Years ago, the owner of a small insurance firm that was about to change hands came to the law office where Jere Doyle was practicing at the time.
The business owner “had the terms written down on a napkin,” Doyle, now an estate planning strategist with BNY Wealth, said, describing them as “like three bullet points.” After a year of complex negotiations involving the structure of the business entity and a letter of credit to finance the transaction, that napkin turned into “a closing binder that was probably three inches thick with all the documentation needed to close the deal,” Doyle said. That insurance firm was “a small business, but there was quite a bit of money involved,” he recalled.
For Doyle and other experts who help guide entrepreneurs through M&A deals (with a focus on wealth management implications and financial advisors’ business and professional development), the key takeaway from that episode is simple.
“The business owners are experts in what they do for their particular business,” Doyle said. “When it comes to selling a business, it’s a first-time event for a lot of people, and they don’t know how long it’s going to take and how complicated it’s going to be.”
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Certifiable business expertise
Advisors seeking to expand their knowledge of everything involved with succession planning —
“Our whole belief and thesis is that business owners need better advisors, and the advisors that serve them need better tools and tech,” said Jason Early, the
Despite the “
The advisors face possible competition for the business of private firm owners, as well as the need to
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What the research shows
For its latest annual report on private business owner strategies, BNY commissioned The Harris Poll to do a survey, which polled a sample of 127 entrepreneurs across multiple industries and firm sizes who had either recently completed an M&A deal or would be considering one in the near future. In the survey, “financial advisors” rated as the second most commonly cited professionals among the “most influential advisors” in the sale. At 21%, advisors came in second to a more general “business advisor” at 23% that could be a wealth manager, certified public accountant, attorney or simply a professional “who’s had a long-term relationship with the business owner and is a trusted partner,” Doyle noted. Notably, advisors rated ahead of M&A attorneys (14%), trust and estate attorneys (9%), accountants (6%), friends and family (6%), consultants (6%), industry business peers (6%) and tax attorneys (5%).
The tax aspects of a deal represent just one component of the planning for it, albeit an important one, alongside questions like preparing for the sale, thinking about the post-transaction phase and how the M&A deal changes the business owner into an investor. However, 79% of the business owners said taxes either moderately or significantly affected their profits from the transaction. They used strategies that included income deferral and exclusion through an installment sale or
“Though it is not always possible, sellers should try to allow for at least a two-year runway to build a cohesive deal team that is in a position to develop an optimal tax strategy and make the right strategic decisions along the way,” the report said.
The findings explain why working with business owners on the sale of their firm is “a huge opportunity” for advisors, especially “if you’re in an up economy, which we are now and we have been for the past 15 years or so,” Doyle said. As the client is “going from an entrepreneur to an investor and it’s totally different,” they find value in the advice as they run the business, navigate the sale and figure out their plans following the closure and into their retirement, he said.
“You can advise somebody in multiple parts,” he said. “It takes not only education, it takes experience as well.”
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Filling a need and creating value
That potential business tied to many important planning complexities involved with an owner’s exit show why hundreds of advisors have taken the three courses required by the college to get the college’s certificate, a fully virtual program that starts at a price of $2,050 per class. The introduction last year of its “
“Advisors could no longer deny the fact that clients wanted tax planning advice and solutions
Through its collaboration with the college and a lot of advisors and wealth management firms since launching last year, RISR aims to assist them in bulking up their services for business owners, Early said. The access to RISR’s metrics dashboard and a detailed report for advisors who earn their certificate will give them a means of demonstrating their added value to clients through results similar to what’s available through planning software. Often, that has amounted to a Microsoft Word document manually prepared by the advisor and their staff, he said.
“For 25 years now, advisors have had the tools to deliver financial plans to business owners,” Early said. “Now you’ve got a succession planning deliverable for business owners.”
In the past, gaps in training and technology have led some advisors to business owners “to treat that asset like any other on the balance sheet,” he said. More professional development and resources involving areas such as estate and legacy planning, retirement, insurance coverage, valuation, growth levers, capital financing, taxes and, of course, succession planning could enable more advisors and firms to address the needs of entrepreneurs.
“Not a single one of them isn’t thinking about forming a business owner strategy. The demographics won’t let them ignore it anymore,” Early said. “I’m betting our company on the fact that this is true, but I’m suspecting there’s a lot of demand there.”
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