How to Avoid the Business Divorce

"If we are together nothing is impossible.  If we are divided all will fail." - Winston Churchill

Handshake_3 Partnerships.  I often tell people that it is not a matter of IF . . . it's a matter of WHEN it will end. 

Call me cynical but unfortunately I have seen too many business partnerships break up and end in the dreaded business divorce.  Amazingly, many partnerships seem to survive the lean years.  But when success happens that's when people change and strange things start to happen.

So how do you prepare yourself to avoid the pain, expense and aggravation of the business divorce? 

Every business partnership (whether in a corporation, LLC or true partnership) should consider a buy-sell agreement from the outset.  As Central Iowa financial planner Art Dinkin says, Begin with the End in Mind.

A buy-sell generally covers how an owner can sell shares and how to value those shares.  Further, a good buy-sell agreement sets forth what happens in the event of death, disability, retirement, divorce, bankruptcy or other considerations. 

Effective buy-sell agreements will generally require a right of first refusal.  This means if one owner finds an outside buyer for his shares the owner must first offer those shares to the other existing owners.  This protects the owners from suddenly running the business with someone they did not intend to have as a partner.

The time to enter into a buy-sell agreement is at the beginning of the business relationship when everyone is excited and getting along.  It is often very difficult to negotiate a deal when something has gone wrong.  Without a buy-sell agreement, owners may end up in court and the business may suffer.

And amazingly, with an effective buy-sell, a strange phenomenon often occurs.  People actually get along and the business prospers. 

photo on flickr by oooh.oooh

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Rush on Business - January 16, 2008 6:07 AM
This post from the New York Business Divorce Blog will make you think twice before becoming involved in a business with your romantic partner.I recently wrote on the firm's Iowa Law Blog that one way to avoid a volatile business...
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Sam Hasler - December 25, 2007 1:25 PM

Very good advice. Using divorce in your title hits the nail on the head, too. The emotions happening during the breakup of a business are not so different from those of a dying marriage.

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