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".

Whether Buying or Selling a Business You Can Learn Something From Warren Buffett

I want to talk about two issues both of which emanate from renowned investor Warren Buffett which are great lessons for both prospective business buyers and sellers.

Lesson For Sellers:

The annual Berkshire Hathaway meeting was held in Omaha, Nebraska last weekend. About 25,000 faithful showed up to spend time with Buffet and his business partner Charlie Munger in what has become a love-fest with the brilliant investors and somewhat of a pilgrimage for the shareholders.

The thing I find incredible is that Buffett and Munger spend most of the time answering questions from shareholders. These are not rehearsed questions or ones that have to pre-approved. They’re straight from the floor and I’m told Buffett doesn’t dodge any of them. It is just great to think that the world’s richest man is completely open with his shareholders and devotes the majority of the meeting to their questions.

(By the way, if you really want some great reading, get a copy of the Berkshire annual report to shareholders – it will be some of the best, down-to-earth company insight you will ever read. Here’s a list dating back to 1977 http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/letters.html)

The Berkshire meetings have followed this question and answer format for years, regardless of the company’s performance. In Buffett’s eyes, the company belongs to the shareholders and more importantly, every question deserves a response – there are no secrets at Berkshire nor do they feel the onus is on the shareholder to dig through the minutia like some public companies do to uncover the really story.

On the other hand, The Office Depot annual meeting was held last week down the street from my office. That company is getting hammered on all fronts yet I was told that  their CEO would only take pre-submitted questions, with strict time constraints….something is definitely wrong with the process here don’t you think?

It reminded me of the countless interactions I’ve had and have been party to with buyer clients over the years with business sellers. I always laugh when sellers or their intermediaries are apprehensive about having meetings or disclosing pertinent data, even to qualified buyers until an offer is submitted. Or, when questions are deferred with the response: “you can look into that during due diligence”.

If anyone could substantiate not answering questions, it would be Warren Buffett yet he is always an open book (and quite engaging) with his shareholders. I figure that if he can spend two days answering shareholder questions, then no seller is immune from the same process.

Lesson For Buyers:

When asked about the recession he said: “I would define that as a situation where people are doing less well than they were three months, six months or eight months earlier and most businesses find themselves in that position too.

Talk about removing the economic and political BS we constantly hear and putting it into plain English.

He was also very direct when stating that his company is NOT in the business of predicting the economy…if he was, he said he would invest in the S & P futures market and not businesses.

Buffett’s long-standing take on business success is VERY simple and so critical right now. If you’re running scared finding every possible reason not to buy a business because you’re worried about the economy (make sure you read my prior blog about the recession at: http://blog.bizquest.com/2007/12/recession-what.html) and be sure to follow Buffett’s decades old PROVEN formula to create enormous wealth:

Step 1: Turn off the stock market
Step 2: Don’t worry about the economy
Step 3: Buy a business not a stock
Step 4: Manage a portfolio of businesses

So there you have it - solid advice that has worked for Warren Buffett. If you want to buy a business, focus on the long-term, not the immediate newsworthy trends. If you’re selling, get everything on the table, warts and all,  and make the process transparent for everyone.

On YouTube and Hundreds of Millions of Dollars

I read an interesting article about the YouTube deal and an interview with the founders, Chad Hurley and Steve Chen. Each is standing to make hundreds of millions of dollars from the sale. The exact amount is not known; they took a total of $11.5 million from venture firm Sequoia Capital, but the exact ownership breakdown is not disclosed. All the same, with a $1.65 billion buyout it seems safe to assume that the two founders will walk away with something in the "hundreds of millions".

This is all, by the way, for a website that was officially launched in November, 2005.

All in all, not a bad payday for about a year's worth of work. But what really drives me crazy is this quote from Hurley when asked how it feels to have hit the financial jackpot: "I haven't really thought about it."

Sure. Of course you haven't.

Just once I'd like to read one of these newly minted dot-com-hundred-millionaires say "It feels great! I worked really hard to get here, my exit strategy all along was to sell the business at some point, a great offer came along, and I jumped at it. I'm really happy I was able to sell the business for so much. Having all this money is definitely going to be fun!"

If you really "haven't thought about the money" and you just want to "continue to deliver value" to your customers and you "don't anticipate any major changes" then DON'T SELL THE BUSINESS!

And there is nothing wrong with that. If you have a business that is making money and that you love doing, there's no need at all to sell it. Run that business for the rest of your life, then pass it on to your kids.

But if you are planning to sell your business one day then you need to think about it from all perspectives, including how it will impact your customers, employees, investors and, last but not least, how will it impact you financially. It's a big decision, so you'd better think about it!

And if you happen to get lucky and walk away with hundreds of millions of dollars, then do us a favor and drop the bland, politically correct answers. Let us know that you hit the jackpot, and it feels great!