But generally speaking, in your experience, where do I focus my attention?

Bill McDermott: [00:15:16] Yeah. So, I’m going to go back and maybe share a story, but this saying did not originate with me. Revenue is vanity. Profit is sanity. The cash flow is reality. So, I was working with a company that was a management consulting firm, international firm. They were doing incredibly well, but they got into trouble during the Great Recession because nobody was doing much, if any, management consulting when the downturn came.

Bill McDermott: [00:15:59] So, this company had to do a pivot. Basically did, and went from losing a-half-million dollars a year to making a-half-million. It was $1,000,000 swing in a year. It was absolutely fabulous. But this business owner said, “Bill, I made a-half-million dollars in profit this year. Where’s the cash?” And basically I said to him, I said, “Randy, look, you see that big honker accounts receivable number that’s sitting on your balance sheet? There’s your profit. If you go out and collect it, then you’ll have the cash.”

Bill McDermott: [00:16:37] So, certainly focus on profit. But I also think focusing on cashflow, I mean, profit doesn’t pay payroll, cash does. And so, I generally try to focus on profit. But if you aren’t doing, to your earlier point, turning the inventory, collecting the receivables, you’re missing out on cash that could be sitting in your bank account instead of sitting in your client’s or your vendor’s bank account.

Ed Mysogland: [00:17:10] Yeah. And a lot of business owners fail to understand that when a buyer goes to buy their business, there’s two checks that they write. The first one is for the business, the second one is for the working capital. And I don’t think that they recognize or I think they have a hard time recognizing that the more that’s tied up in working capital – to your point, that’s not in cash – it’s going to cost me to fund the working capital more than it should, because I’m not collecting receivables in a timely fashion or whatever the issue is, whether it’s debt, inventory, or whatever. That impairs a company’s ability to sell.

Ed Mysogland: [00:18:05] And I think you probably have coached a lot of people on, you know, if you hone in on your working capital, you’re reducing your risk, which is increasing your value, right?

Bill McDermott: [00:18:16] Yeah. To your point, recently we successfully completed a management buyout where this professional services firm sold the company for $13 million, and it was a combination of seller financing and bank debt financing. But when the negotiation on the purchase agreement came, the seller wanted, basically, to take as much cash out of the business as they possibly could. And so, the the broker stepped in and said, “Time out. We need to have adequate working capital. We got payroll, we got purchases, all of this.”

Bill McDermott: [00:19:01] And so, the owners were thinking about their pocket. They should be thinking about their pocket. But, also, since they had seller financing involved by stripping out all the working capital, they put their debt at risk to a certain degree. So, yeah, working capital is incredibly important.

Ed Mysogland: [00:19:21] And one of the best things that you’ve said today is just that, the seller financing and the working capital that they put the seller financing note at risk by how they were treating the working capital. And if I’m a business owner, that’s a big takeaway right there, that you don’t understand or you need to understand that they’re all intertwined together. Everything is intertwined. And each component of a business has risks and benefits. And by not acknowledging one, you’re putting another at risk. That was awesome. Go ahead. I’m sorry.

Bill McDermott: [00:20:20] I was just going to say, so in my banking career, as I was talking to business owners, I coined the term called bank speak. And what I found was happening is I was throwing out terms, working capital being one, cashflow being another, inventory turnover being another, I caught myself using terms that my clients didn’t understand.

Bill McDermott: [00:20:49] And so, I think you and I take for granted everybody knows what working capital means, Ed, but what I found is many business owners, because nobody taught them accounting in school and there’s no on-the-job training when you’re a business owner, I have to be careful to define terms that I’m using because a lot of times I use terms people don’t understand.

Ed Mysogland: [00:21:12] No, that’s a great point. And that was one of my questions is, with all of this information out there, with everything that’s all over the internet, just the vast amount of content, why do you think that business owners aren’t more versed in basic accounting?

Bill McDermott: [00:21:34] Yeah. I think everybody starts out, if you’re starting a business from scratch, it’s because you’re a great technician at whatever it is that you do. So, for example, coming out of a banking career of 30 years, I saw a lot of business owners that ran businesses, but I had never run a business myself. I was never one that had to go out and basically do everything that needed to be done for me to have a paycheck. And so, I think they’re great technicians.

Bill McDermott: [00:22:22] A CPA is a good accountant. An architect. You know, somebody like me who’s a business consultant now, thank goodness I had a lot of accounting and finance in my background. But they’re good technicians, they just haven’t learned how to become business people. And so, if you haven’t taken accounting and finance classes in school or gone to some seminar or maybe a community college to take some courses, you don’t really feel like you’re well-versed in how to manage or how to run a business. You’re a good technician. You’re just not a business person.

Ed Mysogland: [00:23:03] Yeah. And I agree with you. And one of the challenges that we bump into is just that, you’re a great technician, but you’re not a great business owner. And as a buyer of your business, I really need you to be a great business owner because that’s who I’m replacing. I’m not the technician. You know what I mean?

Bill McDermott: [00:23:25] Yeah.

Ed Mysogland: [00:23:29] One of your claims to fame is your coaching, that you’re able to coach people through complex matters. And I guess I’m curious to know how you get over the pushback of time. And as a guy with not a lot of it, I’m sitting here going, “All right. If he asked me to fix a component of my business, how do I make more time to do what you’re asking?” And you can have all the empirical evidence that it’s going to fix everything in the business or fix this part of the business. Do I have to wait until the pain is great enough? Or do you have some secret sauce to help me overcome that?

Bill McDermott: [00:24:20] Yeah. No secret sauce. But I think maybe just some common sense. Again, I think business owners tend to want to be all things to all people. They might also be very high control. It’s not going to get done well unless I do it. And so, the business owner becomes, for lack of a better term, Ed, the choke point in their own business. They’re their own worst enemy.

Bill McDermott: [00:24:57] And so, statistically, do you know how many companies break through the $1 million revenue barrier and the $10 million revenue barrier?

Ed Mysogland: [00:25:09] No. How many?

Bill McDermott: [00:25:10] Ten percent through the $1 million barrier, only three percent through the $10 million barrier of all businesses that ever start. What’s the number one reason? Delegation.

Bill McDermott: [00:25:24] And so, what I tell that business owner is, “Look, your time is valuable.” You know, I calculated an effective hourly rate for a business owner by taking the profit in their business, plus their salary. And it came out to about $150 an hour. And so, I said, “Look, any activity in your business that can be done less than $150 an hour, you need to hire somebody to do it because it will allow you to increase your hourly rate to 200, then to 250.”

Bill McDermott: [00:26:02] And so, the ability to take on those things that they’re not taking on is basically just giving those tasks to other people and allowing them to focus on more revenue generating activities versus administrative activities.

Ed Mysogland: [00:26:18] Yeah. I hear you. And I can hear the business owner going, “Yeah. Where am I going to find this person? Everybody that’s working for me is complaining that they’re overworked and underpaid. If I add another person, where am I going to find them?” And how do I – I shouldn’t say how do I. Then, it’s throw your hands up, screw it, I’ll do it myself. And that’s the default position because of the difficulty of what you’re asking.

Ed Mysogland: [00:26:58] I totally agree with you. I think the next generation of business owners, it’s about delegation and automation. I totally believe that that’s the path that we’re going toward. And those that either go from first generation to second generation or a successful third party sale, I totally believe that those buyers or that next generation, those people that have a command to delegate, whether that’s to third parties like Upwork or some of these organizations, the Gig Economy, or you can find help, personally, I think that is the long term of the successful business. I think.

Bill McDermott: [00:27:54] Yeah. So, a quick story on that. I worked with a client. Their books were an absolute mess. They were a multimillion dollar company. And they had an accountant who is moonlighting doing their books. And the financials weren’t done on time. There were errors. And the owners were spending their time going in and correcting errors. And I said, “Look, go out and find somebody who’s QuickBooks certified. They can be a CPA. They can just be an accountant. But somebody who is really, really good.”

Bill McDermott: [00:28:31] And so, I referred them to a service that I use, because you find people based on relationships. And so, they brought this accountant in. This person has straightened out their books in the span of two months. We just had the second month end close. Bank accounts reconciled. Financial statements were timely and inaccurate. And this client now has clarity in his financials where, before that, they had confusion.

Ed Mysogland: [00:29:05] Yeah. And, again, that’s back to knowing where to look for the talent. And like I said, I think most business owners are faced with the pain of making the change as opposed to the change itself. You know what I mean?

Bill McDermott: [00:29:25] Well, it’s the principle of inertia, right? A body at rest tends to stay at rest. A body in motion tends to stay in motion. You know, my business owner client was stuck accepting that moonlighting accounting person getting subpar financials. And basically just made a decision, “Okay. I’m drawing a line in the sand. I’m going to upgrade my requirements and get somebody in here to do a better job.”

Ed Mysogland: [00:29:56] And, again, to your point earlier on having good records and being able to have clarity of your cash position or your financial position, that’s an important thing. Reading your email and trying to figure out what to do next, somebody probably can do that a little bit more effective than you.

Bill McDermott: [00:30:23] Yeah. The other thing I’ll say on that topic, I’m a big believer that your balance sheet is more important than your income statement. Your income statement certainly measures your profitability, but there are three other things that you care about. You care about your liquidity, how much cash you have that’s on your balance sheet. You care about how you’re collecting your receivables and turning your inventory, that’s on your balance sheet. And you care about your leverage, how much debt you have relative to the net worth of your business. And so, three out of the four things that you track are on your balance sheet. Most business owners don’t look at that first. They look at their income statement first.

Ed Mysogland: [00:31:05] Yeah. We face that, too, when helping these business owners. There is a disconnect between the two. It’s what’s my net income. When we do value work, one of the things that we do is, this is what you’re going to put in your pocket. And that’s part of liquidating your balance sheet. And, oftentimes, that’s more than the tangible and intangible value of the company. You know, once you start liquidating current assets and retiring debt, that’s a whole nother event. Go ahead. I started to interrupt you.

Bill McDermott: [00:31:56] I was just going to say, the other thing that comes to mind, you’re mentioning, also most business owners when they’re selling their business, focus on the gross amount they’re selling. But they may not be factoring in taxes, if it’s an asset sale, as well as debt.

Ed Mysogland: [00:32:17] The highest price is not always –

Bill McDermott: [00:32:20] It’s the net.

Ed Mysogland: [00:32:21] Yeah. And we bump into that a lot, that it’s not the highest price that’s the best price. That allocation of purchase price is really, really important.

Bill McDermott: [00:32:32] It really is.

Ed Mysogland: [00:32:32] So, everything we read, it seems as though we’re heading into a recession. That there’s some level of downturn. So, granted, it was your greatest blessing that you got displaced and here you are. But how did you make that pivot? Because I think there’s going to be a lot of people that are in similar situations or are finding themselves in similar situations right now. So, how did you make that effective change into entrepreneurship? In your case, you started the business versus buying the business. So, how did you get comfortable with the risk that you were taking, I guess?

Bill McDermott: [00:33:26] Yeah. So, necessity is the mother of invention. My wife had two daughters in college. We had a mortgage to pay. And she was the preschool director at our church preschool. And that was not going to be enough to do it.

Bill McDermott: [00:33:45] So, I was financially motivated. I read a really great book. It was called The E-Myth by a guy named Michael Gerber. Michael Gerber says, establish a prototype of the business that you want to build, which in effect is, really, if you are going to franchise your business, this is what you would show a potential franchisor. So, I’m a person of faith. Part of my prayer time after I was laid off is I would say to the man upstairs, “Okay. You closed the door. Would you open a window? And by the way, would you put a little neon around it so I can see it.”

Bill McDermott: [00:34:34] But I found that business owners really struggled with financial management. I was passionate about helping them become better financial managers. Next, I found that I’m a pretty good teacher. And so, teaching these business owners how to be better financial managers was something that I was good at, and then figuring out how to monetize that.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:06] So, this is a page out of Jim Collins’s book, Good to Great. If someone’s thinking about becoming an entrepreneur themselves, what are you passionate about? What are you best in the world at? And what drives your economic engine? And where those three circles intersect is your greatness.

Bill McDermott: [00:35:28] And so, for me, passionate about making business owners better financial managers, teaching them how to run more profitable businesses with healthy cashflow, and then monetizing that as a business coach. And that’s kind of how I did it.

Ed Mysogland: [00:35:46] Yeah. Well, you know what? That whole leap of faith thing – also, I’m a red letter guy myself – I totally believe that, you know, there’s some divine intervention that goes into entrepreneurs where you’re building the kingdom. I totally believe no matter where you’re at on the spiritual spectrum, whether it’s the universe or God or whatever you want to call it, there is some level of wind behind your back to make these doors open.

Ed Mysogland: [00:36:26] I’m guilty of this, too, as far as hiring consultants. I am horrible at it. And one of the things is, you know, when should I expect a return on my investment? It’s not writing the check. It’s when am I going to get repayment for it? You know what I mean?

Bill McDermott: [00:36:49] Yeah. Great question. So, I think, in my experience, I’ve worked with quite a few professional services firms. I can think of one psychology firm, three locations, very well-established practice. This firm hired me for two years. And, essentially, what we did is we did an analysis of the business. We looked at the areas where we could really accelerate financial growth.

Bill McDermott: [00:37:33] And then, after a two year period of time, first, we focused on collections. A lot of their receivables were from insurance companies. Insurance companies are notoriously slow pay. So, we basically had them pick up their pace on collections, which put another $50,000 of cash in the bank. Then, I’m a big believer in the power of one percent. Looking at ways where we can increase revenue one percent consecutively over periods of time.

Bill McDermott: [00:38:10] So, the cumulative effect for this firm, over a two year period, we increased revenue 45 percent total, so roughly a little over 20 percent per year for ten years. The profit that was generated paid 100 percent of my consulting fees and gave the owner another 100 percent return on their spend. So, it took two years in this case.

Bill McDermott: [00:38:45] You know, I know for me, I hired a marketing firm to come in and help me with my brand messaging. I did that two years ago. This year, I’m having my best year ever in the 14 years that I’ve been in business. So, I would say, when you buy a stock, you’re interested in buying quality stocks that aren’t big gainers, because big gainers also can be big losers. But if you can earn 10 percent year over year, your money compounds every seven years, roughly. And so, I’d say slow and steady wins the race. You know, if you can get a decent return in the first year or two, I think you’ve hit a homerun.

Ed Mysogland: [00:39:36] Well, one of the things that we bump into is that everybody’s an expert now. How do you get between what’s signal and what’s noise? Like I said, and I was telling you before we started, you know, my wife’s a therapist and there is all kinds of noise in her industry of solving problems. When in fact, there’s a lot of complex trauma and different things that they have to deal with that requires specialization. So, my point is that anybody can write a blog article about profitability and this, that, and the other. But how do I find people like you that are going to give me that 10 percent return year over year over year?

Bill McDermott: [00:40:26] Yeah. I subscribe to the philosophy of people do business with people that they know and they trust. And so, I always put relationships first, Ed. I just think we were all put on this earth to figure out a way to live together and to help each other. And so, I find that relationships follow a progression. You know, first, I get to know somebody and they get to know me. Then, we like each other. Then, we try each other. Then, we trust each other. And then, we refer each other.

Bill McDermott: [00:41:03] And so, going through that relationship progression, I think it’s totally based on relationships. You sort the noise from the people that you really want to do business with based on the quality of the relationship that that’s developed.

Ed Mysogland: [00:41:20] Yeah, 100 percent. I mean, I was just looking at our deal flow and we spend so much money on external marketing. But I’ll bet 80 percent of our revenue comes from referrals, people doing business that we’ve done a good job for that have referred us. And so, I’m with you. This is how you sniff out – I don’t want to say a fraud because I don’t mean a fraud. This is how to sniff out who’s best in class versus those that probably should be on junior varsity. Anything come to mind?

Bill McDermott: [00:42:01] Yeah. So, I’m sure you’ve probably had this experience. There are a lot of people on LinkedIn that basically put relationships last. You’re their best friend. They don’t even know you. You don’t even know them. But, by golly, they have a solution to a problem that you didn’t even know you had. And we all get those emails and just messages on LinkedIn.

Bill McDermott: [00:42:35] And so, I think to kind of sniff those out, who approaches me trying to sell me something rather than getting to know me, you don’t have the right to sell me unless you know me and I know you. And so, that would be one easy way.

Bill McDermott: [00:42:57] The other thing I usually do is, when I’m going through and looking at my LinkedIn feed, if there are people that are really making some really solid comments or suggestions in a LinkedIn exchange, I kind of determine, “Hey, I’d like to know more about that person just based on some of the insights they’re sharing.”

Ed Mysogland: [00:43:23] Yeah, I agree. I mean, providing some meaningful comments versus just broadcast stuff. I get it. So, I know we’re pushing on time, so if you have a couple more minutes, I got a couple questions.

Bill McDermott: [00:43:41] Yeah. Absolutely.

Ed Mysogland: [00:43:41] All right. So, I know you do some exit planning work. And so, I wanted to focus a little bit about, you know, are you seeing business owners that are coming prepared to sell or are they playing catch up and you’re trying to fix things before they go to market?

Bill McDermott: [00:44:03] Definitely the latter. As I said earlier, that business owner is so busy working in the business, they’re not working on the business. All of a sudden, a business owner maybe that has run a business for 20 years, he or she finds themselves, “Gosh. I’m 60, 61, 62. I’m not going to be doing this a whole lot longer. And, by golly, I have done nothing to build the value of my business.” So, the default is the business owners that I run into have done little to no planning.

Bill McDermott: [00:44:47] And the other concept that you and I probably both deal with is that business owner that has not created transferable value in their business and how they do that is a way that you can truly try value but very little to no planning.

Ed Mysogland: [00:45:12] And that’s what’s heartbreaking is because either – I don’t want to say tragedy, but circumstances, life circumstances come bumping into them and now they’re forced into a decision on how to make this illiquid asset liquid. And, boy, that is a heartbreaking situation. Like I said, it’s not necessarily that you can’t transfer the business, but the problem is it’s not going to transfer for what you want. And so, that creates a lot of the challenges that at least we see.

Ed Mysogland: [00:45:51] I wanted to ask you, you know, what makes exit planning effective? I mean, granted, if you have a lot of runway, that’s an easy layup. There’s all kinds of things you could do. But the people that are hearing this going, “Man, I really want to sell my company. I haven’t done anything.” So, as the profitability coach, is there anything that you can suggest that would lead me to a better than average exit?

Bill McDermott: [00:46:34] Yeah. So, I’m going to try to answer that question and try to tell a story at the same time. So, we’ve all sold houses. And when we sell a house, we get it ready for sale. Usually, a fresh coat of paint, maybe some new carpet. What sells houses from what I’ve been told are bathrooms and kitchens, and so you want to be sure that you’ve got everything updated. Generally, you’re not going to try to sell your house yourself or you shouldn’t, because what you think it’s worth and what that appraiser for that mortgage lender thinks it’s worth or the buyer, you always want to have someone between you.

Bill McDermott: [00:47:26] So, selling a business, sprucing things up is really creating a management team that can successfully run the business and transfer the value to that team. I found having that management team, being sure they’re compensated in a way that they’re not going to walk out the day the business gets sold, so you need to have some kind of arrangement where there’s what I call a stay pay.

Bill McDermott: [00:47:58] Frankly, financial statements need to be reliable. Preferably audited, but at least reviewed by an independent CPA, so that you have financials that have been verified by an independent third party. Just like when you get your house appraised, it’s by an independent third party.

Bill McDermott: [00:48:21] I think it’s ideal to have a business growth plan that you can hand that potential buyer to show how the business can be grown. And I think it’s also important to have documented processes so that that business owner knows how you make money, how you have a repeatable sales process, a repeatable operations or delivery process, and then an accounting and finance process.

Bill McDermott: [00:48:55] So, mostly, I’m looking for management with stay pay, reliable financial statements, and documented processes. I’m sure there are some other equally important things. But I’m certain those are the main ones.

Ed Mysogland: [00:49:10] Yeah. And I’m going to ask you even a harder question. Out of those, which ones most important? Right. I know. You’re welcome.

Bill McDermott: [00:49:23] Businesses are run by people. Real estate is location, location, location. I’m going to say companies are management, management, management. So, I’m saying having the management team is important.

Ed Mysogland: [00:49:41] Okay. I got it. You know, in your analogy of selling a house, you know, its bathrooms and kitchens. And there’s empirical data that says, you know, if you fix up your kitchen and your bathroom, your house will sell or you’ll get X number of dollars back. Unfortunately, to my knowledge, I don’t think there’s anything like that in business, that if you replace your antiquated lades, you’re going to get your money back. I don’t think that’s going to happen.

Bill McDermott: [00:50:20] I’m in agreement. You know, when a buyer buys a business, they’re looking towards buying that business and the income stream that comes with it. But they’re entitled to a return on their investment. And at the end of the day, they have a return that they want to earn based on the amount of the business that they’re paying.

Bill McDermott: [00:50:44] And pure and simple, when we invest in stocks, we’re looking for a rate of return. When we’re investing in a closely held business, we’re looking for the same thing. And, potentially, we’re looking for an even higher return because we want to get compensated for the risk of buying that business as well.

Ed Mysogland: [00:51:06] Yeah. We say the same thing. Not only are you looking for a return on your investment, you’re looking at return of your investment. So, it’s two components. All right.

Ed Mysogland: [00:51:19] So, I finish every one of my interviews with the same question. So, if there is one piece of advice, just one – you know, they spent a-half-hour with you and me – what would that piece of advice be that would have the most immediate impact on their business? You’ve got one good nugget?

Bill McDermott: [00:51:41] I love that question. So, I think what I would say is, where are the one percent improvements that you can make in your sales process, in your cost of goods or cost of services process, if you’re a service business, your delivery process and then your billing and payment process? We’ve already talked about a one percent increase in your top line in sales. What’s the cumulative effect of those one percents? What if I can buy my materials or labor better and reduce my costs that way? What if I can reduce overhead one percent? What if I can collect my receivables one day faster or turn my inventory one day faster?

Bill McDermott: [00:52:42] The cumulative effect of all of those would be huge. And the way that you’re doing that is you’re shortening either the cycle times, you’re eliminating your mistakes, or you’re improving your business model in each of those three aspects of your business. Doing that, I think you’re well on your way to really having a game changer of a company.

Ed Mysogland: [00:53:09] I agree. So, where can people find you? And do you do work throughout the country?

Bill McDermott: [00:53:17] I do. I do.

Ed Mysogland: [00:53:19] Oh, good. All right. Okay.

Bill McDermott: [00:53:20] I have clients in Seattle, Texas, all over the Midwest, up and down the East Coast. So, where there’s technology, I can play.

Ed Mysogland: [00:53:32] You’re based in Georgia, right?

Bill McDermott: [00:53:35] I’m based in Atlanta, Georgia, yes. My website is www.theprofitabilitycoach.net. You can also find me on LinkedIn, my profile is Bill J. McDermott. I am on Instagram as The Profitability Coach. And you can also find my phone number and email contacts either on my LinkedIn profile or on my website as well. But my email, for anyone that’s listening, is bill@theprofitabilitycoach.net.

Ed Mysogland: [00:54:13] Well, we will have all your contact information in the show notes. So, if you didn’t catch it, I can assure you we will have it readily available for you. So, Bill, you know what? This absolutely was everything I’d hoped for. So, I’m so grateful for all the time. I know you and me, we start talking about time and the value of it. And I so appreciate you going over with me a little bit. And I’m certain everyone will have gained a lot from this, from our time together. So, thanks again.

Bill McDermott: [00:54:54] You made it easy for me. You asked some great questions. It was a pleasure to be on the show. Thank you for inviting me.

Ed Mysogland: [00:55:02] All right. Well, I’m going to cut us off. And once again, I appreciate you being with us.

Bill McDermott: [00:55:08] Very good. Thanks again.

Outro: [00:55:12] Thank you for joining us today on the How to Sell Your Business Podcast. If you want more episodes packed with strategies to help sell your business for the maximum value, visit howtosellabusinesspodcast.com for tips and best practices to make your exit life changing. Better yet, subscribe now so you never miss future episodes. This program is copyrighted by Myso, Inc. All rights reserved.

 

Tagged With: Bill McDermott, Business Owners, business value, Ed Msyogland, exit planning, How to Sell a Business, How to Sell a Business Podcast, maximum value, P&L, profitability, ProfitSense, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, selling a business, The Profitability Coach, valuation

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