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Suggestions When Selling a Business to Family Members or Employees

Like many business owners, you probably have plans to one day transition your business to your children or other trusted professionals. We often hear concerns from frustrated owners who believe that taxes will make that impossible.  Others tell us they wouldn’t get a get fair value for their company if they sold it.

Even a business owner, who has created a plan to sell the business to the management team, may learn they don’t have any money!

We use some of the following solutions to alleviate these types of concerns:

  • Ownership Skills Development Plan
  • Sale of Ownership Interest (using cash, seller note or bank financing)
  • Bonus of Ownership Interest
  • Gift of Ownership Interest
  • Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plan
  • GRAT (Grantor Retained Annuity Trust)
  • Buy-Back Agreement for Minority Owner

We welcome your questions about these solutions, and are available to discuss with you whether these solutions  would be suitable for your situation. Each business is unique, and we are set apart by our dedication to work alongside owners and board members to develop specific and cohesive strategies that achieve their goals, and most importantly, do what is in the business owner’s best interest.

Some Advisors Might Have Agendas

It seems like no matter where you turn someone is trying to sell you something, and this can be true of financial advisors. With so many financial products and services on the market, and people touting titles such as wealth advisor and financial consultant, the definition of an advisor has become more and more blurred.

To put it simply, the term “financial advisor” covers many different types of advisers that offer many different services.  For example, the same financial adviser, assuming he/she has the proper licenses, may sell you insurance products, sell you securities for your portfolio, sell you advice about how to invest your portfolio, prepare your taxes, sell your home for you and do your estate planning.  In each of these capacities, a financial adviser is compensated differently.  But not all of these capacities requires a financial adviser to act as your fiduciary.  If a financial adviser is not acting as your fiduciary, that adviser is not legally mandated to put your interest first.

A financial adviser working in multiple capacities may be conflicted.  Conflicted advisers can waste your time and your money.  When it comes to your investments, you deserve an advisor who is looking out for you.  Before taking anyone’s advice here are a few things to consider:

  • Be cautious of anyone claiming to be an advisor, but has an agenda to sell you something.
  • Every program has positives and negatives. If an advisor/sales person hates a program, it is often because they don’t understand it or may want to influence you differently.
  • If someone loves a particular financial program and “all their clients are on it” it is likely the advisor pushes that product because it makes the advisor the most money.
  • Financial professionals might be paid to sell proprietary products for the company named on their business card, and they are held to a suitability standard rather than a fiduciary standard.A suitability standard does not hold an advisor accountable to put the best interest of a client first, but rather to prove the transaction was reasonable.
  • Always ask an advisor the capacity in which they are acting.
  • Always ask the adviser how they are being compensated.

We understand that brokers, accounting professionals, insurance agents, bankers, etc. play a significant role in our financial lives, but we hope you keep the points above in mind as you assemble the best team possible to manage your unique financial interests.


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