About This Blog

This blog is edited by Richard Parker, the President and Founder of Diomo Corporation and a world renowned expert on buying and selling businesses. He is the author of six comprehensive programs on buying businesses including the best-selling How To Buy A Good Business At A Great Price© series and has had over 100 articles published. Richard is also a highly sought after intermediary and recipient of the Business Brokers of Florida Top Dollar Producer having sold the highest volume of business in the State of Florida. Since 1990 he has purchased ten businesses and has started several more. As President and Founder of Diomo Corporation, his materials and live seminars have helped thousands of prospective small business buyers in over 70 countries realize their dream of business ownership. He is also on the Trump University faculty for Entrepreneurship.

This blog is Richard's exclusive space to rant and rave to the BizQuest audience of buyers and sellers on whatever subject tickles his fancy, but he promises to include at least an occasional posting having something to do with buying or selling businesses.

He hopes that you will also take advantage of the "Ask The Expert" aspect of this blog by sending him your questions. All reasonable questions can expect to receive a personal response from Richard and the better ones will be posted on this blog - don't worry, your name will not be included in the posting.

You can send Richard your questions or otherwise contact him by visiting the Diomo Corporation website and clicking on "Contact".

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Hiring the Right Attorney When You Buy a Business

Attorneys have their role in the business-buying process and yes, there are plenty of them who are deal-breakers, but that generally happens when a buyer hires the wrong one. A good attorney will help make the deal happen, and you need to understand their role and how to find the right one.

I just received an email from a visitor to our website who went on about how an attorney they hired “completely blew the deal and the seller won’t deal with them anymore”. He told them that he was “only looking out for their best interests”. He was highly recommended by a family member. I also learned that he was a specialist in patent law. That is just wonderful. The problem is this person was buying a three store retail chain.

Mistake number one – they hired the wrong attorney.

Now, you may be saying, an attorney is an attorney – right? Wrong! If you have a toothache, would you go to a foot doctor? Of course not! So if you’re buying a business, then you need an attorney who specializes in transaction law. Ideally, you’ll want one with experience in transactions of businesses similar in size and type to the one you’re buying.

An attorney plays a very important role, but you need to know what it is. They should not be your negotiator except for any overly complex situations that may require the buyer’s and seller’s counsel to make headway.

Good deals get done between the buyer and the seller and then the attorneys simply scribe it properly. As such, you have to be very clear with them about what you and the seller have generally agreed to and then it is up to them to help you get the deal done in a legal sense.

You want them to bring all the potential issues to your attention. You need them to offer sage advice about any possible exposure you may have. You want them to review any documents that you sign. They need to draft documents that reflect the local law. They are the ones that can effectively assemble closing documents along with any brokers involved. But that’s pretty much the end of it.

You definitely need to consider every issue that your attorney raises but when all is said and done, YOU have to make the decisions.

There is almost always going to be some element of risk in a deal. I have yet to see any deal that is absolutely bulletproof. A good attorney will outline the risks but will also present real-world scenarios. Of course you need to be adequately protected and some parts of the deal are more important than the other. If your attorney tries to hammer the seller into submission, the deal won’t get done.

Buying a business involves a lot of moving parts and clearly having the right team of advisors at your side will make a huge difference. But at the end of the day, you’re the one who has to lead the team.