专栏企业家

Plan your exit to prevent a sticky end

Even entrepreneurs are mortal. So they need to think hard about eventually selling or passing on their business. These days the professionals call this exit planning. It sounds morbid, but is a necessary process if you want to maximise the proceeds from a disposal. There are even grandly named Certified Exit Planning Advisers who can offer technical assistance. But the core issues facing any private company owner are easy to identify, without any expert help.

Perhaps the most important question is: when do you want to sell? Retirement for the self-employed can be a voluntary choice, but illness, exhaustion, divorce and partnerships unravelling can force a decision. Ideally the timetable should belong to the owner, who can then pick a moment to enhance the value, and to suit their lifestyle. Of course if the company is being transferred to younger family members or staff, then optimisation is likely to be a better word – a fair distribution all round, taking into account relative contributions and needs. Either way, preparation is a good idea – because a business is not an inanimate asset like a house, but a dynamic construct that is extremely vulnerable if neglected.

Most founders are proud of their creations, and would much prefer to see them prosper in the future, almost as a form of legacy. Entrepreneurs might pretend to have no emotional attachment to the business they spent perhaps decades building, but often I have found that impression to be false. These owners have strong bonds to their employees, customers and suppliers, and a passion for their products and markets. That intensity of involvement means making sure that if possible the business ends up in the hands of appropriate shareholders – rather than it being broken up, over-borrowed or run by the wrong management. I have frequently seen owners turn down higher offers from their obvious corporate rival because they cannot bear to sell out to a bitter competitor who will gut their business.

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卢克•约翰逊

卢克•约翰逊(Luke Johnson)是一位成果颇丰的企业家和创业家,他为英国《金融时报》撰写企业家专栏。他目前担任英国皇家艺术协会的主席,并管理着一家私人股本投资公司——Risk Capital Partners。约翰逊曾在牛津大学学医,但是毕业后却进入投行业。他在1992年收购PizzaExpress,担任其董事长,并将其上市。到1999年出售的时候,PizzaExpress的股价已经从40英镑涨至800英镑。

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