What Do I Do Now?: Preparing for Life After Your Business Sale
Selling his rock quarry was the farthest thing from Norm’s mind. Starting from a dormant, water-filled pit, five rusty conveyors, and no customers,...
2 min read
When preparing to sell a business, a mistake you will want to avoid is failing to pay enough attention to the variety of legal issues involved in a business sale. The wrong legal mistake can stop a sale in its tracks. Worse, it could cost a small fortune to unravel. Thus, it is critically important to carefully analyze all relevant legal angles to the sale of your business. This short article will look at some of the key legal points sellers should consider long before putting their business on the market.
A critically important step for any seller to take is to have all potential buyers sign a confidentiality agreement or non-disclosure agreement (NDA). These agreements benefit sellers because, in the event of a deal that falls through before completion, the buyer is prevented from disclosing any details to other parties. Without an NDA, the buyer could reveal important aspects of your discussions and negotiations. Obviously, that could negatively impact your business and additionally have an impact on a future sale.
When it comes to selling a business, trying to cut costs or corners on legal issues is a big mistake. Investing in proven counsel is a must when preparing to divest your business. A good M&A attorney can give you a roadmap of legal moves you should make and pitfalls to avoid. Your experienced M&A attorney can also anticipate and quickly respond to the tax consequences of the deal, the structure of the sale, due diligence issues, document preparation, representations, warranties, and post-closing issues (e.g., earnouts, your continuing involvement in the company, etc.). Hiring an attorney with established M&A transaction experience will assist you in constructing ironclad agreements. As a seller, you will face a variety of risks in your business sale. For example, you need protection from the scenario of a potential acquirer recruiting key employees to a different business. Without a tight NDA and other legal agreements, a buyer could “pass” on buying a business, and then turn around and take away employees or otherwise weaken the business up for sale.
Another form of protecting a seller’s interest is a business acquisition letter of intent (LOI). The LOI should be one of the key tools at your disposal in negotiating a deal on the sale of your business. The LOI often serves to bridge the gap between receiving an indication of interest – used for initial, basic price and terms of a business purchase – and reaching a definitive asset purchase agreement or stock purchase agreement. An LOI can be either binding or non-binding, depending on the circumstances of the deal. It should include detailed terms of the agreement between the you and the purchaser and should have been negotiated previously. These steps allow the sale to move forward into due diligence beginning and prior to crafting a definitive purchase agreement.
The above are just a few of the dozens of errors in the legal realm that sellers too often make and regret after the fact. When preparing to sell your firm, the cost of investing in the legal aspects of selling your business is well worth your time and money. If your legal bases are covered, you will have a much more successful experience selling your business. The best preparation you can make, before putting your business up for sale, is the advice of an experienced M&A attorney and the procedural guidance of a proven M&A broker, investment banker or, for smaller deals, business broker.
Selling his rock quarry was the farthest thing from Norm’s mind. Starting from a dormant, water-filled pit, five rusty conveyors, and no customers,...
Your consideration of whether now is the time to sell should include a variety of business and personal factors.