Getting Married Before You Date

Yesterday at 5:00, I found myself sitting in our conference room across from a very interesting gentleman. He was in his upper fifties, maybe 60, and carried himself as a professional. He explained that he had been in business for upwards of 40 years – that he had made some big mistakes, learned from them, moved on, and built a fairly successful business. 

He told me that the business that he had started had run its course and he wanted to start a new one, having learned from the mistakes of the old. In order to start the company, he decided to bring in 3 additional people. These people were friends of his, experienced in his industry, and possessed of the skill sets necessary to make the new venture run. My visitor had decided to divide 40% of the stock among them, retaining 60% for himself – enough, he felt, to keep control of the company.

He was convinced that giving out shares of the company was the only way to keep the group motivated, absent money to pay each person’s going rate. My visitor was wrong.

Recently, I wrote a piece in our e-mail series discussing the mistake of offering partnership at the outset of a business relationship. And whether the discussion concerns true partnership or co-ownership of a corporation or LLC, the fact of the matter is that co-ownership is a business marriage. And make no mistake, just like the real thing, a business divorce can be expensive and emotionally draining. 

For his part, my prospective client was asking his friends to invest their time and skill in a new business for little or no compensation. What he wanted was a way to show his friends that they would reap the benefits of their investment.   We explored a number of possible solutions, but what we decided upon was offering stock options.

People, you see, are unpredictable. Some may be highly skilled and great friends, but start working together and it’s a trainwreck. Different business philosophies, work ethic, or personalities can destroy a team that could not possibly look better on paper.   Stock options and a vesting schedule are two ways to put together an arrangement now which takes effect later

In this case, we could commit to an option to purchase stock in the company beginning in 3 years, discounted for each year the person had been with the company. Moreover, as incentives, other discounts to the purchase price could also apply, provided we took care not to trigger any unwanted tax consequences.

In other words, my prospective client could date before he got married. And in my experience, that’s a pretty good plan.

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Raise it for discussion on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

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Experience Doesn't Always Come with the Sunrise

“There is a difference,” I was taught, “between ten years of experience and one year of experience repeated ten times.”   I thought about this the other day as I contemplated the calendar change to 2011 and the fact that next year will mark my 25th year in practice. 

Everyday it seems like I see too many examples of companies celebrating survival, rather than progress. We regularly receive letters adorned with “our 10th anniversary” ribbon stickers and see businesses using the phrase “since 1956” or some such instead of an actual message.   When I was a young attorney (maybe for ego’s sake I should say “younger” attorney), I was hoping to be made partner when the management committee told me instead “we’ve decided that you have to wait 3 more years before we extend an offer of partnership.” 

Now, granted I was young – younger than any of the partners by a long shot – but I had just as many clients and generated more revenue than most.   “Why,” I asked, “does it matter how many more sunrises I see between now and an offer of partnership?” I urged them to give me something different such as a revenue, performance, or even billable hour target to hit. But no, to them it was time. To me, this made no sense.

One of the real values of seeing another sunrise is the ability to leave behind the mistakes and absurdities that had, no doubt, been a part of your yesterday. But equally as important, with the sunrise comes the opportunity to build on yesterday’s lessons. Sometimes that’s painful in business.

Print out your customer list. Not a list of your most active or largest. Print out a list of all of them. Don’t just read the names, ponder them. As to each, are they enthusiastic about your work or did you make a cringe inducing mistake? Were you late? Were you, perhaps, a bit less responsive than you should have been? Are they loyal to you or are they casting a wandering eye across the business landscape wondering if they can do better? 

I have yet to find a business owner who, in his heart of hearts, can honestly say that he did right by 100% of his customers 100% of the time. 

So here are the questions: What are you going to do about the failures? Are you committed to learning? Have you created a company culture open to improvement? Can you begin a lasting and productive dialogue about your failures? Have you ever conducted a bloodless autopsy – one with a mission of education rather than the identification of a scapegoat?

In other words, in 2011, what will you have learned by the sunrise?

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Raise it for discussion on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

What Will You Do Differently in 2011?

“I got a phone call this morning from one of our oldest customers. He fired us. After 20 years, he fired us. Said he doesn’t know us anymore. I think I know why.” 

The speaker recounted his phone conversation to his account reps, saying “we used to do business with a handshake, face-to-face. Now it’s a phone call, a fax, ‘get back to you later,’ with another fax, probably.” 

This United Airlines commercial was originally aired before e-mail and the advent of social media. First aired twenty years ago, in 1990, it still resonates. So many businesses are started by an entrepreneur, skilled in the producing the product or service that spawned the company. Customers came because of the skill and stayed because of the attention. As the owner of a small business, the founder could track every project and knew every client. When someone was upset; he knew it.

Growth has a way of making that kind of personal attention obsolete. Time passes and a founder looks around to realize that whole projects are being performed for customers he never met.   And what about the ones he knew – the ones who built his business or who inspired him to go into business in the first place? Chances are, they’ve been delegated. Delegated to talented people, to be sure, but delegated just the same. 

Sooner or later, the thought has to occur to these customers – your old friends -- that if they mean little enough to your company that they can be delegated, your company means little enough to them that they can go elsewhere.  

Looking ahead to 2011, most business owners set targets for growth -- more revenue, more customers, bigger projects, better distribution. But how many set goals reflecting stronger relationships, customer retention, and expressions of gratitude? 

Many years ago, I read a book in which the author urged business owners to “pay attention to the ‘fine’s.’” He meant that people rarely voice their complaints. When asked about service or the particular product they purchased, even when dissatisfied, they’d normally respond that things were “fine.” Not every customer can be counted on for enthusiasm. After all, there isn’t an infinite amount of enthusiasm to go around. But the silence and the “fine’s” speak volumes to those with a keen enough ear and enough focus to notice. 

So what are you doing to focus on client retention, rather than just growth? Studies indicate that a new client is 7 times more expensive in terms of marketing and advertising dollars than existing clients. The point is that it is much cheaper and more efficient to keep the clients you have than spend every ounce of energy trying to bring new prospects in the door. 

If you do not already track trends in returning business, 2011 is an ideal time to start. After all, nothing speaks to customer satisfaction more than repeat business. Even more than tracking it, look for the things that increase the pace of returning business over time. 

Perhaps, like those executives in the United Airlines commercial, you can forgo e-mail, faxes and phone calls, and, just once in a while, put in the time to travel even great distances for a handshake.

 

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Raise it for discussion on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

Why you absolutely need to spend money on a lawyer

One of my favorite lawyer jokes goes like this:

Q:  What’s the definition of a corporate lawyer?

A:  Someone who prevents exciting things from happening.

Unfortunately, and all too often, the joke is true.  Many corporate lawyers fail to see the forest for the trees.  They get so wrapped up in focusing on every possible thing that could go wrong in your business or transaction that they “overdraft” your corporate documents and contracts and scare off the other party to your transaction.  Moreover, they often adopt an adversarial stance vis a vis your business partners, customers, and contracting counterparties, which ends up souring what is supposed to be a positive business experience for the companies involved.  All this extra time and extra analysis ends up costing you time, unnecessary anxiety, and more money in legal fees.

 In short, corporate lawyers too often act like overly wordy litigators.  And that’s not what we’re supposed to be.  We’re supposed to help you build, not to tear down.  We’re supposed to help you perform cost-benefit analyses with respect to your contract language, not throw in everything but the kitchen sink.  And building and benefiting should always be a cooperative and forward-looking endeavor, not an adversarial and retrospective one.  It’s not about your lawyer’s ego.  It’s about your business.

However, there’s at least one time during the life of your company when letting your lawyer get analytical and obsessive is actually more beneficial than detrimental, and when there’s a quantifiable benefit to the money you’re paying him for his services.  And that time is when you decide to start a new business.

You’ve got to get your ducks in a row, make sure the language in your formation documents is tight, and keep your gaze steely.  You don’t want your lawyer to stop this exciting thing from happening, but you DO want him to slow it down enough for you to make some serious decisions that will affect the financial and operational future of your new enterprise.  Decisions such as choice of corporate form, tax considerations, investor rights and obligations, corporate governance, banking relationships, and a host of other issues.  Some can be put off until a few months after you’re up and running.  Most cannot.  This is one time when preventing an exciting thing from happening too quickly is actually desirable.

 Are you going to part with some money in legal fees, as the title of this blog states rather forcefully?  Probably.  You might be able to spend a bit less, but you might end up spending more.  It depends on the type of business you’re starting, your financing, your facilities, your investors, your choice of corporate entity, certain tax considerations, and your appetite for risk, among other things.  It won’t cost you an arm and a leg, but it’s going to cost you something.  And it’s going to be some of the best money your business ever spends. 

 I’m going to explain why over the course of the next several weeks of blogging.  Stay tuned . . . .

 
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