You don't have to hold onto your business until your working days are done. Here are some reasons why "retirement" and "exit planning" shouldn't be synonymous.
Have you ever noticed how the terms “retirement” and “exit planning” for business owners are often used interchangeably?
Sometimes it seems as though the only socially acceptable way to exit a privately held business is to hang on until you’re well past your prime, eventually giving the reins to your offspring so you can play golf for a few years before retiring into a home to wait to die. Your children, however much you love them, could be the last people in the world that should run your company. Spending your retirement watching your life's work diminish before your eyes –
I’m sure you have your own reasons for building a business you could sell, and while retirement is a legitimate reason, it’s not the only one. Here are my favorite reasons—inspired by real people in their 30s, 40s, 50s and 60s—for selling a business before you want to retire. You may want to:
- Become an angel investor;
- Capitalize on an unsolicited offer for your business;
- Write a serious check to a charity;
- Get rid of your mortgage;
- Start a bigger, faster and more profitable business;
- Live debt free;
- Take a year off to coach your kid’s baseball team;
- Buy a beach house;
- Get out of a toxic partnership;
- Experience what it is like to work for a big company
When I ask business owners who have sold their company to share the one thing they wish they had known before doing so, many are quick to say they wish they had known to do it sooner.
Don’t wait too long to enjoy the other jobs of life. Allow a good 20 years to do the things you have always wanted to do.
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