Make Them Say Yes
Once they have found the right practice to buy, advisers should follow these steps to
make sure they get noticed in a seller's market.
By David Grau
Reprinted from Financial Planning, www.financial-planning.com
very sale of an advisory practice starts with a letter of intent (LOI). And if that
letter isn't accepted, that's where the deal ends. But once the LOI is signed, 95% of deals go
through.
There are strategies to ensure that happy result if buyers plan their courtship of the seller
carefully.
Basically an LOI crystallizes the rough terms of the transaction and lays the groundwork for
ongoing meetings between the parties. It's written after a buyer and seller have seriously
discussed the price, terms, and conditions of a deal, but before the purchase agreement and
much of the due diligence are completed. Buyers usually have a pretty good idea of what a
seller will accept before they submit an LOI.
If there are multiple buyers for the practice, most sellers will require an earnest-money deposit
of about 1% of the purchase price. The deposit should be put in escrow or in an attorney's trust
account. It's refundable for a limited period, such as 15 to 30 days after the LOI is signed.
During this period, the buyer conducts a thorough due diligence and makes a decision. If the
buyer decides not to go forward with the acquisition, he or she is entitled to a full refund of the
earnest-money deposit. If the buyer completes the transaction, the deposit is credited toward
the down payment.
LOI Basics
Most financial advisory practices in the small-cap market (sale price less than $3 million) are similar, so the letters of intent are fairly
standardized. The critical ingredients include:
Assets (or stock) to be purchased
Liabilities or obligations assumed
Closing data
Proposed purchase price
Amount of down payment
Amount and length of earn-out or note
Contingencies on any payments
Length of seller's post-closing involvement
Tax-allocation strategy
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If the buyer exceeds the due-diligence period and has not formally withdrawn the offer, he or
she forfeits the earnest-money deposit. That's because a seller commonly expects that, once an
LOI is signed, he or she will deal exclusively with that buyer, who in return won't drag out the
due-diligence period. A smart seller also will request proof of a buyer's ability to pay for the
practice before signing on the dotted line.
While an LOI is mostly non-binding, it creates a moral commitment to complete the deal on the
stated terms. So buyers and sellers need to coordinate the process with their attorneys to
ensure that everyone stays within the LOI guidelines. When one party strays too far from the
written understanding of the price and terms, deals collapse quickly.
Currently, it's a seller's market on Business Transitions' online marketplace for small practices.
There are 30 inquiries and an average of three offers per seller. Before smart buyers can sign
an LOI, they must grab the seller's attention. The best way to do that is not necessarily by
being first to show up at the seller's door. The first offer often forces sellers to confront their
fears about the reality of the sale. They're much more comfortable with the deal and what it
means to them by the third or fourth offer.
When sellers are sorting through offer, a first hurdle is cultural. Buyers have to remember that
the open market for practices isn't eBay. Sellers, as a rule, don't choose the highest bidder, but
the buyer who best fits with the seller's personality and business philosophy. They want to be
confident their clients will like the buyer and stay with him or her.
Another hurdle is geographical. Buyers must convince the seller that they will maintain some
kind of local presence after the sale so the seller doesn't worry that clients will be neglected
and the practice will fall apart.
About one in five buyers makes it past the first two hurdles to face the final one: terms. The
down payment and the length of the payoff have as much to do with a successful sale as the
price. Buyers have to be willing to put at least one third of the purchase price down in cash to
gain $40 million or more in assets under management in less than 90 days, even if they have
not met a single one of the seller's clients. If you want to escrow the down payment and pay as
client-delivery benchmarks are reached, the sellers will feel like you're asking them to take on
too much of the risk. After all, once the deal is closed, it favors the buyer, not the seller,
because the buyer can pay the balance over time out of the business's revenues.
Prove that you can handle the acquisition. Introduce your second-in-command if you have
one. Office managers, even receptionists, say a lot about you, your skills, your maturity, and
your practice. They say that you can handle and work with people both professionally and
administratively. Send a copy of your bank statement or otherwise demonstrate that you have
the money to pay for the practice. Include a copy of your credit report in the same envelope so
the seller doesn't have to ask. Sellers appreciate things like that.
Don't try to address every last deal term in a LOI. It is a non-binding agreement. Your
purchase agreement may go faster and more smoothly if your LOI weighs in at 20 pages, but
only because the buyer and seller will both be dead on their feet after the prolonged
negotiations just to get the letter done. Sellers don't appreciate things like that.
Once an LOI has been written, add a cover letter and make sure to call before you fax
the offer to the seller. Otherwise your perfect offer will inevitably be intercepted by an
employee who delivers it to the boss/seller with a "deer in the headlights" look while mumbling
about looking for a new job. This lack of tact will antagonize the seller. More important, by
breaking the confidentiality of the deal, you risk costing the seller critical employees who may
have been part of the package. Further, clients who hear rumors that their adviser is leaving
them might bolt.
Involve spouses early in the process. A dinner meeting is great opportunity to put
personalities front and center. It helps to remember what it's like dealing with your clients;
financial decisions are often made by husband and wife together. Sales and acquisitions at the
small-cap level are no different.
Buying or selling a practice is about real people and their needs and concerns--specifically, the
seller's clients and their families. Too often, acquisitions and sales turn into a pile of legal
documents, a list of names, an income stream, and competing offers. If the seller knows that
your offer is genuine and competitive and that you understand the real goal of the transaction,
you will win more offers than you lose.
Finally, don't be afraid to fail. Most successful buyers failed once or twice before their first
offer was accepted. It takes practice--just like any semi-complicated task you perform for the
first time. Stay with it and you'll eventually succeed. You could add $40 million in assets under
management to your practice, perhaps as often as once a year. FP
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David Grau is president of Business Transitions in Portland, Ore., a leading facilitator of buying
and selling advisory, accounting, and insurance practices on its Web sites:
FPtransitions.com,
RIAtransitions.com,
CPAtransitions.com,
NAPFAtransitions.com, and
Insurancetransitions.com.
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