PAYROLL PROTECTION ACT LOANS (HOW TO APPLY FOR THEM)

The question of the day is whether to go about SBA loan applications and how.

There are lots caveats, but here are the broad strokes.

  1. Legislation passed congress and was signed by Trump Friday

  2. It provides for loans of 2.5x last year's average monthly payroll (up to $10 million)

  3. It can be used for payroll and other essential overhead items like employee benefits and debt interest

  4. If you keep employment at pre-coronavirus levels for eight weeks after receiving the loan it is eligible to be forgiven

  5. The loans will NOT be processed through the SBA's web site.

  6. Banks will take applications, process the paperwork and provide the loans through the existing SBA 7(a) framework

  7. Lending guidelines have been relaxed and they "hope" funds will be available in three weeks

Several bankers we have talked with today have confirmed there is no way for them to process these applications today. The legislation provides 15 days for SBA and lenders to figure out how to administer the loans. Most hope to be taking applications next week.

If you have not done so already and you anticipate applying for a loan contact your banker tomorrow and get specifics on when they expect to begin processing applications and what information they will require.

Then get that information to us and we will help. In normal times we would be making some of these calls for you. But there is no way for us to run point on this with each client's local bank. Please take initiative and get on the list with your banker.

Whether to accept the money is a question we will focus on helping clients answer over the next week. For now let's assume you will need it and start the process.

TOOL: PAID MEDICAL AND CHILD CARE LEAVE GOES EFFECTIVE 4/1/20

Here are the main points for mandated medical leave and child care.

  1. Beginning April 1st you must comply with the new paid leave mandate.

  2. If you have fewer than 500 employees the law applies to you

  3. Sick leave is for ten days (two work weeks). It covers someone under quarantine, self-quarantine or someone with COVID-19 symptoms seeking a diagnosis. These people get 100% of their regular pay, limited to $511 per day.

  4. Sick leave can also be taken for ten days if someone is caring for a COVID-19 patient or who has to stay home to care for a child because the child care provider or child’s school is closed. These people get 2/3 of their regular pay for two weeks up to $200 per day.

  5. Child care leave is available for an additional 10 weeks at 2/3 pay up to $200 per day.

  6. If you have fewer than 50 employees and child care leave is going to put you out of business you can request an exemption.

  7. Employers can use their payroll tax deposits to make these payments.

  8. If the payroll tax deposit is not enough to keep the employer from coming out of pocket the employer can request an advance refund. IRS expects these requests to be processed in two weeks or less.

HOW ARE YOU GOING TO AFFORD THIS? The concern has been cash flow. Watch the video for an example of how this will work.

Client Update - Planning in the Face of a Coming Stimulus Bill

Some good news, we have been incredibly encouraged this week and last. The teams we have met with are grounded, in good spirits and are demonstrating great leadership. A couple of things have stood out.

1) A plan helps a lot. I’ve talked to a lot of business owners over the last three weeks. Our clients with a strategic plan, even a plan that is undergoing revisions as we speak are handling this much better than other businesses who don’t have a plan. The mental clarity, reassurance and decision making ability provided by a plan cannot be replaced by anything else. And it’s not just numbers…your values, your vision, your why and your mission matter A LOT and they are helping businesses make important decisions.

2) Plans aren’t changing THAT much. No one is panicking. We don’t know what the next 2-4 weeks are going to be like so there’s no sense in going crazy. We are revising most revenue forecasts down. We are planning to make some tough decisions about payroll if things get a lot worse. But no one is closing up shop or running for the hills. We are going to adapt and adjust to this the same way we adjust to other challenges.

3) Leadership teams are killing it. It’s hard to tell you just how much all of us have been struck by the exemplary leadership we are seeing. It’s awesome!

About the stimulus bill:

A lot of clients are anxious to know if it can help and what is in it. WE DON”T KNOW YET. As of 5:15 today the full text isn’t available. Here’s what’s being reported by media who are getting a peek at it…

1. There will be a deferment of payroll taxes potentially for the rest of the year. I don’t think this is a good idea. Watch the video for an explanation.

2. There will be some kind of payroll tax credit for keeping payrolls level. We don’t know how much. We don’t know for how long.

3. There will be small business loans based on payroll. These are not a saving grace. Watch the video for more.

4. You can’t do the loans AND get the payroll tax credit.

5. It all appears to be short term. Nothing is meant to get you any farther than 6/30.

As soon as we get a look at the bill itself I will send out another update.

Our tune hasn’t changed. We need to make smart decisions assuming you won’t get anything from the federal government. This will bail out some industries like the airlines, but it CANNOT bail out the entire small business economy in the US. There is $300B set aside for small businesses (under 500 employees). There are 30 million of these businesses in the US. That’s $10,000 on average for every small business. We have to work our way through this and ADAPT and if we get help it’s gravy.

Client Update: Using Video to Connect with Your Team on COVID-19 Updates

Video, Video, Video

The necessity to hold meetings virtually has seen teams adopting video platforms like Zoom. That's no surprise. But some of our innovative and creative clients are harnessing the power of video to record and distribute daily updates to teams. This is powerful. At a time when our teams are longing for connection more than ever video delivers in a way that text alone does not. As the leader it is your job to reassure, inspire and motivate your team. Use all the tools available. I have no shame in ripping off good ideas so true to form this message is also available as a video.

Values are core

We preach constantly about values and teams quickly understand how important they are. This is the time for your values to take center stage and inform every aspect of how you address our continuously changing environment. As an example, here's how Axiom's values are informing our response and plans for next week.

Value #1: Care - we love those we serve

You may not know this but we pray for you, by name, every week during our operations meeting. That will continue on a more frequent basis and will be accompanied by fasting as we seek wisdom, guidance and stamina to serve you well. 

We will also be setting up a schedule to dial into your weekly meetings even when they occur outside of our normal meeting schedule. We want to stay abreast of developments in your business and be available to jump in as a resource during these times when your leadership team might be stretched thin.

Value #2: Truth - speak the truth, even when it is difficult to say or difficult for others to hear

We should all be preparing for a shelter-in-place scenario like those in California, New York and Pennsylvania. The economic impacts of this will be immense. It is unlikely that either the payroll tax rebate or forgivable, federally backed loans being floated in proposed legislation will be sufficient to insulate small businesses from the negative cash flow impacts of a shutdown. The good news is that many client businesses fall under essential services classifications OR they involve business operations transferable to a work at home setting. That means it will be market effects, not government intervention that we must adapt to. The state and local mandates providing guidance on essential services are below for your reference.

California

New York

Pennsylvania

Value #3: Diligence - be prepared and bring the right amount of work to the task

All clients should begin revisiting short and long term cash flow forecasts including weekly and monthly cash "burn" rates, updated sales forecasts, and anticipated cash balances over the next six months. This is our priority for each of you over the coming weeks. Don't worry if this language is Greek to you or you don't know where to start. We will be driving this conversation for you and will marshall whatever resources are required to come up with a cash flow plan. We don't know what federal programs for recovery will look like yet so we are planning without them in an abundance of caution.

Value #4: Learning - read every day and learn to ask better questions

We are reading a ton, trying to keep up with the situation across multiple industries and state jurisdictions. One of the most important questions we can ask is "what can work from home mean?" especially when it is not at all obvious how normal work can happen away from the workplace. Let's face it. These are not "normal" times. Think outside the box. One of our clients this morning shared with his team the lessons he learned from the last recession and how marketing through the difficult times when everyone else was cutting their marketing budgets proved to be the difference maker. On the other side of the recession when competitors were struggling to catch up on their marketing his team was way ahead.

This recession will be painful, but it is different in that systemic failures in the market do not need to be repaired. It is also different in that demand for essential services will continue to be "pent up" and must be released on the other side of the emergency. If you must have employees work from home rather than behind the wheel of a truck or a forklift consider what it looks like to have those employees deepen connections with co-workers and customers during this time. What does outreach look like? What services or support can be offered virtually (potentially at zero cost)? The actions you take now will determine the culture and retention rates you enjoy later. Think longer term than the rest of the world is inclined to think right now.

Client Update: Up Your Meeting Frequency to Give Peace of Mind During COVID-19

We are seeing some great examples of proactive communication, and it is working to put employees minds at ease. This is a time to lead and give those on your team an alternative to the fear and hand wringing they see in the media.

The most proactive leadership teams are meeting every day to stay on top of new information. Already we are seeing a shift in attitudes and approach. Here's what I mean. Last week all the focus was on "What can we do to assure customers it is safe to work with us?" Now companies are starting to ask "How can we make sure customers aren't going to get our employees sick." The shift is pragmatic.

Building departments and county offices are staying open, but are closed to the public. This means using online means to acquire permits or request inspections. Communication from Sarasota County assured businesses that inspections would continue to take place, but with enhanced precautions. Bars are closed, but restaurants are open (with reduced capacity). Beaches are open for groups of ten or less (?). Even the shelter in place orders enacted in northern California contain some broad exemptions that will keep many businesses open. In other words, life must go on

We are seeing our first cases of leadership team members working from home in an abundance of caution after feeling ill or being around someone else who was feeling ill. Let's face it, some of your employees are going to get sick and experience flu like symptoms for a few days. It will impact your workforce. This is where the cross training and work on processes and procedures that you've been doing will pay off. 

When you have employees out sick take extra measures to check in on them and keep them up to speed on what is happening back at the office. They will miss the community, culture and connection to their friends and coworkers while they are out. And without you they will be at the mercy of mass media and social media for their information. Don't let that happen. Continue to encourage and care for them until they can come back stronger than ever.

Something neat we have seen in two totally unrelated situations is businesses pushing forward with virtual initiatives that have historically had slow adoption rates by customers. People don't like change until it works in their favor. A 100% virtual estimate and sales proposal that seemed too much of a hassle last month is welcomed today. The option to teleconsult with the family physician wasn't even considered 30 days ago, but is eagerly accepted now. If you have opportunities to virtualize some aspect of your product or service delivery, now is the time to offer those alternatives to a receptive customer base. 

Finally, a word of encouragement. Did you know that Fortune magazine was started during the Great Depression by an entrepreneur who wanted to inspire and encourage others during a difficult time? I learned that on a family vacation to Chicago 4 years ago (thanks, Carrie for reminding me). Be a light to those around you. Inspire, encourage and exhort! Never underestimate your role as a leader and the impact you have on your team by walking through the door with the right attitude.

Client Update: How Other Businesses Are Responding to Coronavirus

There is a lot of information circulating on the coronavirus. This is not a replacement for that information. It is meant for our small community of clients and their top leaders. My hope is that we can share with you what we are learning from other businesses like yours, how they are responding, and what they are experiencing. Mass media is totally disconnected from the world of real small business owners, and little of the information they provide is helpful in making decisions.

With that in mind…

Over communicate:

This begins with our leadership team. All of us should be adjusting our priorities for this quarter and next. That means the execution will have to follow suite. And execution won’t happen without coordinated communication and effort on your team. This is no time to abandon your weekly operations meetings to put out fires.You should be doing just the opposite. Most clients are adding a separate mid-week meeting specifically for addressing issues related to coronavirus and new information that has become available since the last meeting.

EVERYONE in your company needs to know what the leadership team is doing in response. If you want them focused on the job at hand you need to reassure them that YOU are worrying about the details AND sweating the big picture. As long as they know you are on it they will be more at peace. A simple email blast detailing the latest of what you know and what you are doing will go a long way.

Empathize with customers:

If your business involves home visits rewrite call scripts to acknowledge customer’s anxiety, inform them of precautionary measures you have in place and ask if there is anything else you can do to put them at ease. Telling them they shouldn’t be worried is not an option. Meet them where they are. If you have elderly customers ask if there is anything you can do for them, pickup for them, bring to them on your way to a service call.

Prepare for months and hope for weeks:

The Continental European approach seems to be tending toward slowing the transmission rate to give the healthcare system as much time to work as possible. This probably won’t impact the total number of people who get the virus, but it will spread them out over a longer period of time. The UK’s approach seems to be more geared to weather a worse storm over a shorter period of time. It was unclear where the US was headed, but recent guidance from CDC recommending the cancellation of any event with 50 or more people for the next EIGHT WEEKS, the White House is recommending people avoid gatherings of ten or more people, and six San Fransisco area counties have mandated shelter in place.

Get as much done now as you possibly can. Production work should take precedence over administrative chores. There will be time to sweep the warehouse floor later.

Those of you in the service sector may have remote work options. We work remotely with almost all of our client teams and we can help you with systems and tools if you need it. In terms of meetings and communication visit axiomstrategic.com/tech for one such resource. At a bare minimum your leadership team should be setup to work outside the office.

We are seeing lots of great opportunities for businesses to serve employees during this time including :

  • Kids watching kids with high schoolers of some employees watching middle school and elementary kids of other employees while school is out.

  • Accepting donations from other employees who have excess staples (water, canned foods, toiletries) and stocking internal food banks to put employees minds at ease.

  • Remote work arrangements for employees who need to be with their older parents providing care and peace of mind.

  • Simply making the rounds and asking how employees are feeling and what we can do to relieve any anxiety they might be experiencing.

Other service opportunities we are seeing:

  • Assemble call lists of elderly customers with the anticipation that there will be slow times in coming weeks to reach out to them and perform periodic check-ins, if for no other reason than to give them someone to talk to.

  • Add an option to auto-attendants asking callers if there is anything else we can do to help them through this time, even if hit has nothing to do with our business.

Let us know what you are experiencing. It helps us paint a better, more complete picture for all of our clients. We will continue to send updates, ideas and insights as things develop. And call if you have questions or a specific situation you need to talk about before our next scheduled meeting.

52 Strategic Todo's for the New Year

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Want to make the new year your best ever? That sounds cliche, but if you’re ready to do the work it is imminently feasible.

The biggest difference between growing businesses and stuck ones is the amount of time they spend working ON the business. It' isn’t about filling customer orders or handling complaints. It is about tearing apart and rebuilding the order process and asking why the complaints are happening in the first place. It isn’t reducing overtime by hiring more people. It’s asking how many people are we going to need ten years from now and in what order?

But this is not urgent work so it gets pushed aside so that orders can get filled, complaints can get handled and applicants can get interviewed.

If there’s one thing you can to make this next year different it is to spend 60-90 minutes per week working on the business. It’s so important we dedicated an entire episode of the Axiom Podcast to it. Here are 52 strategic todo’s to get you started.

  1. List and define 3-4 core company values

  2. Define your vision by writing a one sentence goal for the next ten years.

  3. Write 2-3 paragraphs describing why your business is important to you and why achieving your 10 year vision matters

  4. Write a one sentence mission statement that describes what you do and why to the general public

  5. Draw your ten year organization chart

  6. Write down the 5 most important things you and only you can do on a weekly basis.

  7. Look back over the past week and do a time audit by identifying when and where you spent your most valuable and least valuable 8 hours.

  8. Identify your three biggest competitors and secret shop their prices

  9. Do a "new customer" walk through of your business

  10. Walk through the warehouse or materials storage area and make a list of anything that looks like it hasn't moved in the last 6-12 months

  11. Ask someone to call the front desk with a specific problem. Listen on speakerphone and write down what you learn about your customer's experience.

  12. Listen to the last 10 customer service calls and identify 2 things that went well and 2 things that didn't in each call.

  13. Take your insurance agent to lunch, describe your ten year vision and ask what you should be doing now to manage risk better.

  14. Take your CPA to lunch, describe your ten year vision and ask what you should be doing now to manage taxes better.

  15. Go through all of your advertising spend for the last 12 months and determine whether you can calculate your return on investment for each vendor/channel.

  16. Identify two products or services you should stop offering and come up with a timeline to get out of them.

  17. Call your industry trade association and ask what you should be taking advantage of that you aren't

  18. Call a competitor across the country and setup a time to discuss best practices

  19. Read your employee handbook and highlight anything that is out of date or confusing

  20. Ask HR to put you through a new employee orientation

  21. Schedule your time off for the next year and share it with your leadership team

  22. Go to your website and make a list of all the stuff that doesn't work or doesn't look like you want it to.

  23. Write down your personal goals for the next year

  24. List all of your products and/or services and next to each write down the price and the date the price was last adjusted.

  25. Call the chamber of commerce and ask who you should call for [your product or service] in the area. Follow-up by asking what you would need to improve for your company to be top of mind on future calls.

  26. Take the mayor to lunch and ask what your company can do to help the city.

  27. Identify two things on your desk that you can delegate to someone you normally do not delegate to. Give them the work and describe what success looks like with a deadline.

  28. Imagine that you landed in the hospital tomorrow and were out of the office for 6 weeks. What day-to-day tasks do you need to delegate for this to be a minor inconvenience opposed to a major disruption.

  29. Walk through the storage lot, yard, etc and make a list of all the things that need to be scrapped, dumped or sold.

  30. Walk into each and every bathroom and ask yourself "what does this space say about my business?"

  31. Spend 90 minutes with the person in charge of facilities/physical plant and have them show you evertyhing that needs repairing, painting, maintenance, etc.

  32. Ask accounting to spend 90 minutes with you going over every item on the balance sheet.

  33. Compare overhead expense accounts today to where they were 5 years ago. What has increased the most and why?

  34. Take your lowest performing salesperson to lunch and ask what you can do to make him more successful.

  35. Take your newest employee to lunch and ask what needs to change in the company.

  36. Take your oldest tenured employee to lunch and ask why they're still choosing to work for your company.

  37. Google your service/product and see where you show up. Who's ahead of you? Why?

  38. Identify the biggest crisis of the last week. What can be done to avoid a repeat ocurence?

  39. Call the last customer account that you lost and ask what you could have done to keep their business.

  40. Call your longest standing customer and ask what you can do for them to say thank you.

  41. Ask your spouse to list the ten best and ten worst things about the business.

  42. Calculate your annual, monthly, weekly, daily and hourly breakeven sales numbers.

  43. Do a quick interior inspection of every vehicle in the fleet. Take pictures of the best and the worst.

  44. Go through your calendar and write down a highlight and lowlight for each of the last 12 months.

  45. Do a personal SWOT analysis of your company.

  46. Answer the question "what would break if sales doubled over the next three months?"

  47. Ask for the check register and go over the last 30 days worth of cash disbursements.

  48. Call your banker and ask what services you should be using, but are not.

  49. Ask your largest vendor to analyze your account and identify ways you can save money while increasing business with them.

  50. Brainstorm three new products/services your company could launch in the next two years. Ask your team to provide feedback in one week.

  51. Ask your best and worst salesmen to pitch you back to back.

  52. Identify 90 minutes during each week for the next 52 weeks when you will work on the business and put them in your calendar.

How to be the CEO of a Family Business

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Mark sat across the conference table from me utterly frustrated and ready to resign. He'd had enough. Running a $20 million company was not an easy task. He was responsible for four locations, 180 employees, and over 20,000 retail customers. The industry was under assault from Chinese competitors and low unemployment was making labor hard to find. His controller and right hand person was 70 years old and struggling with health issues. But it wasn't these challenges that had Mark on the brink of resignation. It was his family.

Mark’s company is owned by three different generations of family members. Poor estate planning decades ago had resulted in the ownership being handed down haphazardly to cousins, siblings, aunts and uncles. Year's of profitability had trained these family members to expect and depend on their dividend checks. Now Mark needed to replace four aging fork lifts, one of which employees refused to use because of its age and unsafe condition. He also needed to replace the roof on one location and refurbish the showroom in another. He had the money, but on his screen there was an email, from an uncle, four states away, complaining about Mark's "frivolous" spending habits. Mark had no doubt the uncle was more concerned with his upcoming quarterly dividend check.

Mark was just weeks away from the annual family board meeting, and he told me he was done. He didn't know what he was going to do next. His wife had a good job outside the family business, and he'd figure it out in time. He was 51 years old. He had taken the company from $8 million to $20 million in sales. And now he was leaving.

The more I heard about Mark's situation, the worse it got. The fundamental problem was one of role confusion. There were few distinctions between family members. Mark was dealing with shareholders, non-shareholders working in the business, those with family meeting votes and those without, executives and entry level children of passive owners who lived thousands of miles away. It seemed like everyone had their noses in places they didn't belong, and I could see exactly why Mark was leaving. His company had failed to properly identify three distinct roles. We will call them hats, because just like hats you can take one off and put another one on. And you can't wear more than one at a time without looking like an idiot. Here are the three hats family businesses must manage.

The Shareholder Hat

Shareholders own the company. In good times they can collect dividends. In bad times they may have to invest more cash to keep the company going. Sometimes there is one shareholder who owns 100%. Sometimes there are two who own 50% each. Sometimes there are more with wildly different shares of ownership. In most cases dividends get paid out and capital gets raised in proportion to each individual’s ownership percentage.

But there is one just one critical role of shareholders. They elect the board of directors. In this role their votes are usually counted in proportion to their shares of ownership (but not always).

That's it. Shareholders don't work in the business. They don't manage the business. They don't make investment decisions or hire and fire employees. To do those things you must take off the shareholder hat and put on another hat. And that was the biggest problem in Mark's situation. People with a shareholder hat were doing things that shareholders don't do. It is a recipe for disaster and it makes more sense when you understand the other two hats.

The Board Member Hat

Board members are voted in by the shareholders. It is their responsibility to hire the CEO and hold that person accountable. The board is responsible for major decisions such as when dividends will be paid and how much will be paid. The board may also approve financing and capital raise decisions. But the main function of the board is to hold the CEO accountable while serving as a sounding board for long term strategic decisions.

Board members may or may not be shareholders. Having outside board members to provide a different perspective can be very valuable, especially when it comes to breaking tie votes between family members. Outside board members are also able to consider things from an objective perspective not clouded by potential financial gain or loss.

It is important to remember that just being a shareholder doesn't guarantee a board member seat. Shareholders with little business experience or technical skill should probably stay off the board. Unlike shareholder votes board votes are usually counted equally meaning a 1% shareholder appointed to a four person board has a 25% say in appointing the CEO and holding her accountable.

The Employee Hat

Employees are hired and can be fired. They get a paycheck. They have job descriptions, accountabilities and get evaluated for their performance. The CEO is an employee. In that capacity he or she makes a million decisions about both the long term direction of the business and the short term day-to-day operations. The CEO is responsible for the financial performance of the business as well as the culture, public perception, marketplace reputation, and overall influence the company wields. The buck stops at the CEO's desk. In short the board hires the CEO and the CEO hires everyone else.

When the board hires the CEO it should provide an employment contract that guarantees some insulation from shareholders and even the board itself so that the CEO can run the company without undue interference. When you hear about CEO's getting million dollar payouts as part of their severance package this is what you are seeing. Those CEO's were recruited under the following two conditions:

  1. If I come work for your board of directors you will leave me alone to do what I do best.

  2. If you don't leave me alone you'll pay me a bunch of money to leave.

There were a lot of things wrong with Mark's situation, but this was probably at the top of the list. People like Mark don't suffer fools meddling in their business, at least not without a lot of financial compensation. But Mark didn't have a contract and the board had no financial consequence for its meddling. In the end both sides lost.

The CEO often isn't the only family member in the business. In Mark's case he worked alongside cousins that were store managers and a brother who ran the vehicle fleet. His dad still did some HR work part time. All of them received paychecks. But they all felt entitled to weigh in on daily business decisions because they were shareholders.

Venues

As you can imagine in most small businesses these hats are not defined very well. It is hard to know when to take one hat off and put the other on. But the concept of VENUES can make it much easier. There are venues where you only wear the shareholder hat, other venues where you only wear the board member hat, and everywhere else you wear the employee hat (if you are indeed an employee of the company).

Think about it this way. If you go to a wedding you don't wear your gym clothes. Similarly when you show up to work on Monday morning you leave your shareholder or board member hat in the car. It's time to put on your employee hat and go to work.

The shareholder hat gets worn roughly once a year. This is true of public companies and it should be true of most small businesses. There is an annual shareholder meeting where board members are affirmed or replaced, an annual report is presented and shareholders are given access to board members and executives for Q&A. There is also an investor relations function within the company that disseminates information to shareholders regarding company performance and the status of their share holdings. But that's it. Shareholders don't weigh in on the strategic plan or day-to-day business decisions.

The board member hat gets worn quarterly and sometimes monthly in fast growing businesses. Board members receive updates from the CEO and executive team, ask questions, vote on long term strategic issues and short term decisions requiring capital. Their function is primarily accountability for the CEO and vetting long term strategic decisions. They will review financial performance against expectations and should have a decent knowledge of how the business makes and spends its money. In times of transition the board may hold special meetings as they recruit and hire a new CEO. In moments of crisis the board may be convened for emergency sessions, but those should be rare.

Board meetings are governed by the company by-laws and one or more board members should be familiar with Roberts Rules of Order. Most of the time the formality will seem like overkill, but when you need to address a contentious issue orderly motions, discussion and voting is absolutely critical. The trick is to use them all the time because when you need them most it will be too late if they are not already a part of the board's standard meeting procedure.

How it works in the real world - One Owner/Operator

The single owner/operator has to wear all three hats. Let's address each one in turn.

The CEO hat

We are big fans of Gino Wickman's Accountability Chart idea. This looks similar to an organization chart except that we focus on the 5 or 6 key accountabilities for each person on the chart, not their job title. The CEO should have accountabilities for leadership (what Wickman calls LMA or leadership, management and accountability), success of the strategic plan, financial performance and a few others. Defining these accountabilities is important, especially as the team grows.

Every day the CEO's job is to fulfill these responsibilities. And every day when he shows up for work these are the most important things on his plate.

The Board Member Hat

Most Single owner/operators don’t have a board, but they should. You can recruit some outside advisors to the board and meet with them quarterly. Often the spouse is a member of this group, but not always. Sometimes a CEO roundtable group serves as a proxy for a board of advisors. I think it is better to recruit a small group of 3 or 4 trusted advisors whose sole focus is your business and holding you accountable to your plans. For the cost of a nice meal once a quarter you can add significant horsepower to your business.

Alternatively you can hire an outside firm to act as your board-for-hire. This has the benefit of paying people whose role is to tell you things you may not want to hear. Several times a year they force you to put on the board member hat and critically examine the job you have done as the manager of the business.

The Shareholder Hat

For a single owner/operator this is usually a formality, but an important one. Almost every corporation, no matter its jurisdiction, needs to have an annual meeting to legitimize its corporate standing under state law. This can be done when the tax return is signed or at some other discrete annual event that can be documented. After all it is unlikely that the shareholder is going to appoint a new board and hire a new CEO. But documenting an annual resolution to affirm the existing board, acknowledge newly appointed members, accept the financial statements as presented in the tax return and sign off on any other state mandated compliance requirements is hugely important if anyone every attempts to pierce the corporate veil in a law suit.

Multiple Owners

Businesses with two or more owners essentially follow the same path with a few important modifications:

  • The accountability chart becomes critical. Very few "Co-CEO" arrangements work. Someone has to be administratively responsible for the overall business on a day-to-day basis. The formal existence of a board makes this much easier to accomplish because the non-CEO owner knows that several times a year the CEO will be held accountable and the votes will be equal.

  • The board or outside advisors should establish a tie breaker vote by creating an odd number of members. Two board members with an equal vote is a recipe for disaster. Without a board the owners try to make board decisions while relying on shareholder voting percentages. The majority owner either tries to cast the tie breaking vote or (just as often) defers to the minority owner in an abundance of unwarranted caution. With three owners this is less likely, but a separate board with outside advisors is still a good idea.

  • The annual shareholder's meeting needs to be more than just a formality. In most states the assets of one spouse are joint property in the marriage meaning your partner’s spouse is just as much a partner as the person listed on the share certificate. It makes sense to get everyone in the same room, include the spouses, present the results for the last year, talk about plans that are being executed for the future and give people a chance to ask questions.

Multiple Family Members as Owners

As we move to multiple family members the stakes get higher. Everything that was important for multiple owners to address is even more so for multiple family members:

  • Without an accountability chart family members are virtually guaranteed to speak out of turn. Without core accountabilities it also becomes nearly impossible to call out poor performance among family members. It is very common to see parts of the business that are struggling because family members have been given a job title with no specific accountabilities. Job titles might have their place on a business card, but it is much more important to know what the key non-negotiables are when it comes to job performance.

  • Outside board members or advisors are necessary to defuse sensitive topics and make sure everyone adheres to the ground rules of decorum and civil discussion. Outsiders also help insulate the business against family factions or sibling rivalries. This is also the critical point at which CEO's can become extraordinarily ineffective if not shielded from board interference by a good employment contract. All of this costs money, but as the complexity of the ownership structure increases so do the costs of managing it all and making sure the company continues to grow and thrive.

  • The annual shareholder's meeting essentially becomes an annual family business meeting. And that is a good thing. Having a safe place where family members are not only allowed to ask questions, but are in fact obligated to do so helps make sure the table talk at Thanksgiving remains civil. Establishing clear boundaries where issues are and are not open to discussion is huge for these small businesses. But you have to provide a venue and a structure for this to happen. It won’t magically appear without considerable effort.

If you would like a playbook for setting up the structures above reach out to us with "Family Playbook" in the subject line of your email.

How to sell your business

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It is not uncommon for baby boomers to see business sale as the logical end game over the next 5-10 years. But there's a dirty little secret when it comes to getting your business ready to sell.

The same things you have to do to maximize sales price are the same things that make selling your business a terrible idea.

To understand where I am coming from let's start with how businesses are valued.

How Much Can I Get?

I tend to divide sellers (and therefore the businesses they sell) into two categories:

  1. Those selling a job

  2. Those selling a business

What's the difference? Job sellers are typically small "mom-and-pop" businesses doing less than $500,000 to $1 million in revenue. In these businesses the owner is usually the most highly compensated employee, and the person who does the most work. In these owner/operator situations the business literally will not survive without the day-to-day involvement of the owner in basic business operations (sales, service, production, bookkeeping, etc).

These businesses tend to be sold by less sophisticated business brokers who use an "Owners Free Cash Flow" valuation method. Basically they add up everything being paid to the owner whether it be salary, bonuses, benefits, car allowances, personal expenses, loan repayments or draws from retained earnings. The total is then multiplied by some rule of thumb to arrive at the asking price.

Sellers usually get about one year's worth of compensation out of the deal before taxes. This gives them some breathing room, but the clock is ticking. Unless they were already financially independent it is just a matter of time before the seller must find a job or start a new business.

Buyers of these "jobs" pay for the privilege of coming to work every day and "being their own boss," which is ironic because the newly minted small business owner quickly discovers that rather than one boss there are now scores of customers, vendors and employees that they must answer to. In essence they have traded one boss for many, along with the stress of keeping a business running.

Larger companies may buy up these smaller operators for their customer lists and a few key employees. This usually works out much better for the buyer than the seller since any administrative employees are redundant and will probably be let go. Meanwhile, the seller still has a short runway until the cash runs out.

How Businesses are Valued for Sale

A true business on the other hand is a much different story. These businesses can operate for weeks or even months without the owner's day-to-day involvement. And often the business owner isn't the highest paid employee. That distinction usually goes to a commissioned salesperson or a general manager responsible for day-to-day operations. The business owner does perform key managerial and leadership functions, but when it comes to getting products out the door or closing deals these owners have often been removed from that process for a while.

These businesses also distribute significant dividends to the business owner on a quarterly or annual basis. Dividends are the excess profits that the business can afford to pay out to the owner in their capacity as shareholder. They are separate from any compensation the business owner receives for their job responsibilities in the office (think W2 wages).

A business like this is valued much differently than a mom-and-pop business. Experienced business brokers will construct a discounted cash flows model that uses historic and projected dividends coming out of the business and a risk factor called the "discount rate" to estimate the net present value of the business. There is a formula for this, but it is beyond the scope of this post. Just be assured that it isn't difficult to setup an Excel spreadsheet to crunch all the numbers and test different assumptions.

The key takeaway is this:

The ability of a business to pay dividends determines the sales price.

How to Increase Dividends

Dividends come from profits. So if we want to increase dividends we need to increase profits. We also need to increase the efficient use of capital in the business so it doesn't take as much cash to operate. Getting rid of old fleet vehicles with poor gas mileage and high maintenance costs in favor of newer vehicles with favorable lease terms is one example of this. Moving into a better equipped space to decrease turnaround times, and get jobs done faster is another example. Getting suppliers to hold inventory on a just-in-time basis rather than spending our cash to purchase and warehouse product is yet another example of using capital more efficiently.

There are a thousand things a small business can do to increase profits and dividends, but all necessitate long term growth in some form or function. That makes strategic planning and execution an absolute necessity. This means having a detailed 3-5 year plan and a weekly, monthly and quarterly execution discipline with your leadership team.

The strategic plan should include steps to remove the owner from day-to-day operations. This requires building a leadership team that can handle the day-to-day and installing a general manager who gets the owner's long term vision. Performance compensation goes a long way toward finding and retaining the right person for this key role.

Maximum Valuation

After 3-5 years of focused attention on building and executing a strategic plan, most businesses are in a very good place. The business owner is fulfilling a critical leadership function, but the leadership team and the rest of the employees are handling day-to-day operations. A good general manager even allows the owner to escape for a month or two at a time without any negative effects to the bottom line (and many times with significant improvements while the team is left alone to execute).

At this point the business is generating healthy dividends that are driving a high potential selling price. Since a management team is installed and running things the potential pool of buyers is also much greater. With no requirement for particular industry expertise or business operations background anyone can own the business provided they can afford to purchase it.

The Owner's Lifestyle

Now comes the catch and the dirty little secret. If it takes every penny of the owner's salary and every penny of available dividends to keep up with the owner's personal spending we are really back to square one. There's no difference between this situation and the mom-and-pop business looking to sell. Sure, we may get some cash in the bank to provide some breathing room, but an owner with an exorbitant lifestyle will burn through that cash in no time.

But if the lifestyle can be paid for by the owner's salary we have a path toward financial independence and simultaneous business ownership. It works like this. Once the dividends exceed the owner's W2 compensation the owner is essentially financially independent. The owner has an asset (the business) capable of generating enough cash flow (dividends) to meet their needs. At this point if the owner installed a CEO (or promoted the general manager to CEO) it would be possible to step away from the business entirely and just live off the dividends.

Yes, there will still be responsibilities, but these are the responsibilities of a shareholder investing time in oversight, strategy and long term vision on a monthly, quarterly and annual basis. It doesn't require showing up at the office every day, or even every week.

Why Selling Your Business is a Terrible Idea

To maximize your selling price you need to build and execute a strategic plan for growth that allows the owner to step out of day-to-day operations.

Here are the two choices facing a business owner who has successfully done this:

  1. Turn over the business to a buyer for a one time check. Invest that money. Live off the principal and returns generated by the investment.

  2. With zero financial pressure to sell the owner could choose to keep the business and it's perpetual stream of dividend payments. The owner also has the opportunity to retire without compromising the current lifestyle.

There will be objections about diversification and the risk of having all the business owner's eggs in one basket, but these are academic. The business has a high valuation because the risk factors have been mitigated through sound planning and execution. And the growth of the business yields excess dividends sufficient to invest in traditional vehicles like retirement accounts, rental properties, etc. The truth is that a business the owner has known for decades with a competent management team is far less risky than investment vehicles and advisors with whom there has been little experience.

I find that almost everyone who has a choice chooses option 2. It can take years to get there, but it’s also going to take years to get your business ready for sale if you want option 1. Don't be surprised if you decide to walk away from the closing table and keep a business you've grown to love. Get started today.

Cleaning up for the Housekeeper

Have you ever found yourself running around the house wiping things down and straightening up BEFORE the housekeeper arrives. It sounds crazy, but we’ve all been there…embarrassed or unwilling to let the world see what’s REALLY going on, how bad the mess really is.

Businesses fall into this same trap when it comes to working ON the business through strategic planning and execution. There is always one more thing to clean up or straighten out BEFORE they can rally the team to build and execute a strategic plan. The list of examples we’ve run into is long.

  • “It’s been really busy. Once things slow down a little bit and everyone catches their breath we will be ready
  • We just hired a bunch of new people and it would be better if they had some experience first
  • Our controller has been out dealing with an illness and we really need her at the table before we do something big like that
  • We just started converting our systems over to a new software package and it’s got everyone buried. They won’t have time until we’re done
  • Our new sales manager really needs everyone’s help to get things cleaned up in that department before we can talk about business strategy
  • We are changing locations and that’s going to be very disruptive. It would be better to wait.
  • There’s a new product line we are introducing and that has our full attention right now
  • Our org chart is going through some big changes and until that settles down we just can’t manage any more change
  • The CEO is about to go on sabbatical for two months.
  • There’s a recession coming, let’s get through that before we start building plans to grow the business”

What is it that makes all of these excuses irrelevant?

First, to call them excuses isn’t quite right, because they are born out of a misunderstanding that comes from inexperience in the disciplines of strategic planning and execution. They aren’t excuses so much as they are the reality that faces small business teams every day. They are the whirlwind.

The Whirlwind

In their book The Four Disciplines of Execution Chris McChesney, Sean Covey and Jim Huling coined the term “the whirlwind” to describe the day-to-day responsibilities, fires, rabbit holes, dead ends, employee crises, and customer headaches that exist in our jobs. The whirlwind is inescapable because it is everything you are getting paid to do as part of your 40-50 hour per week job description. In fact, in our work with leadership teams all it takes to be extraordinarily successful over the long term is just 2-3 hours per week away from the whirlwind. This is time when you close the door, go to a coffee shop or work from home on your biggest 90 day priority. The rest of the time we know you will be mostly reactive, living in the whirlwind.

Let go and let your team

It is usually the leader that is trying to manage the whirlwind hoping that one day it will subside and there will be time to actually work on the business. Unfortunately that day is never coming.

The alternative is to let go and allow the team to manage the businesses in the midst of all kinds of whirlwind activities. I said earlier that we have seen every one of the items above used as an excuse NOT to work on the business. You might be surprised to know that we have also seen every single one of those items listed as a strategic priority tackled by a team that was growing the business. That’s right, one business’s excuse is another business’s strategic priority.

What’s the difference between a team that is just trying to survive the whirlwind and one that is tackling huge whirlwind issues and making them strategic priorities? The simplest answer is growth. Businesses trying to survive are usually stagnant. Those with leadership teams addressing the whirlwind in the context of a strategic plan are growing the business. Both businesses are going through the same set of circumstances. One is growing and one is maintaining the status quo.

Status Quo vs Actual Performance

Leaders struggling to maintain the status quo are rarely measuring the actual performance of their leadership team. They have taken on too much of the responsibility themselves, and rightly perceive that it’s not fair to hold people accountable for performance they haven’t been given the freedom to improve.

A different approach is to be transparent with the team and admit that yes, the house is a wreck. However, from this point forward, it is the team’s responsibility to get things in order, not just the business owner’s responsibility. The owner is simply one member of the team and cannot be expected to do it all.

The owner and the team can then decide how performance will be measured. Note we’ve said nothing about the owner setting an unrealistic expectation for performance in the face of overwhelming whirlwind responsibilities. We haven’t introduced expectations at all. We are just measuring how the business and individual leaders are actually performing.

Some important things happen when we start measuring what is actually going on in the business.

  1. Leaders who belong on your team accept responsibility for their areas of performance.
  2. Those who don’t belong on your team quickly self identify and look for a way out.
  3. Reality sets in and people realize that even in the midst of the whirlwind performance needs to continue and improve over time.
  4. The biggest whirlwind items, those that affect the entire team, become priorities that marshal the full attention and resources of the team.

We Aren’t as Special as We Think

I met with a business owner once who went on and on about all the reasons now wasn’t a good time for him to work with the team on growing the business. He rattled off three things that I remember well. First, he had just made a big tax payment and needed some time to rebuild cash reserves. Second, his inventory software was changing over to a cloud based system. Third, his controller and right hand person was looking to retire. He was in the pool building business.

So I said, “wow, it must be tough to be the only pool builder in the country with low cash reserves, a big systems upgrade and a key vacancy to fill all at the same time.”

We both knew he wasn’t that special. He had just finished telling me how a friendly competitor had grown 30% while the owner’s wife was battling breast cancer. We both knew a former employee of his who had started a landscaping company that managed to double in size despite losing half his equipment in a trailer fire….without insurance.

My point is that we all think our whirlwinds are special and that they make it infeasible to grow the business right now. But there are other business owners out there facing the same things we are, probably worse. Not only have they accepted the whirlwind as a fact of life, they have made the biggest, most difficult whirlwind problems priorities in a strategic plan to grow the business. And they’ve let go of any need or compulsion to protect the team from the whirlwind or from an expectation that the business still needs to perform and improve.

Start working on the business today. Building a plan to tackle your nastiest whirlwind items is a great place to start. Then get out of the way and let your team do the work. It is likely some of them won’t be up to it, but don’t let that stop you from letting the rest of your leaders shine. Don’t worry, they already know the house is a mess. It’s part of their job to help clean it up. Give them a chance and start growing again.

Do you have a growth mindset?

What does it take to grow a business?

  • Good operating procedures? Yes.
  • Adequate working capital? Yes.
  • A capable and engaged team? Absolutely.
  • Effective marketing and a sales team that convert? Almost always.

We could keep going down this list. It’s a big one. But there’s one thing I like to see at the top of the list when we start working with a new client.

It is a growth mindset.

A growth mindset describes the mindset of a business leader that is all about growing and expanding the influence and reach of the company’s mission. This isn’t easy. It is pretty much the opposite of running the company by the bank balance and trying to maintain the status quo. But at the same time we aren’t talking about raising a million dollars. We aren’t talking about landing a six figure sales contract. We aren’t even talking about having a specific level of technical expertise or experience. We are talking about a mindset. And that is a place where everyone can start. What does this mean in practice.

To grow a mission you have to have one. Your company has to do what it does for a reason that goes beyond money or profits. Think I’m crazy. Look at any iconic, long standing, successful company and you will find that the mission existed long before the profits ever showed up. This isn’t a coincidence. Growth of mission guarantees growth of profits. But growing profits without a sustaining mission is usually either happenstance or a short term affair.

Assuming a mission exists, the push to grow it, the growth mindset of the leader that is driving everything forward, creates a positive level of stress in the company that does several things.

Positive stress and evaluating competency

Growth creates lots of opportunities to see whether people can rise to the occasion when challenged. It forces them to develop new skills and abilities to meet the growing responsibilities entailed in their job descriptions. Without growth sub par performance can stay below the radar and go unnoticed. During periods of growth even star performers will struggle and occasionally fail. There is no other way to develop and get better.

Positive stress and culture

Growing companies are crucibles of culture. They are intense and sometimes stressful environments where people must hammer out interpersonal and relational differences while accomplishing a common goal. A hallmark of growing companies is either self destructive, dysfunctional, acerbic cultures (e.g. Uber) or empowering, supportive and familial cultures (e.g. Zappos). If you want your culture to improve [articulate and define your values then] adopt a growth mindset focused on growing your mission. Some of the trivial interpersonal issues on your team will fade to grey as people have something more important to spend their time and energy on.

Positive stress and priorities

Parkinson’s law states that work expands to fill the time available for its completion. The same is true of priorities. Without an overriding push to grow that requires focused effort we fill our todo list with 100 meaningless tasks. But faced with expectations and goals and deadlines we suddenly find that just a few things rise to the top and become priorities.

The same is true of individual roles and responsibilities. Each person on your team has a highest and best use, but without a growth mindset there is no need to focus effort and energy on the things that are most valuable to the company’s forward progress. Growing business have more opportunities to put people into areas that use their unique gifts and skill sets. Status quo businesses have fewer areas where excellence is required.

The Growth Mindset in the Family Business

Family businesses in particular run the risk of underperforming if they don’t have a growth mindset. The stakes are higher for them than for other businesses. Why?

In a family business simply trying to maintain the status quo there are only so many opportunities for leadership, for skill development, for management opportunities, and even for ownership. We find that without a growth mindset the culture in family businesses is often apathetic and it’s not hard to understand why. You’re basically working with a group of people who have resigned themselves to sitting in second place. The presumption is that all of the good spots will go to kids or siblings or nieces and nephews. The business isn’t growing so I just have to be satisfied with where I am.

But in family businesses focused on growing the mission over generations of leadership and ownership there are untold possibilities for future advancement, leadership and personal growth. The family business owner, more than any other, has a responsibility to grow mission so that non-family members get a shot at contributing to the fullest.

Proof of a growth mindset

How do you know whether you have a growth mindset or not? Simple. Do you have a plan? A growth mindset is a commitment that you are going to grow the company. That commitment is on paper where others can see it, critique it, build it out, be held accountable to it and measure progress.

Without a plan it is a wish.

If you want to change the world grow your mission. If you want to grow your mission start building the plan today. Then tomorrow, get to work.

The Culture Handoff

“Just don’t screw it up.”

That’s the attitude of most parents when they entrust the business to their kids. But what does this say about the culture those kids are inheriting?

Or for that matter….

  • What is culture?
  • Does it matter?
  • What does it have to do with passing the business on from one generation to the next?

Culture is the environment created by the set of values at play in your company every day. This means that you have a culture, whether you like it or not. There’s no escaping it. Your employees, customers, vendors and family members are breathing it in every day.

When cultures are toxic they sap the energy and enthusiasm of your top performers. Toxic cultures color the experience of almost every customer interaction. They affect your relationships with trade partners and even the terms they will grant you on purchases and warranty claims.

By contrast, when cultures are healthy they spotlight bad attitudes, irresponsibility and unethical behavior. They generate better reviews from customers and more word of mouth referrals. They reduce attrition among employees and help recruit A players.

So, yes, culture does matter. Culture is one of the reasons two companies in the same industry, selling the same product have widely different results.

But most important for our discussion, culture is key in determining whether the second generation moves into leadership fighting a severe headwind or whether they enjoy the benefits of a cultural breeze at their backs.

Our experience is that very few companies think intentionally about their culture. It just sort of develops over time as an unsaid, unseen force that is, at best, little better than the status quo, and at worst, a contributing factor to low morale, low competitive performance and poor financial results.

How DO you work intentionally on your culture? It’s not complicated.

Articulate and define your values

Start by sitting down and thinking of the 3 to 5 words you want employees, customers, vendors, and family members to use to describe your business. Less than three values is too few to fully describe the picture and more than five is too many for people to remember.

Once you have the words it is time to define them. A friend just recently told me he made the mistake of pulling his definitions out of Websters dictionary. Later he realized those definitions failed to capture what HE wanted his values to mean. This is your job as the leader. It’s OK for you to define a particular value differently than everyone else. In fact, the definition is way more important than the word. The word just becomes a proxy for the definition. Over time it will be your definition of the value, consistently applied and repeated that comes to describe the culture. A value without a definition is about as useful as no value at all.

By way of example here are Axiom’s values:
Care - we love those we serve
Truth - we speak the truth even when it is hard to hear or difficult to say
Diligence - we bring the right amount of work to the task
Learning - we read every day and learn to ask better questions

Care may mean one thing to you, but it’s only my definition of care that matters at Axiom. The same goes for the other values. You must give everyone your definition before they can decide to sign up to participate in your culture. Don’t be ambiguous. Name and define your values. Stand up for what you want your company to represent.

Build a plan and start executing it

If all you ever do is come up with a great set of values you will be ahead of most small business owners…on paper. But it won’t mean a thing in the real world. Creating values without working them out in a plan is kind of like buying a monster truck and parking it in your driveway. You’ll never know whether your values mean anything because they will never be tested. People will never use them to do anything meaningful. If you don’t build a plan and work it to completion you are settling for status quo. Why worry about culture in the first place if all you care about is maintaining the status quo.

When you plan you put people on notice about the opportunities that lie ahead and the skills they will need to take advantage of them. As you start executing against the plan WHAT your people do will determine whether we make any progress. But HOW they do it will be governed by your values. That combination of achievement and values is what intentionally creates the culture you want.

As you execute and as your plan starts unfolding not everything can be charted on a scorecard. Values are the tool that allow you to “objectively” measure the difference between two star performers: one who makes you proud and represents the company well and another that keeps you up at night.

Stay consistent

Once you put your values up on the wall, once you write them into the plan, and once you start pulling them out to measure performance…expect resistance. A lot of people will wish those pesky values would go away. Some of your leaders will be uncomfortable talking about them with their teams. Some old timers will scoff and cynically dismiss your values as ivory tower BS. Some will try to coopt them as their own and change the definitions. Your most toxic employees will become even more passive aggressive as they try to undermine your efforts. Expect all of this. It’s actually a sign that you are doing something right.

Also, don’t play favorites. Everyone on your leadership team needs to be held accountable to the same set of values. Let’s say you have the following value and it's up on the conference room wall:

Optimism: we strive to see the good in situations and others.

But your sales manager is constantly griping about lazy employees, crooked customers and dishonest prospects and conspiratorial competition. Everyone on your team is going to know that Optimism as a value doesn’t mean squat. Not everyone on the payroll is going to be all-in on every value. But your leadership team needs to be on the same page. If you start making exceptions about which values are not really that important at the top you will wind up doing more harm than good.

Finally, consistency means acknowledging the value champions while also dealing with their lack of performance on the job. It’s not enough to sign up for the company culture if you can’t get the job done. We need both to make a difference and to accomplish the company’s mission. Exemplary values and lackluster performance are not consistent with each-other.

Expect healthy turnover

If you do all of these things there is one guarantee I can make. You will have some turnover, and that is AWESOME! Turnover is a sign that toxic employees are leaving or are being asked to leave (usually it’s the former). It is also an opportunity to escort new A-players into the company who take your values for granted. You will never experience the push back on values or the passive aggressive behavior from new employees like you do from those with tenure.

These two factors, the elimination of toxic employees and the introduction of people who buy-in from day one will turbo charge your cultural growth. It will be hard for months. You will feel like giving up. But all of the sudden one or two toxic elements will leave, a couple of new seeds will be planted and things will take off like you never imaged. I have seen it happen over and over again.

One of the greatest gifts you can give the next generation in your business is the inheritance of a healthy culture. Start building it today and see what happens.

The Vision Handoff

Think vision statements are hokey?

I’m with you. I have seen more useless vision statements than the average bear. But that doesn’t stop us from forcing the issue with our clients. Vision statements are important if you plan to get anyone to help you grow your company. They need to be clear and they need to be worthy of everyone’s best effort. In this post we aren’t going to go into a ton of detail on how to set a vision for your company. That isn’t necessary, because honestly it isn’t that complicated. It may not be easy, but it is pretty simple.

Your vision is where you want to go. It is the destination. The clearer you can’t paint me a picture of that destination the more useful that vision is going to be for both of us. When in doubt, put a number in your vision. Numbers drive out fuzziness and ambiguity. Your vision shouldn’t be to grow. Instead try “top 100 in our industry.” Your vision shouldn’t be industry leading quality. Instead try “win 5 Malcolm Baldridge National Quality Awards.” Get clear and paint a picture your people can get excited about.

For families struggling with how and when to hand the business off to the next generation there are few matters more important than vision. I think these families have two options. They can maintain the status quo, or they can build a STRATEGIC succession plan. That plan must address vision in two very explicit ways.

STEP 1: Determine the state of your current company vision. There are four possible scenarios here.

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The Doldrums

This is a situation where mom and dad had a clear vision for a long time and at some point in the recent past we were able to say “mission accomplished.” We checked the box and never really reset the vision for the next big endeavor.

We ran into one such company where the founder had spent 30 years building a very successful and large enterprise. For a long time the vision had been to build an organization that would outlive him. A masterful partnership deal had provided liquidity and capital that opened up all kinds of possibilities for the next generation. But no one had given any thought to where that next generation might want to take the business. Not surprisingly there was little urgency or excitement about the business or about the transition to a new generation of leadership.


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Continuity

This is probably the most favorable scenario. The previous generation set a worthy vision, the kids buy into it and momentum is maintained as the baton is handed from one generation to the next.

In these companies vision is talked about, it drives decisions, there are long term goals, there are usually plans to execute them. But there may have been some lapses in execution. The plans may not have always gotten the attention they deserve.

This is the time to take advantage of the honeymoon period afforded when new leadership is appointed. The transition from one generation to the next has the potential to not just maintain momentum but to greatly increase it if everyone can handle their new roles well. More on that later.


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Ambiguity

There never was a vision, and there isn’t one on the horizon. This is probably the most common situation. It is indicative of the status quo transition model where mom and dad say “just don’t screw it up.”

More than any other scenario this is the one where mom and dad really struggle to let go. And it’s not a surprise. Without any kind of strategic succession plan there is no way to gauge whether the kids are ready. There have been few situations to see them in action driving success in the plan or leading effectively. And without a vision mom and dad worry that the kids will make decisions and evaluate opportunities as well as they did. Essentially everyone is just hoping things work out.


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Betrayal

Mom and dad have a vision, they have been pursuing it, they thought they had buy-in, but now that it is time for the kids to run the show everything is changing. What we find out in these situations is that usually mom and dad weren’t that intentional in communicating their vision for the company. They just kind of assumed that everyone knew where they were going and why. You can imagine that if their own kids didn’t know the likelihood that other employees have a clue.

There is a lot of potential here for the business to suffer if the two generations cannot agree on what comes next. Alternatively the kids may charge ahead after mom and dad let go and the relationship may suffer due to the perceived betrayal.


Having established which situation you are dealing with the next step has to deal with managing the roles of each generation.

Step 2: Get clear about who the new vision standard bearer will be

Like it or not the person who is championing the company’s vision will be perceived as the leader. If the kids don’t take up this new role as their own a crisis is looming. Sooner or later mom and dad won’t be able to continue in this role, and the resulting vacuum will cause everyone to doubt the next generation’s capacity to lead regardless of how good they are operationally.

A good strategic succession plan will put the kids front and center not just on executing the plan, but also on taking advantage of every opportunity to talk about where the plan is taking us.

It is this change in roles that ultimately determines whether the business gains momentum or hits a brick wall. It affects how many key players stick around and give the kids a chance to lead and how many look for other opportunities after mom and dad leave.

My final encouragement to you is this, there’s no such thing as maintaining the status quo. You are either growing or you are dying. The transition from one generation to the next will either be a good thing for the business or it will be bad. No one is going to say “Eh, they’re doing an OK job. Everything’s fine.”

Find out where you are and start building a strategic succession plan to put your kids in the best position possible for the future. If you need help call us.

The Money Tree

“Money doesn’t grow on trees!”

How many times did you hear that when you were growing up? It seems like all parents say this to their kids at some point. But when parents become business owners they often treat the business just like a money tree. How?

Jobs for everybody - We see businesses hiring the owners kids, nieces, nephews, brothers, sisters…all regardless of whether or not these people are actually making a meaningful contribution to the business. It seems like this is especially rampant on summer and winter break. Before long the office kitchen starts to look like the student union.

The paycheck allowance - The abuses don’t stop once the kids graduate and start families of their own. We have seen org charts and compensation schedules where everyone at a certain level is making $40k, except the owner’s son. He’s making $75,000 because he just got married and had a baby and needs that much to live.

Follow your passion - Many business owners let their kids come to work and essentially write their own job description. John likes computers? Great! He’s our new full time IT person. Nevermind the fact that no business our size has a full time IT person, and we got along just fine for years without one.

These examples sound overblown and silly, but variations on them exist everywhere in family businesses. More serious than their drag on cash flow is there impediment to culture building and developing other leaders in your company.

Their is a better way. Making kids part of the strategic planning and execution process creates several opportunities.

Planning for future needs - If your son or daughter has an interest in the business you have the opportunity to build a strategic plan that looks out 3, 5 or even 10 years. In that plan you can identify where you anticipate needing specific skills and leadership. Your kids may or may not wind up playing a star role, but you have the basis for a very meaningful and productive conversation about where they can contribute the most and experience the most fulfillment, all without the pressure of needing a paycheck today.

Go to school on someone else’s dime - I am a huge fan of kids going to work for companies in the same industry, but not the same market. Every industry has best practices. You can hire a consultant or buy a report, but it is much more effective to put someone on payroll for 40 hours a week who’s been there and done that. If they want to come work for you encourage your kids to stick around their college town and get a job for a company in your industry. The lessons and experience they eventually bring home will make the memory of those college tuition payments less painful.

Build confidence and humility - Kids need to prove themselves. Most of the interpersonal conflict we deal with in family businesses comes from situations where the kids have never held meaningful professional posts outside the family firm. Knowing they can make it somewhere else goes a long way toward building their confidence. Kids who first work outside the family business also tend to take less for granted. They are more humble and realize the grand scale of the opportunity they are being afforded to work in the family business.

Teach accountability - This one is the most important. Your kids need to watch you build and execute a strategic plan that takes into account the business’s needs, the development of other leaders, good timing and sound financial stewardship. That is how they learn that everyone must be accountable, even the owners. Owners are, in fact, most accountable. If your kids get that lesson you will have taught them something that becomes part of your legacy.

No matter where you are in your business, things can begin to improve today. Have up front, honest conversations with your kids and your key employees about where you’ve missed it and where you need to do better. Then start putting together a plan that you can work diligently on day after day, week after week. If you need help call us.

Your Family Business Needs Boundaries

Boundaries are important for parents and family members working together. Done well family business should draw families closer and enhance the personal relationships between generations. But too often a lack of intention about the direction of the business and the roles played by each family member leads to stress and strained relationships

Strategic planning can play a role in improving relationships by getting clear about boundaries in the following areas:

  • What is important and what is not

  • Where family members can contribute their best efforts

  • When it is OK to talk about the business and when it is not

  • What it looks like for EVERYONE to be accountable.

Boundaries start with being very intentional and the best way to do that is to build a plan that 

  1. Articulates your values

  2. Paints the picture of your vision

  3. Shares why that vision is important

  4. Succinctly identifies your company’s mission

  5. Commits the company to one or two core strategies over the next few years

  6. Establishes concrete 1-3 year goals

  7. Sets 90 day priorities

  8. Holds people accountable to weekly commitments

That is strategic planning and execution in a nutshell. If your family needs boundaries, start by taking a day off from working in the business and work on your strategic plan.

Two Ingredient Recipe for Growth

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If I were to ask you what the two most important ingredients for growth in business are, what would you say? Think about it for a second.

You’re probably thinking about sales, efficient operations, better marketing, great customer service, or better employees.

Though these are often present alongside growth they are not the driving force behind growth. The two most important ingredients for growth are a compelling vision and clearly defined values. Although these are intangible, they are respectively, the destination you grow towards and the solid foundation that will support all that growth.

But what is vision? And what are values? Definitions for these vary depending on who is giving the answer. So here’s how we define them at Axiom, in a practical way that actually works to drive small business growth.

VISION

A statement of the projected future of the organization and its place in the world as defined by the leader.

In its simplest form, your vision is the picture you paint me of what your business will look like down the road. What are we trying to get to? The clearer the picture, the more practically useful your vision will be in your business.

What makes the vision statement important? It unites your organization around a common purpose. It provides a “north star” that every department in your business can use to evaluate decisions and performance.

For example, though sales growth is a great contributor to business growth, how much sales growth is necessary to meaningfully progress toward the vision? Is there a goal your team should aim for? Where [what geographic area] should they focus on growing? What products and services should they lead with? Where should the pricing be? With a clear vision the answers to these question come easier.

What qualities make up a good vision? We’ve written on vision before and you can read all about our thoughts on what makes a good vision, here. But if you want the summary version, a good vision statement must meet these criteria:

  • A vision statement is a communication tool; the projected future should be clear.

  • Some of the best vision statements contain a number or something that can be objectively measured. Numbers are the easiest way to provide clarity about what your future organization looks like. “We want to be philanthropic,” and “we want to be able to donate $150,000 a year to local charities” communicate the same thing, but one paints a much clearer picture.

  • It is set by the leader. Rather than being set by committee, a good vision is set by the business owner and leader in chief.

  • It must be aspirational. Your vision should describe a future context. It should give the employees working with you something to work towards.

In order to drive growth your vision statement must play a central role in all of your communication. If it just sits on a shelf it will not do anything. If you use it to set goals, to evaluate performance, to judge the fitness of new hires, to decide which partnerships to pursue and which customers to leave… if you actually use it every day it will make a big difference. When vision is recited by leaders in an organization it can unite your people by giving them a purpose to engage with, together.

VALUE(S)

Enduring and unchanging descriptors of a company’s culture.

With togetherness comes conflict and mess. Values are an important ingredient that direct how your people are to act in pursuit of the vision. Generally, values are unique to each organization and are also set by the leader. If Vision describes where you want the company to go, Values describe the company you are committed to being along the way.

There’s no formula for determining what your values are, but there are a few things to be mindful of when setting values.

  • Values dictate your culture. Without values, a culture will still exist...it just may not be a culture you want.

  • Values should be easy to remember. Choose a word, then briefly describe what it means. For example, one of Axiom’s values is truth, which means we speak the truth even when it’s difficult (to say, and hear).

  • Values should be pre-eminent, not pretentious. It’s what we do that matters. This means two things: 1) Values should be public, so we can be held accountable when we fail. 2) Values should influence every company activity.

APPLICATION

Taking from the last bullet point, it’s what we do that matters; the information in this blog is only going to be helpful insofar as you apply it.

In the past, we’ve written largely to an audience of business owners and given practical advice to match. However, we’ve realized there are two groups that have a vested interest here: employees and employers.

To the Employee. The most practical way you can use this information is by “leading up the chain of command.” The phrase comes from authors Leif Babin and Jocko Willink in their book Extreme Ownership. Stated simply, leading up the chain of command means providing your leaders with valuable information they would otherwise not know so that they can support you with the proper tools and resources. In this case, leading up the chain of command means that if your boss hasn’t talked with you about vision or values that’s as much your fault as anyone’s.

Consider asking your boss questions like:

  • How do you see our values influencing daily operating activities?

  • What do you hope to accomplish with the company? Where are we going?

  • What are the words you want vendors and customers to use when they describe their experience with us?

In every instance, these conversations benefit the organization. If your boss cannot articulate vision or values, you have the ability to stress how invaluable they are. If they have vision and values, and but few people know them, you have the ability to help them hone the message and  then rebroadcast it to the entire team.

To the Employer. Vision and values are foundational ingredients for your success. Without them, you handicap your company’s growth potential. Do you have a vision? Do you have clearly stated and defined values? If not, your homework is straightforward. Step one is to draft a vision statement and a short list of values.

If you have vision and values, step two is to ensure that your entire organization is acutely aware of them, even to the point of annoyance. There are many ways to do this.

  • Make them public and visible. Put them on the walls and in the public spaces of your office.

  • Make performance reviews an evaluation of both technical skills and adherence to values.

  • Adjust operating activities to be reflective of your values.

  • Build and execute strategic plans to accomplish your vision. It won’t happen on its own.

It takes a great deal of reflection and intention to define and set vision and values. It doesn’t get any easier when having to do this amidst the day to day hustle. Yet the right ingredients for growing your business are within your control. Focus and align your organization around a shared vision and values, then set your sites on growth.


Letting Go of the Family Business

In our previous video on the topic of family business we answered the question, “How do I know when they’re ready to take over the family business?” In this video we move from theory to practice. Plenty of parents know the next generation is capable, but actually letting go? That’s another matter.

There are three stereotypical approaches to managing the transition:

  1. You’ll get it from my cold dead hands.

  2. Just take it!

  3. No decision

But there is a better way, and it deals with how these two generations pass the baton when it comes to the vision for the business’s future. Vision has a huge practical part to play in how smoothly the business moves from one generation to the next.

  • If there is no vision the business essentially passes from one operator to the next. Things may continue according to the status quo, but the business won’t grow in its missional reach and impact.

  • If the previous generation believes they can say “mission accomplished!” the next generation needs to articulate where the business is going under new leadership. Otherwise the business will be left in a kind of limbo that generates zero momentum for the incoming leader.

  • When the two generations are at odds with two distinctly different ideas about the company’s vision the business rarely lasts. In these situations of vision conflict resources are squandered and time is lost to the competition while everyone wonders whose vision of the future will eventually win out. Hint: it’s usually neither.

But when there is a shared vision it is possible to make the transition while picking up momentum at the same time. Shared vision happens either because the second generation is continuing in the direction established by their predecessors, or because the previous generation has signed onto the new direction envisioned by their children. In either case the question “who should be the leader right now?” has the same answer.

Whoever is the driver behind the current vision should be the leader.

The driver is the one who doesn’t just champion the vision, but is the steward of that vision. This entails not just responsibility, but obligation. If the second generation is not at the forefront articulating, refining and applying the vision they will struggle to move beyond the shadow of mom and dad.

Complacency Is a Company Killer

Co-authored by Devin Dash and Joey Brannon

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Complacency is a company killer. It’s exactly what led Kodak to bankruptcy in 2012. What role did complacency play? Well, many years before its ruin Kodak snubbed the invention of their own engineer, Steven Sasson. He invented the digital camera technology in 1975, and rather than embracing the novelty, Kodak dismissed it. Who knows what led to Kodak’s complacency? The fact is, it crept into Kodak’s executive arm with disastrous effect.

Yet, despite this story and others like it, complacency still lingers unchecked in many organizations. I’ve heard words that make my ears burn: “I’m comfortable” and “it [the business] supports my lifestyle.” We’ve got to readjust our thinking. In this post, I define complacency, I share how to fight it, and I recommend a tool we use to guard against it?

Diagnosing complacency can be difficult. This is due to the fact that the feeling of complacency is private. Unlike a mechanical failure, a defiant employee, or product flop, complacency isn’t something we easily see. Its root is in the hearts of individuals and their motivation. Unless we are really introspective, we may not even notice it in ourselves. Additionally, we may mistake complacency for contentment. So, what is complacency?

COMPLACENCY DEFINED

By definition, complacency is a feeling of smug or uncritical approval of oneself or one’s own achievement. Complacency described simply is unhealthy satisfaction; it has two distinct characteristics.

Smugness: An owner wrestling with complacency is self-focused. Their desires, their comfort, awards, income, and other accolades make up their vision. It goes without saying this is dangerous. Purpose, in a company under complacent leadership, is individualistic, and short term.

Uncritical: Complacency is also uncritical. Another way of describing this would be self-affirming. This means someone who is complacent may not reflect on what brought them success. It’s linked with pride because it is a lack of personal criticism. A complacent person may still be critical of others.

Continuing with Kodak as our example, we see the presence of these two characteristics. The execs were riding a market share close to 80% in the U.S. and 50% globally. Surely this affirmed their status as accomplished executives and afforded them financial comfort. They failed to consider where innovation had brought them and were also critical of others, e.g. Sasson and his invention.

COMPLACENCY’S KRYPTONITE

To avoid Kodak’s mistakes, it’s important to combat complacency. The best method against it is healthy dissatisfaction. Healthy dissatisfaction rival’s complacency because it’s the exact opposite. The key to embracing healthy dissatisfaction is living out two qualities: humility and discernment.

Humility: As one pursues healthy dissatisfaction, humility must be practiced. Humility means one simply considers themselves less. Humility guards us against satisfaction and dissatisfaction that is focused on self. This also shifts our focus to the business and enables us to more accurately and objectively gauge performance. Humility also encourages the pursuit of goals and achievements that are divorced from self interest.

Discernment: A healthy dissatisfaction requires discernment. This means we don’t live with our head in the clouds or buried in the sand. Rather, we seek to understand all the factors that lead to an outcome. One practical application of discernment is to examine and question the excellence, or shortfalls, of decisions. Without discernment, one risks being dissatisfied without knowing what to change, or satisfied without understanding what brought about success. Discernment enables growth by encouraging critical evaluation of options and opportunities rather than reliance on the status quo.

TOOL AGAINST COMPLACENCY

The best way to guard against complacency is to develop and execute a strategic plan. At Axiom, we help clients build one-page plans that foster both healthy satisfaction and healthy dissatisfaction. Plans are so effective because they:

  • Provide consistent direction

  • Define winning, and

  • Establish standards for accountability

  • Are made public and acted upon

The best plans demonstrate humility and discernment in each of these areas.

Consistent Direction: Every individual in a company should be able to say where the organization is going. Your vision is the answer.  A vision answers the question, “what is the projected future of the organization and its place in the world?” Answering this question will guard against complacency because it declares a purpose that is beyond serving any one individual and it does so in an innovative and intelligent way (i.e. it demonstrates both humility and discernment).

Winning: Just as every individual should be able to say where the organization is trying to go, every individual should know whether any progress is being made in that direction. A good plan will define what winning and losing look like. The best plans will do this with humility by defining a win as something other than a zero sum game (i.e. one person’s loss is another person’s gain). Those same plans will embody discernment by setting goals that, if accomplished, will lead to the attainment of the long term vision of the company.

Standards & Accountability: Things happen because individuals act. A plan helps communicate which individuals are responsible for which outcomes, and provides a basis for holding people accountable for their performance. The best plans apply to everyone, from the most junior employee to the most senior executive. In other words, everyone submits to the plan and demonstrates a measure of humility in doing so. The best plans require great discernment to engage every member of the organization and provide a basis for evaluating every individual’s performance.

Public Action: Plans are pointless without action. And action often has consequences that are hard to predict. This can be hard for teams. There is no guarantee of success. There will almost certainly be failure on some level. Ignorance will be revealed. Dirty laundry will be aired. Individual and group performance won’t always measure up. Such is the fate of teams that roll out plans and begin to act. The alternative, which happens quite often, is that individuals build their own plans with varying degrees of ambition or optimism and then either fail to act or do so privately outside the discerning eye of other team members.

It takes a great deal of humility to perform on the public stage where others can critique and pass judgment. In his speech before the Sorbonne in 1910 Roosevelt said it best, “There is no effort without error and shortcoming” [1]. Action requires the humility to fail publicly and the discernment to critique performance without succumbing to judgmentalism.

If you feel yourself sliding toward complacency cultivate a healthy dissatisfaction by thinking hard about what your company’s future should look like. What do you aspire to? That vision is the start of a great plan that if built and executed with great humility and discernment will reignite a passion for your work. And passion is anything but complacent.


[1] http://www.theodore-roosevelt.com/images/research/speeches/maninthearena.pdf

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    Are My Kids Ready to Take Over the Family Business?

    Parents are never quite sure what time is the right time. In this series we tackle the first of seven strategic questions many family businesses struggle to answer. Of all seven this is perhaps the most common.

    How will I know when my kids are ready to take over the family business?

    The traditional answer is based on a level of experience gained in each operational department. But that may not be the best approach.

    Sound strategic planning and execution is a much better way to address succession. In this video we go into exactly how that happens.

    Ancient Wisdom on Conflict Resolution

    Effective conflict resolution is a necessity in every business, no matter how big or small. Sooner or later a ball will get dropped, a piece of information will be miscommunicated, a customer crisis will develop, a promise will be broken…the opportunities to resolve conflict are nearly endless.

    The important thing to realize about conflict is that it has a direct bearing on the culture of the business. In fact, the health of the culture can be judged by how effectively conflict between individuals is addressed and resolved. Far from being feared, ignored or wished away conflict should be embraced because it gives us a rare opportunity to actually IMPROVE the culture. Don’t shy away from it.

    When we work with clients we ask them to consider a method for conflict resolution that is nearly 2,000 years old. And no matter what your religious beliefs I challenge you to find a more effective way to resolve conflict, deepen relationships and improve culture. I don’t think a better way exists and I have seen dozens and dozens of approaches to handling personnel issues inside companies. This is by far the best and most effective tactic I have put into practice.

    Watch the video and let me know if you agree.