Share Repurchases in the News

Share repurchases are a tool frequently used by public companies to buoy their share prices.  Buybacks are a form of returns to shareholders that do not carry the sting of taxes on dividends.  What may not be generally known is the pervasiveness of the use of share repurchases by public companies.  For example, in the […]

50,000 Steps for Labor Day Weekend and the Benefit Short-Term Goals

Meeting my goal of 50,000 steps over the Labor Day Weekend is a good thing. There is, however, a greater lesson. The focus of short-term goal setting is what many of us need from time to time to be rack through the clutter and clumsiness of daily life. Lots of your important but not urgent projects also cry out for intense focus at the right time. We just have to plow through the clutter of our daily lives and focus on what’s important. I’m not naive enough to believe that we will do that all the time. However, I know from infrequent periods of intense focus that the benefits far outweigh the costs. Have an important task that you know really needs to be done and you keep putting it off. Stop today. Set a short-term goal. Let your activity on that goal crowd out those things that always get in the way, and just do it.

Valuation Concepts for Ownership and Management Transition

We have been talking about managing private company wealth in numerous posts on this blog and in my forthcoming book, Unlocking Private Company Wealth: Proven Strategies for Managing the Wealth in Your Private Business. To facilitate this discussion, we need to have an understanding about how different valuation concepts enter into the process of ownership […]

My Introduction to Personal Branding

A few months ago, I wrote a post on personal branding following a training session on the topic I gave at Mercer Capital. The post was interesting and I received a number of comments both on and off this blog. The post also triggered a request for me to provide a webinar for the Practice Builder Academy (PBA). The PBA is an academy formed by two friends of mine, Rod Burkert and Mel Abraham, to help professionals in the valuation and forensic accounting spaces develop business more effectively. I was flattered to be asked and so I prepared for and did a webinar with them. This post addresses some of the things I talked about in the PBA webinar on Personal Branding and Business Development.

10 Tips on the Role of Valuation in Ownership and Management Transitions

On Friday, August 15, 2014 I spoke at a conference of the Society of Financial Service Professionals in Orlando. Florida.  It was the first time I have spoken before this group whose members include many financial planners–all of whom have at least one and many of whom have more than one professional designations.  I attended […]

Why the Focus on EBITDA?

There is a fascination in the business world with something called EBITDA. Look on the audited financial statement of any company and you won’t find any such thing. But everyone, or almost everyone, is talking about EBITDA when they talk about business earnings. EBITDA is an acronym for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. It is important because, as we will see, EBITDA is the initial source of all reinvestment in a business and for all returns to shareholders. Investors and analysts focus on EBITDA because when buying a business or when valuing a business, it is necessary to make judgments about its ability to generate cash flow sufficient to meet all of the needs of the business and and to provide adequate returns to shareholders.

Ian Campbell’s New Book – 50 Hurdles: Business Transition Simplified

Occasionally, you may pick up a new business book and can’t wait to read it because you can tell from the beginning that it brings a fresh perspective to a known problem. Ian Campbell’s new book, 50 Hurdles: Business Transition Simplified, is one of those books. Let me introduce you to this wonderful book now.

Is There Life Insurance Associated With Your Buy-Sell Agreement?

If there is life insurance associated with your buy-sell agreement, it is critical to be sure that the language in the agreement and any related documents specifies its treatment precisely. Life insurance can be used as a funding vehicle to acquire the stock of a deceased owner. If so, the life insurance is not treated as part of the purchase price. Alternatively, life insurance can be a corporate asset (corporate-owned life insurance, or COLI), and proceeds are part of value. The two different treatments provide different, perhaps dramatically different results for selling owners and remaining owners when buy-sell agreements are triggered by the death of an owner.