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April 21, 2011

Video trailer and your chapter of Built to Sell

It’s amazing how much peddling a book has changed over the last few years. In the old days, an author would have to go from store to store signing books.

Nowadays, books are marketed like movies and it all comes down to how many people tweet about the book or write a comment on your book’s video trailer:

Giving away a free chapter online has also become standard but I wasn’t sure what to share with you. This is the second edition of Built to Sell and it includes everything in the first edition plus an all new “Implementation Guide” which outlines how to apply the lessons in the book to your business. In case you have already read the first edition, I thought I would offer you the first chapter of the Implementation Guide. Hope you enjoy:

Implementation Guide (excerpt).

Step 1 of 8: Isolate a product or service with the potential to scale.

The first step in building a company that can thrive without you is to find a service or product that has the potential to scale. Scalable things meet three criteria: (1) They are “teachable” to employees (like the Stapleton Agency’s Five-Step Logo Design Process) or can be delivered through technology; (2) they are “valuable” to your customers, which allows you to avoid commoditization; (3) they are “repeatable,” meaning customers need to return again and again to buy (e.g., think razor blades, not razors).

Brainstorm all of the products and services that you provide today and plot them on a simple diagram with “Teachable” on one axis and “Valuable” on the other:

Once you have plotted everything you offer on the chart, eliminate services or products that a customer needs to buy only once.

Often, you’ll find that the most teachable services or products are the ones that customers value the least. Alternatively, you’ll find that the products and services your customers value most are the least teachable. That’s normal. Try combining one or more services or products to create the ideal offering.

By way of a hypothetical example, let’s take a look at how Alex Stapleton might have plotted his services before deciding to focus exclusively on creating logos. You’ll recall he had Elijah working on the branch posters for MNY Bank. Since creating a branch poster is a simple task that lots of marketing agencies can do, Alex would have plotted the branch posters at the top left of the chart: high on teachable since he could get his juniormost designer to do them, but also low on value to customers because branch posters can be done by lots of other marketing agencies.

You may also recall how Chris Sawchuk was struggling to get the local bicycle shop to be ranked number one on Google’s natural search listings. Chris was a generalist designer without any specific knowledge of search engine optimization (SEO). In fact, SEO is a highly sought-after skill in the market that requires a deep subject matter knowledge and years of experience to do well. Successful SEO is very valuable but also very difficult to teach, which is why Alex would have plotted the SEO project for the bike shop on the bottom right corner of the chart.

On another level, creating logos was something Alex could teach his staff to execute, and since they had come up with a unique, proprietary approach to developing them that clients liked, Alex would have plotted Ziggy’s Natural Treats logo at the top right of the chart.

Lessons from Experience

Of the three criteria for a scalable product or service—teachable, valuable, and repeatable—I found the single most important factor in driving up the value of my companies was ensuring my revenue was repeatable, meaning customers had to repurchase somewhat regularly.

Although all recurring revenue will have a positive impact on your company’s value, some forms are more desirable than others. Based on what I’ve learned from talking to buyers, here are six forms of recurring revenue presented from least to most valuable:

No. 6: Consumables—toothpaste

Consumables are disposable items customers purchase regularly but that they have no solid motivation to be brand-loyal toward.

Each morning I wake up and brush my teeth with Crest Whitening Gel. I’m fairly sure the “whitening gel” is a placebo, but it appeals to me given the amount of black coffee and red wine I consume. Every once in a while, I’ll go off-piste and try a Colgate product that promises “extra whitening,” but I always work my way back to Crest.

If you sell a consumable, start tracking your repurchase rate from existing customers. This will be a number that acquirers will use to calculate your projected sales into the future—and to calculate how much they’re willing to pay to buy your company today.

No. 5: Sunk money consumables—razor blades

More valuable than basic consumables such as toothpaste are “sunk money consumables .”In the case of these items, the customer has made an investment in a platform.

When I started using Gillette Sensor razor blades, I first had to buy a handle. Now I buy a new five-pack of blades every month, and I can’t bring myself to try Schick because then I’d have to purchase its handle mechanism. I’ve been a Sensor guy since I grew my first patch of peach fuzz. I’ve made an investment in the platform, and that makes me reluctant to switch providers.

The same is true at the office. When I was in the market for a printer, I bought a Xerox. And even though I probably won’t need to buy another printer for a while, I still have to buy Xerox’s expensive toner cartridges.

Expect to garner a premium for your business if you can demonstrate a loyal group of customers who have made an investment in your platform.

No. 4: Renewable subscriptions—magazines

Even better than having loyal customers who repurchase is having revenue that is guaranteed into the future. For example, I am a loyal subscriber to Outside magazine. Each year I get a re-up letter, and I send a check to cover my next twelve issues. Outside recognizes one-twelfth of my subscription fee the month it receives the check and each of the next eleven months.

Magazines are cheap compared with the subscriptions that analyst firms such as Frost & Sullivan or IDC sell their customers, which can run into the hundreds of thousands of dollars, making these companies more valuable than their competitors that offer project-based consulting on a one-off basis.

No. 3: Sunk money renewable subscriptions—the Bloomberg Terminal

When customers make an investment to do business with you, they become very sticky. If they buy on a subscription model, you will have one of the most valuable businesses in your industry.

Traders and money managers swear by their Bloomberg Terminal. Bloomberg customers have to first buy or lease the terminal and then subscribe to Bloomberg’s financial information. Having sticky customers loyal to a proprietary platform allowed Michael Bloomberg to build a valuable company.

No. 2: Auto-renewal subscriptions—document storage

When you store documents with Iron Mountain, you are charged a fee each month until you ask for your documents to be shredded or you agree to pick them up. Unlike a magazine subscription, for which you have to make the conscious decision to re-up, Iron Mountain just bills you until you tell it to stop.

Iron Mountain tracks its cancellation rate down to the decimal point and it can predict its revenue well into the future, which is why it is such a valuable company.

No. 1: Contracts—wireless phones

The only thing more valuable than an automatic renewal subscription is a hard contract for a defined term.

As much as we may despise being tied to them, wireless companies have mastered the art of recurring revenue. Many give their customers free phones as long as the customer locks into a two- or three-year full-service contract.

As you ascend the recurring-revenue hierarchy, expect the value of your business to go up in lockstep.

Once you’ve isolated what is teachable, what your customers value, and what they need most often, document your process for delivering this type of product or service. You’ll recall Ted helping Alex to define and document the Five-Step Logo Design Process. As Ted explained, describe each of the steps so that you can repeat the model in the same way each time. This will form the basis of your instruction manual for delivering that product or service. Use examples and fill-in-the-blank templates where possible to help ensure that your instructions are specific enough for someone to follow independently. Test your instructions by asking a team or team member to deliver the service or product without your involvement. Getting the instruction manual right will require time and patience. Expect to develop many drafts.

Next, name your scalable product or service. Naming your offering gives you ownership of it and helps you differentiate it from those of potential competitors. Once you own something unique, you move from providing a commoditized service or product to providing one whose terms of use you decide. If your product or service isn’t generic, customers won’t be able to compare your price to others’. Instead, name your offering, along with each of the steps you take to deliver it, to differentiate your offer so that you can set its price and payment terms.

After you come up with a great name, write a short description of the features and corresponding benefits of each step in the production of your offering. Revamp all of your customer communications (e.g., website, brochure) to describe your process in a uniform way.

Lessons from Experience

I used to own a market research business, and one of the services we provided was focus groups. You know the drill—the clients are sipping beer on one side of the one-way mirror while eight hapless “respondents” on the other provide their feedback on whatever the client wants to peddle.

Focus groups used to be a great business. It cost about $2,500 per group to rent a facility and pay the respondents. We would charge $6,000 for each group and clear a tidy $3,500, or roughly 58 percent gross margin. I say “used to be a great business” because as other companies caught on to the profitability of focus groups, the competition increased, driving down prices. Worse, clients started to issue requests for proposals (RFPs) for their focus groups.

The first time I saw an RFP, I was excited. The client was a big phone company, and it had asked our little company for a proposal to conduct six focus groups. A $36,000 potential order was a big deal for us, so I painstakingly responded to all of the RFP’s questions. I sent off my proposal and waited. Eventually I got a call from the phone company saying it had chosen another bidder. I couldn’t believe it. I’d thought my proposal was perfect.

I followed up with the buyer, and after several failed attempts finally reached him and demanded an explanation. He told me the winning bid was $3,500 per group. I would have had to drop my gross margin to $1,000 per group, or 29 percent! I would have had only twenty-nine measly points to pay for all of my operating expenses such as payroll, rent, and so on.

If you want your business to be profitable, enjoy fat margins, and thrive without you, you need to stop responding to RFPs and start carving out your own one-of-a-kind product or service. RFPs commoditize a category down to the point where the only way for a business to win a contract is to be the lowest-cost provider.

In my business, I decided to develop an alternative to focus groups that I could control the pricing for. We called them “customer advisory boards.” A company that wanted consistent and candid feedback from its customers could hire us to set up and run an annual advisory board on its behalf. We documented the process, developed an uneditable PDF deck for our salespeople to use to pitch the service, and, since customer advisory boards were unique in the market, set the price at a point where the gross margin returned to our historical averages.

April 14, 2011

Your Life In Ten Year Chunks

Mont Sainte Victoire, Aix-en-Provence.

Yesterday I had a call with a woman from The Strategic Coach. We were discussing the possibility of a partnership but she didn’t like the name of my book, “Built to Sell”.

“We encourage our members to keep their business forever” she said, “and I don’t think we want to be associated with a book that recommends entrepreneurs sell their company”

Hmmm, how strategic of them…

Distancing one’s self from a book called “Built to Sell” is actually pretty common. Often reviews of the book start with the following disclaimer, “Now I’m not thinking of selling my business, but if I were, this would be worth reading because blah blah.”

Somehow, the idea of selling a business has become something only money-grubbing, heartless mercenaries would contemplate.   >> More

April 13, 2011

Splitting Into Two Parts Made this Business More Attractive

DONE DEAL

By Nick Whitmore

Colin (not his real name) sold his central Virginia business-referrals firm after 11 years of running the franchise he’d created.

Prior to closing, Colin’s business generated revenue of $420,000. He decided to sell to focus fully on a new business-advisory enterprise he’d set up.

The business had two divisions: one in Shenandoah Valley and one in central Virginia.

“My mentor told me, ‘You have two businesses within that business, so you could split it up into two and sell them separately,’” said Colin.

Colin didn’t place a single ad to sell his business. He gave his assistant, who was running the central Virginia arm of the business, the option to buy it. However, the assistant wasn’t able to purchase it because of finance issues. In the end, Colin received four offers on his business before finally closing a deal.

The buyer of the central Virginia division was a good friend of Colin’s. “He said, ‘Are you selling it?’ I said, ‘Well, we weren’t, but we’re always open to selling it.’ We really liked the guy, so we said we’d sell it.”

Colin’s former bookkeeper purchased the Shenandoah Valley arm.

In total, Colin’s business was generating $206,000 of earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA). The business was sold in two parts for a combined total of $550,000, representing an EBITDA multiple of 2.67. The business was sold “as is.” There was no earn-out or seller finance involved.

Deal Snapshot

Business type: Business-referrals
Revenue: $420,000
EBITDA: $206,000
Selling price: $550,000
Multiple paid: 2.67

(photo courtesy of sxc.hu/blary54)

March 09, 2011

Six Pitfalls of converting to a subscription model

Subscription ModelAs you know, I’m a big believer in recurring revenue as a way to make your business more sellable. Recently however, I got an interesting email from a reader who asked me about the pitfalls of switching to a subscription-type model:

John: I was led to your website and comments while searching for information on the business pitfalls of converting to the subscription model. The benefits seem clear to me, but I need to do a better job of addressing the potential dangers and difficulties, before I take it to my management team (and Advisory Board) and win their buy-in. If you’re willing or interested, is there a way that you can help with that? >> More

December 09, 2010

Picking and paying your Jerry Maguire

I got an email yesterday from a friend who is looking for someone to help him sell his business.  I have found intermediaries (mergers and acquisitions professionals or business brokers) to be a valuable resource for selling a business (and preparing it to be sold). In the video above, I share my experience with how to find an intermediary to represent you and what you’ll need to pay them to help you sell your company. Please use the comments section of this blog to share your own experience with finding and working with a business broker or M&A pro.

On a separate note, I found out this morning that my book Built To Sell has been recognized by Inc. Magazine as one of the top business books of 2010. I’m still peeling myself off the ceiling. A great big THANK YOU to you for reading the book (and this blog) which I know helped the editors at Inc. make their choices.

Finally, here are some new articles for this week about selling your business:

Three tips for negotiating your earn-out

~ published November 30, 2010

The other day I met with two entrepreneurs running a $1-million per year graphic design business. They were in the final stages of negotiating a deal to sell their company to a large multinational marketing services firm. »more

The mercenary vs. the missionary entrepreneur

~ published December 1, 2010 Globe and Mail

Do you have a purpose in your business that goes beyond making money?

Harley-Davidson’s mission is to “fulfill dreams through the experience of motorcycling.”

Southwest Airlines is trying to “democratize air travel so that all Americans can visit a loved one or relative at a happy and sad time in their lives.” »more

How to get employees to care

~ published December 2, 2010 Globe and Mail

To build a valuable company you can walk away from – whether to sell or to leave just for a vacation – requires that you figure out how to get your employees to care as much as you do.

For his advice, I spoke to Ken Blanchard, whose books, including Raving Fans and The One Minute Manager, have sold millions of copies worldwide. »more

Ready to Sell Your Business? Avoid These 8 Mistakes

~ published December 2, 2010 BNET

Are you planning to step away from running your business in the next few years? Here are eight mistakes to avoid before hitting the eject button:

Mistake 1: Being boring

While it is true buyers like predictability, they also like growth. Set aside a small slice of money for experimenting on new things (product ideas, etc.). »more

November 16, 2010

Protecting your leverage

If you have ever pried open something by jamming a piece of wood in one end and applying pressure to the other, you know that leverage can give you more power than usual.

When you’re preparing your business to be sold, assuming you have an attractive asset, you have lots of negotiating leverage. You’ll be courted and discussions will build to a crescendo punctuated by a Letter Of Intent (LOI) presented by a buyer(s).

Your LOI(s) will likely have a “no shop clause” which means, provided you accept it, you must stop negotiating with other buyers. This exclusivity arrangement is the M&A equivalent of getting engaged — you’re not married yet, but you need to act like it.

The moment you sign an LOI, the stick slips out of the crack. The buyer knows you’re committed, but weaker than before and they may use that to their advantage. This would be ok if your fiancée were acting in good faith. Some do, but others don’t. I spoke to a corporate lawyer a while ago and asked him what percentage of the time a deal gets discounted between LOI and closing day. His response: “is there a number higher than 100%?”

The problem is that some professional buyers (strategic acquirers, sophisticated financial buyers) use an LOI to kick your stick out of the crack on purpose. Knowing you’re weakened, they start to change the terms of the deal in their favor: a longer earn out, a bigger escrow, less attractive employment agreement, lower upfront payment — I’ve heard them all.

Last week I spoke to Peter Lehrman, the CEO of AxialMarket which is an online marketplace for businesses for sale. Lehrman offered seven strategies for keeping your stick wedged in the crack after you sign an LOI. You can read his advice in the first two articles I wrote on selling a business below.

(photo courtesy of Flickr/ Neilwill)

Protecting your company’s value during a sale

~ published November 9, 2010 Globe and Mail

If you have ever promised your child a treat in return for good behaviour, you know all about negotiating leverage.

When selling an attractive business, you also have leverage—up to the point that you sign a letter of intent (LOI), which almost always includes a “no shop” clause, forcing you to terminate discussions with other potential buyers while your newfound “fiancé” does due diligence before handing over the cheque. »more

Don’t let lengthy negotiations depreciate your business

~ published November 10, 2010 Globe and Mail

I once asked a corporate lawyer – a veteran of hundreds of company sales – what percentage of the time the sale price of a company gets discounted between when the buyer and seller sign a letter of intent (LOI), and when the deal actually closes .

The lawyer looked at me thoughtfully and, after a moment of reflection, asked, “Is there a number higher than 100 per cent?” »more

The suit who thinks your baby is ugly

~ published November 11, 2010 Globe and Mail

Corporate development executives – the big-company suits responsible for buying businesses on behalf of their CEOs – often resemble heart surgeons: you know they’re smart, but their bedside manner leaves something to be desired.

This, of course, becomes a problem when you’re trying to sell your company and the guy or gal on the other side of the table is getting under your skin. Your business is your baby. You gave birth to it, you cared for it when it was young and fragile, and now that it is all grown up, you love it – warts and all. »more

9 Ways to Make Your Company More Valuable in 2011

~ published November 11, 2010 BNET

As you plan for next year, I’m sure you have a set of goals for your revenue and profit in 2011. Have you also got a list of projects that will drive up the value of your company?

Most businesses are valued on a multiple of earnings, so your profits are one key factor in driving up the value of your company, but the other number in the equation is the multiple of your earnings used to arrive at a price.  The more predictable and exciting your business, the higher a multiple you’ll get. »more