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Succession Planning For Accounting Firms. Joel Sinkin Accounting Transition Advisors. Accounting Transition Advisors. About the firm: Merger and transition advisors exclusively serving the accounting industry Customized solutions Over 950 transactions, over 18 years of experience
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Succession Planning For Accounting Firms Joel Sinkin Accounting Transition Advisors
Accounting Transition Advisors About the firm: • Merger and transition advisors exclusively serving the accounting industry • Customized solutions • Over 950 transactions, over 18 years of experience • Represent the buyer or seller • Services include: • Buyer-seller introductions • Merger and acquisition transaction structure • Document preparation/review, valuation and due diligence • Post-transaction business planning • General consulting and coaching
If there are 50 things you need to think about in a transaction……. ……the smartest of us will think of only 35
Why is Activity So High? Competition Staffing Technology Niche Development Aging of the partners/staff The economy
Three Ways to Grow One client at a time Develop marketable niches Merge or acquire another firm
Starting the Transition Process When should we start? How many more tax seasons do you want to work? Client “face time” Investments including technology, leases, staff Start succession process during establishment of new firm and partnership agreements are in draft
How Do You Find a Candidate? Advertising Networking Direct Mail Outside consultant or broker Internal search
Is Your Successor Ready? Do you know………. ……why the other firm wants to merge? ....... the staffing situation/excess capacity? …… their physical space requirements? …… current technology and equipment? …… financial strength or issues? Bigger is not always better!
How to Select a Successor Specialties that you offer that they would need to understand Size of successor, retention rates and excess capacity Billing rates/ Professional credentials Location(s) Culture
How to Select a Successor Financial strength Professional/staffing strength Ethnic/language considerations Longevity of partners Employee track record
What is the Seller Thinking? “If I retire, I’ll die!” “I am irreplaceable” “I am MASTER of my own domain!” “Clients NEED me”
Sales – Internal v. External • Internal Sales • Almost always go for less • Often no retention period • Death, disability and penalty buyouts • Remaining partners making more • Non multiple formulas on gross are more common • Accounts Receivable & WIP • External sales are more of a “business” deal and • go for high dollars
Sales – Internal v. External • Things to be wary of………… • Multiple partners, leaving simultaneously • Partners reducing time commitment, but not income or control • Replace the role, not the body • Cannot replace the administrator with a “Rainmaker” • Must have excess capacity • Partnership agreements (check them annually)
Attracting the Best Talent WANTED: Smart, energetic, hardworking, client-focused, future thinking, flexible professionals to join our fabulous firm!
Pointers for Finding Talent You can’t attract talent with empty offices Quality of life issues are important Reward the Rainmaker Need staff to do the work Leadership qualities Sweat equity should count! Baby boomer crisis looms ahead
MERGERS FOR SUCCESSION • Two Stage Deals • Concept is remain whole in compensation, remain in control while commencing transition • Structure • Case Study Example • Built in practice continuation agreements Do Practice Continuation Agreements work
MERGERS FOR SUCCESSION • Have agreed upon time tables for the role reductions of the retiring partners • Cull out sale • Have everything in place before you start: • Terms • Transition plan • The capacity to takeover the retiring partners • Space, staff, firm name
Due Diligence • Do your homework! • History and background of the firm • Client retention rates • Billings vs. collections, billing rates • Compensation packages of all firm members • Employee manual, employee contracts • Furniture, equipment, assets and leases • Pricing, billing and collections • Profitability
Due Diligence • Clients • Who does the work • Where is the work completed? • How many clients require face time? • Fees • Industries served • Services for clients • Collections age analysis of A/R and cash flow • (per month) • Focus on how you will run the firm, • not how it is currently managed
Due Diligence • Firm culture • Potential exposure issues • Quality control issues • Retention rate of employees • Work papers • Leases or other obligations
Other Thoughts General “chemistry” between the parties Continuity of relationships will help retain clients A good deal is a fair deal Remember, it’s the package, not the individual variables Staff merging
Other Thoughts • Documentation • Restrictive covenants • Roles and responsibilities • Hold Harmless • Basic firm contact information • Arbitration for disputes • Divorce clauses, where appropriate • Accountability of both parties
Other Thoughts The Transition….. Client Communications Roles for new staff members Specialization
For more information Please visit our website for resources including free reports, whitepapers and case studies. Joel Sinkin Jsinkin@transitionadvisors.com 1-866-279-8550 www.TransitionAdvisors.com