How Do You Say “Hello”?
Answering services, message machines, voice mail, “on hold” music, speaker phones . . . where would a business be without them? Perhaps–in some situations–a lot better off! In the small to midsized business, where every call should count, owners and managers need to ensure that the telephone is an efficient, effective sales tool instead of a handicap. It’s important to remember that the caller’s first impression of your company is from the voice answering the phone. That first minute or less will help form the caller’s lasting opinion of your business, so why not take the opportunity to make that opinion the best possible? Here are a few ideas for improving the way your business says hello.
Call Your Office
Give your office a call–just don’t let them know it’s you. Have someone whose voice your employees won’t recognize place the call, with you standing by waiting to listen. This may sound like cloak-and-dagger tactics, but it’s one that successful managers use to monitor the quality of their telephone service. What to listen for:
- A pleasant salutation (“Good morning, Jones and Jones”), followed by a name, if appropriate, and offer of assistance.
- An unhurried, interested response to queries, or the offer to connect the caller to someone else who can provide information.
- A reasonable on-hold time. And, if the time seems longer than normal, is there an apology for the delay?
Check Out Your Service
Conduct a “test” of your answering service similarly to the above; however, you’ll be listening here for that extra level of care an answering service should take in personalizing its service. Be sure the following standards are met:
- Answering service operator answers with the name of your company, not just a generic “May I help you.”
- Operator should know pertinent facts about your business: times of operation, key names of personnel, etc.
- Check message you give operator against the message that he or she transmits to your company.
If you aren’t satisfied, take the time to educate your answering service about your standards and expectations. If the service can’t–or won’t–comply with your request, engage another organization to do the job.
Tune Up Your Message
When was the last time you listened to your own company’s voice mail message? When you do, turn a careful ear to the following checkpoints:
- Are you satisfied with the voice that represents your company? It should be upbeat, but also well-modulated and pleasingly-pitched. Do a test of several voices and choose the one that sounds best “on tape.”
- If your voice mail system has background music, or if your company has a call sequencer with on-hold music, be sure the sound is welcoming and soothing.
Take High-Tech Down a Peg
Does your company have automated voice mail? Speaker phones? Conference-call capability? All well and good in this era when communication is king. Just keep in mind the advantages of the “live” human voice–when you make a call, business or personal, isn’t this what you prefer to hear? Although the person in your business who answers the phone may well be your lowest-paid employee, remember that this human voice is vital to the image of your company.
What Makes the Sale of a Business Fall Through?
There are myriad reasons why the sale of a business doesn’t close successfully; these multiple causes can, however, be broken down into four categories: those caused by the seller, those caused by the buyer, those that just happen (“acts of fate”), and those caused by third parties. The following examines the part each of these components can play in contributing to the wrecked deal:
The Seller
1. In some instances, the seller doesn’t have a valid reason for entering into the sale process. Without a strong reason for selling, he or she has neither the willingness to negotiate nor the flexibility to see the sale to a conclusion. Without such a commitment, the desire to sell is not powerful enough to overcome the many complexities necessary to finalize the sales process.
2. Some sellers are merely testing the waters. As detailed above, they are not at that “hungry” stage that provides the push toward a successful transaction. These sellers merely want to see if anyone wants to buy their business at the price they would like to receive.
3. Many sellers are unrealistic about the price they want for their business. They may be sincere about wanting to sell, but they are unable to be realistic about how the marketplace will value the business. The demand for their business may not be there.
4. Some sellers fail to be honest about their business or its situation. They may be hiding the fact that new competition is entering the market, that the business has serious problems or some other reason the business is not salable under existing circumstances. Even worse, some sellers do not disclose that there is more than one owner and that they are not all in agreement about selling the business.
5. A seller may decide to wait until a buyer is found and then check with their outside advisors about the tax and/or legal consequences. At this point, the terms of the deal have to be altered, and the buyer won’t agree. Sellers should deal with these complications ahead of time. Nobody likes changes–especially buyers!
6. Sometimes sellers don’t understand that almost all businesses are seller-financed. Buyers have to be able to make the payments while still making a living from the business. If the business cannot offer this necessity, no one will buy it.
The Buyer
1. The buyer may not have an urgent need or a strong desire to go into business. In many cases the buyer may begin with positive intentions, but then doesn’t have the courage to make “the leap of faith” necessary to go through with the sale.
2 Some buyers, like sellers, have very unrealistic expectations regarding the price of businesses. They are also uneducated about the nature of small business in general.
3. Many buyers are not willing to put in the hours or do the type of work necessary to operate a business successfully.
4. Buyers can be influenced by others who are opposed to the purchase of a business. Many people don’t or can’t understand the need to be “your own boss.”
Acts of Fate
These are the situations that “just happen,” causing deals to fall through. Even considering the strong hand of fate, many of these situations could have been prevented.
1. A buyer’s investigation reveals some unmentioned or unknown problem, such as an environmental situation. Or, perhaps there are financial deficiencies discovered by the buyer. Unfortunately, these should have been on the table from the beginning of the selling process.
2. The seller may not be able to substantiate, at least to the buyer’s satisfaction, the earnings of the business.
3. Problems may arise, unknown to both the seller and the buyer, with federal, state, or local governmental agencies.
Third Parties
1. Landlords may become difficult about transferring the lease or granting a new one.
2. Buyers and/or sellers may receive overly-aggressive advice from outside advisors, usually attorneys. Attorneys, in their zeal to represent their clients, forget that the goal is to put the deal together. In some cases, they erect so many roadblocks that the deal can only fall apart.
Most of the problems outlined here could have been resolved before the selling process was too far advanced. There are also some problems that could not have been avoided–people do sometimes enter situations with the best of intentions only to find out that this is not the right answer for them after all. These are the exceptions, however. Most business sales can have happy endings if potential difficulties are handled at the appropriate time.
Business brokers are aware of the various ways a deal may fall through. They are experienced in resolving issues before the business goes onto the market or before a buyer is introduced to the business. To buy or sell a business successfully, sellers should resolve any potential deal-wreckers, following the advice of a professional business broker.
Although business brokers cannot provide legal advice, they are famililar with the intricacies of the business sale. They are also familiar with local attorneys who specialize in the details of these transactions. These attorneys will usually be more efficient, and therefore more cost-effective, than the attorney who handles a general practice.
Prior to Closing — Red Flags from the Seller’s Viewpoint
Buyers are expected to perform a thorough due diligence on both the business and the seller(s). However, many sellers don’t do an extensive due diligence on the buyer(s). Deals do not always close; many are aborted in the very early stages, and others tank somewhere along the way to what was hoped to be a successful closing. So, what happens that prevents a deal from closing, especially one that began with such positive signs? Obviously, in many cases, the buyer’s due diligence turns up some items that were not revealed by the seller, and others that can’t be resolved. Some of these items probably had early-sign red flags; other red flags occurred somewhere along the way, and unfortunately, the result was that there were pre-closing red flags.
The Early-Sign Red Flags
Sellers should seriously look at who the buyer is. This may be a corporate buyer who is just looking. On the other hand, some sellers may overlook a strong individual buyer for fear that he or she may be inexperienced in the acquisition process or might be too cautious. In both cases, the seller may want to ask questions such as the following: What companies have you already looked at? How much equity are you willing to commit? What experience do you have in what my firm does?
Some sellers have that sixth sense that allows them to size up a prospective buyer. No one wants to waste time with someone who really isn’t a buyer. The deeper a seller goes into the due diligence process with a potential buyer, the more red flags may appear. If there are too many, if the ones that get raised seem too difficult to resolve, or even if they might be resolved, if that sixth sense says “no” anyway, it is probably time to move on.
Red Flags Along the Way
Once the Offering Memorandum has been given to the potential buyer, the next stage of red flags may occur. For example, if your intermediary informs you that he or she has not heard from the prospect after receiving the memorandum, it could mean that the buyer prospect is not as interested as you might have thought. Also, if the next step involves a junior member of the prospective buyer’s management rather than the CEO or COO, the red flag should go up. If the prospect, corporate or individual, refuses to provide, or delays providing, information showing their financial capability to do the deal, the red flag should be raised. One recommendation is to set up a social event, a dinner or extended lunch between you and the buyer prospect. Visiting at a social event allows the buyer and seller to get to know each other, establish a cultural understanding and build a working relationship. If this meeting goes badly, the red flag should go up, at least half-way.
Red Flags Just Prior to Closing
The Letter of Intent has been drafted and signed. One area that may cause several red flags to go up is if the buyer’s attorney is inexperienced in the deal process, is overly aggressive, or just won’t bend. This is such an important issue that if changes aren’t made, the deal is probably in serious jeopardy of collapsing. The seller’s attorney may be able to gather some insight on this matter.
Both sides are taking some risks in any buy-sell process, but both sides should take their due diligence efforts seriously. If a deal has arrived at “a just prior to closing” status, it is certainly vital that both sides can resolve their red flag issues. It could be tragic if the deal has gone this far without serious red flags being raised.
The whole purpose of recognizing the red flags is to try to resolve them before the deal “craters”. A positive attitude by both sides is almost always the answer, and this attitude is best accomplished by the use of a professional intermediary who has been there, knows the red flags, and knows how to resolve them.
Reasons for Sale
The reasons for selling a business can be divided into two main categories. The first is a sale that is planned almost from the beginning or by an owner who knows that selling is or should be a planned event. The second is exactly the opposite – unplanned; the sale is motivated by a specific event such as health, divorce, business crises, etc. However, in between the two major reasons, are a host of unpredictable ones.
A seller may not even be thinking of selling when he or she is approached by an individual, group or another company, and an attractive offer is made. The owner of a business may die, and the heirs have no interest in operating it. A company may bring in new management who decides to sell off a division or two; or maybe even decides that selling the entire business is in the best interests of everyone.
A major competitor may enter the market, forcing an owner to elect to sell. And the competition may not just be another company. The owner of a business may realize that an external threat is such that the company will lose a competitive advantage. New technology by a competitor may outdate the way a company produces its products. Two competitors may merge, placing new pressures on a company. The growth of franchising and big box stores can promote themselves on a much larger scale than a single business, no matter how good it is. National advertising can create the perception that a large business’s pricing, inventory or service is better than the smaller competitor, even if it isn’t.
Although these issues may not push a business owner or company management to consider selling, they are certainly causes for consideration. Unfortunately, most sellers fail to create an exit strategy until they are forced to. Professional athletes want to go out on top of their game, and business owners should do the same.
“Loose Lips Sink Ships”
The “loose lips” tagline was a common World War II phrase and was on posters everywhere. The problem continues on the business battlefront today. Leaks of confidential information coming from, apparently, some of the Directors of HP have been in the news everywhere. This is an ongoing story. If it can happen to HP, it can happen to anyone. Leaks of confidential data are a serious issue at any time, but are especially serious if they involve the sale of a company. Sellers are very concerned because of the impact a leak can have on their company and their employees.
Unfortunately, confidentiality is a Catch—22 issue. On one side, the seller wants to maintain it; on the other side, the seller wants to get the highest price possible, which can mean exposing the business to numerous potential buyers. The more potential buyers contacted, the better the chance of a good price being obtained—and the greater chance of a leak.
Owners may be overly concerned about leaks of confidential data, but since this is a concern, the issue must be dealt with. The shorter the time table between going to market and a sale the less chance there is for a leak. The selling process should not drag on! This is one reason why the price, terms and deal structure should be as fair as possible from the very beginning. The longer negotiations take, the greater the chance for word to leak out. If all of the red flags are dealt with early on, the more likely there can be a quick closing. That way, if there is a leak, the deal can be concluded before any damage can be done. The only other alternative is to deal with just two or three potential buyers. This, of course, lessens the chance of getting the seller a better deal.
Sellers should make sure that all documents involving a sale or potential sale are kept under lock and key, marked “Confidential,” and only transmitted to buyers in a secure manner. Confidential information should only be emailed or faxed when one is absolutely sure it can’t get into the wrong hands. Buyers and sellers have to be cautioned about the confidentiality issue. Too many times when there is breach of confidentiality, the leak comes from the seller. The seller tells his golfing partner, mentions it to a neighbor at a cocktail party, reveals it to a relative – indeed, it is usually a case of “loose lips sinking ships.”
If there was ever a reason to use a professional business intermediary, this is it. They can be the conduit between the buyer, seller and the outside advisors. Business intermediaries are experienced in preventing breaches of confidentiality, e.g. by requiring buyers to sign strict non-disclosure agreements. What’s even more important, they are pros, knowledgeable about dealing with one if it happens. This is just another reason to use the services of a business intermediary.