Preparing For Your Exit, Planning For Your Inevitable Business Exit

  • What have you done to plan for that day?
  • What are you waiting for?
  • How could planning for the biggest financial event of your life not be worth your time and effort?

Given that most retirees live on 95 percent or more of their preretirement income there’s good reason to get busy creating an Exit Plan that enables you to help achieve your financial and lifestyle objectives after you leave your business.2

If you aren’t sure how to begin preparing for your voluntary – and inevitable exit – because you don’t understand the process or even know whom to turn to for help, you are not alone. There is a methodical, adaptable and customized Exit Planning Process that business owners and their advisors have used for years that is designed to help owners leave their businesses on their own terms and on their schedules.

Exit Planning is not mysterious, time-consuming, nor just a clever way to sell you another product. It is, however, a means to help you achieve your financial and lifestyle objectives:

  • Leaving on the date you choose
  • Receiving the amount of cash you want
  • Choosing your successor

What exactly is the Exit Plan that will allow you to leave your business in style? How do you create yours? Just as there is an almost infinite variety of businesses and business owners, so too are there many different Exit Plans.

Yet all plans contain several common elements. Let’s begin with the basic seven issues that most owners understand best when we phrase them as questions.
  1. Do you know your primary planning objectives for leaving the business, such as:Departure date?Income needed to achieve financial goals?To whom you want to leave the business?
  2. Do you know how much your business is worth?
  3. Do you know how to increase the value of your ownership interest through enhancing the most valuable asset of the
    company – the employees?
  4. Do you know the best way to sell your business to a third party, with the goal of increasing your cash, decreasing your tax liability and reducing your risk?
  5. Do you know how to transfer your business to family members, co-owners or employees, while paying lower taxes and achieving your financial goals?
  6. Have you implemented all necessary steps to ensure that the business continues if you don’t?
  7. Have you provided for your family’s security and continuity if you die or become incapacitated?

If you can answer “yes” to all of the questions, then you are well on your way to developing a successful Exit Plan. If you are like the vast majority of business owners; however, your answers highlight areas where you need to focus your Exit Planning efforts. As you work through your Exit Plan, however, you will be able to say, “Yes” to each and every one of the questions listed above.

Given that most retirees live on 95 percent or more of their preretirement income there’s good reason to get busy creating an Exit Plan that enables you to help achieve your financial and lifestyle objectives after you leave your business.

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