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"Great Wealth Transfer"

3,294 Views | 13 Replies | Last: 1 mo ago by houstonag90
CuriousAg
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2.3 million boomer businesses currently. 70% don't have a succession plan in place.

How do I take over one/many of these businesses? What is the best place to find them? (BuyBizSell, Loopnet?)

What niche would you look into?



12thMan9
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AG
Talk to 1 of the 70%.
Ronnie '88
Casey TableTennis
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AG
I would look into any business where they are a 1 person show. The price would be low, transferability low. That would allow you to come in cheap, over a few years, and then make more transferable as you create processes, modernize, scale. Value/ebitda would be easy to improve, creating cash flow to rinse repeat or be more purposeful about venture #2.

Almost any industry can fit this.
one safe place
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Buy nearly anything, learn all the buzzwords, find someone who knows less about things than you do, bombard him or her with those buzzwords, and sell them the business for way more than you paid. I kid, kinda.
Captain Winky
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My dad's a neurosurgeon but refuses to let me take over the family business. Its a tough road out there.
jagvocate
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AG
You can carve out certain services like sponge baths and getting people their shoes after surgery, don't give up

Troglodyte
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AG
Most of these investments aren't cash flow businesses that you can buy and passively own. 90+% of the time, "the guy" is the business. You can step in and take over for him, but you need to work with him for several years to learn and get a good reputation.

If you are young and willing to work hard, this is definitely a great career move.
Complete Idiot
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12thMan9 said:

Talk to 1 of the 70%.
Talk to 23,000 businesses? What are you, insane?
MAS444
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AG
Not a boomer I'd be happy to sell you my business (for the right price).
bagger05
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AG
CuriousAg said:

2.3 million boomer businesses currently. 70% don't have a succession plan in place.

How do I take over one/many of these businesses? What is the best place to find them? (BuyBizSell, Loopnet?)

What niche would you look into?
What are your goals?



For what it's worth, I think there are three kinds of these businesses out there.

You've got your high asset/low employee/high customer count businesses. This is the "boring businesses" stuff that a lot of Instagram gurus talk about. Laundromats, RV and mobile home parks, storage facilities. I have no experience with these. I personally wonder if selling courses teaching people how to do it is more lucrative than actually doing it.

Then you've got one man bands. As others have said, you probably need the necessary skills to deliver that service to take that over.

And then there's lifestyle businesses. They've been grown TO A POINT. Then the owner got happy and didn't want the next level of problems so they just put it on cruise control. Very common that the business NEEDS the owner to function. Often it's sales. Usually also includes a bunch of business admin stuff like payroll, banking, taxes, 401(k), insurance, IT, HR, etc.

What you're signing up for there is one of two things: you keep on trucking as the previous person did (and do the same five jobs they were doing and are linchpinned like they were). Or you decide to clean it up and grow it to make it more profitable (eventually) and maybe sell it to someone else someday.

Plenty of folks out there that can help you find a good lifestyle business. There are some brokers on TexAgs that hang out on this forum. The challenge is the price. The owner of the lifestyle business always thinks it's worth more than it is.


I bought a lifestyle business four years and seven days ago. If you've got questions I can share what I've learned.


But big question is WHAT IS YOUR GOAL? Also, be advised that passive income is a myth.
CuriousAg
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Appreciate the replies.

Not looking to be an absentee owner. Mid-30s, willing to learn, put in the time to build a skill and take to next level.

Currently in Saas space selling into Landscape space. Lots of owners who started mowing lawns in college and now have successful businesses. Lots of PEs buying them up for the recurring revenue.

I have been an irrigation tech in my past. Haven't ruled out acquiring Landscape company and implementing technology.

Goal: want to take off when I want to take off after building business. Eat what I kill vs give 99% to current employer. Wife is stable Partner at her company and can contribute to marketing purposes in the future to help expand. Time is now to take a leap and build something the next 15-25 years or multiple ventures in that time.
bagger05
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AG
Sounds like you're in the exact same situation as a friend of mine. He joined my CEO group right after he bought a company. He was tired of working for the man and didn't want to be a founder. Ended up buying a trailer dealership.

I recently asked him for some recommendations for another friend and this is what he said:

Quote:

I would start with these resources first. They are the building blocks of knowledge and open gates to thousands of others who have gone down this path.

Books - Buy then Build by Walker Diebel and How to Buy a Small Business by Harvard Business
Podcasts - Acquiring Minds, Acquisitions Anonymous, How 2Exit, Think like an Owner
Online Forums - SMB Twitter and Searchfunder.com

Another book I'd recommend is Rocket Fuel by Gino Wickman and Mark Winters. Most great companies have two people at the top -- the ideas person and the execution person. Getting a sense of which of these people you are will help you figure out what type of company you're looking for.

If you're an ideas person, you'll need to find a business with a capable execution person. Or much more likely - you'll need to hire this person so plan accordingly (they're not cheap).

If you're an execution person, you'll probably want to find something where the upside is in improving profitability and scaling rather than pursuing new markets or stealing market share.
CuriousAg
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Thank you for sharing these resources. This is exactly what I am looking for to get this journey started.
houstonag90
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I recently went down this path about a year ago and would be willing to have a chat if you have some questions. If so feel free to send me an email and we can set up a call.

connor_redd@outlook.com
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