How Your Age Shapes Your Exit Plan

How Your Age Shapes Your Exit Plan

Your age has a big impact on your attitude toward your business, and your feelings about one day getting out of it. This article discusses a few generational patterns that emerged in the research for Built to Sell: Creating a Business That Can Thrive Without You.

How Your Age Shapes Your Exit Plan

Your age has a big impact on your attitude toward your business, and your feelings about one day getting out of it. This article discusses a few generational patterns that emerged in the research for Built to Sell: Creating a Business That Can Thrive Without You.

Your age has a big impact on your attitude toward your business, and your feelings about one day getting out of it.

 
For example, one person who runs a boutique mergers and acquisitions business refuses to take assignments from business owners over the age of 70.
 
He has found that septuagenarians are so personally invested that they can rarely bring themselves to sell their business – frequently calling off the sale halfway through, claiming they just wouldn’t know what to do with themselves if it closed.
 
While it’s always dangerous to generalize – especially based on something as touchy as age – a few patterns emerged in the research for Built to Sell: Creating a Business That Can Thrive Without You.
 

Owners aged 25 to 46

 
Twenty- and thirty-something business owners grew up in an age when job security did not exist. They watched as their parents got downsized or packaged off into early retirement, and that resulted in a somewhat jaded attitude towards the role of a business in society.
 
Business owners in their twenties and thirties generally see their companies as a means to an end, and most expect to sell in the next 5 to 10 years.
 
Similar to their employed classmates, who move to a new job every 3 to 5 years, business owners in this age group often expect to start a few companies in their lifetime.
 

Aged 47 to 65

 
Baby boomers came of age at a time when the social contract between a company and an employee was sacrosanct. An employee agreed to be loyal to the company, and, in return, the company agreed to provide a decent living and a pension for a few golden years.
 
Many of the business owners in this generation think of their company as more than a profit center. They see their business as part of a community and, by extension, themselves as community leaders.
 
To many boomers, the idea of selling their company feels like selling out their employees and their community. That’s why so many chief executive officers in their fifties and sixties are torn: they know they need to sell to fund their retirement, but they agonize over where that will leave their loyal employees.
 

Sixty-five plus

 
Older business owners grew up in a time when hobbies were impractical and discouraged. You went to work while your wife tended to the kids (today, more than half of businesses are started by women, but those were different times), you ate dinner, you watched the news, and you went to bed.
 
With few hobbies and little other than work to define them, business owners in their late sixties, seventies, and eighties feel lost without their business – that’s why so many refuse to sell or experience depression after they do.
 
Of course, there will always be exceptions to general rules of thumb, but frequently – more than your industry, nationality, marital status, or educational background – your birth certificate defines your exit plan.

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