Monday, January 28, 2008

ARE YOU READY TO MAXIMIZE YOUR PROFITABILITY?

Arden Dale writes in a compelling article published in the Wall Street Journal on January 8, 2008 that “Want to Sell a Business? You May Not Be Ready.” Ms. Dale goes on to state quite cogently that many small business owners are relying on the ultimate sale of their business for their own personal retirement funds. The author’s thesis is that many small business owners do not have proper financial records, detailed operational documentation, and may not have a very realistic idea about the price for their businesses. She goes on to point out that buyers are much more sophisticated than in the past and are insisting on receiving extensive due diligence materials before agreeing to any purchase. The author’s solution is to start getting the business ready to sell several years in advance, to keep proper books and records, and to improve the operating profitability as much as possible.

Sound familiar? This is what we have been talking about this for years now with our program to Achieve Maximum Profitability at your Inn well before it goes to the market. Looking at the financial condition of an Inn as compared to Inns across the Country is achieved by looking at results compared to other similar Inns. In this regard, one source of information for the smaller Inns would be the PAII Industry Study (2007-2008 utilizing 2006 financial results is the most recent version). Other sources includes our own Quantum Hospitality/Oates & Bredfeldt, LLC Standard Cost Analysis Study. In either case, the concept is to conform your own Inn’s financial performance to the Chart of Accounts set forth in the appropriate study, and to determine on an account-by-account basis whether or not your income and expenses are in line with the average Inns in each such study. I can state, without any doubt, that each time we do such analysis for an Inn, we are able to come up with potential cost savings well in excess of our charges for doing this work. We do in depth reviews of the operations of 30-50 Inns across the Country each year, and there are very few that stand up to this type of rigorous, detailed study. The result is that we are then in a position to suggest operational and expense cost savings which will improve the financial results prior to selling the Inn, irrespective of the process used to market the Inn. This is especially true about the “personal” costs and expenses that seem to always be present in the Profit and Loss Statement of the Inn. A good couple of years before any contemplated sale is a really good time to eliminate these additional costs and show some real profitability and net cash flow in the Inn.

Dale’s point about researching the price for the Inn is also well taken. Most Innkeepers look at what they think another Inn has sold for without first hand knowledge of the financial condition of that Inn. They think that if that Inn down the street sold for $X then their Inn has got to be worth more since it is “better” or “more popular,” etc. Another practice is simply to utilize the various rules of thumb like Gross Revenue Multiplier (see previous Article dated May 17, 2007 called “Best Methods for Finding the Ideal Inn”). Often Innkeepers are told to price their Bed and Breakfast Inns at 5-6 times gross sales, even though the business results do not justify such lofty pricing. The solution is to obtain professional advice as to what your Inn Business is really worth compared to other similar Inns before going to the market.

The point about written operational policies and procedures is another really important one. Two or three weeks training from the prior keepers of the Inn can not teach new Innkeepers what they really need to know in order to maintain the value of their new Inn Business in the first year. Those Inns which have written checklists and policies, training manuals, job descriptions, recipes, and stated practices for all of their operational tasks are simply worth more than Inns that do not have this documentation. Buyers will quickly figure this out in the due diligence process, and may walk or run away from a poorly managed Inn notwithstanding the price.

Finally, a word about where we seem to be on the National economic front, as it may impact the ability of Innkeepers to achieve their goals of selling the Inn. Some commentators have downplayed the impact of the Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis on business. This, of course, is pure foolishness, and a disservice to those whose dreams can be destroyed by buying Inns at the wrong time or at the wrong price. It is now clear from the daily economic news, the plummeting real estate markets, and the rapidly falling stock market that the Country is at grave risk of a real recession, if we are not already there. This will clearly be felt in the tourism market, and all forms of accommodations across the Nation will be feeling this pinch. The Inn business survived the fall off after 911 by not falling prey to the discounting that the hotel business jumped on. We hope that the greater hospitality business has learned its lesson, but for Innkeepers, this year will clearly be a real challenge.

For Sellers, this is not good news. It will clearly have an impact on the prices that will be achievable for their Inns, especially if results take a down turn for them. It already has impacted time on the market for Inns, especially full service Inns with restaurants. Most Inns are staying on the market for 1-2 years before they are sold, even if they are at the right price. For buyers, this does created somewhat of an opportunity, with the Federal Reserve pushing interest rates back to the really low levels of the past several years, however the real key is to make certain that there is sufficient cushion in the net cash flow of the Inn to weather the likely fall off in the hospitality business caused by an economic recession. So buyers need to be very careful that they look at the reality of the financial performance of an Inn opportunity, that they make absolutely certain that there is sufficient cash flow to get by if things go bad, and that they have good working capital at the outset. Making an emotional “lifestyle” decision is not a very good idea in the immediate future (or perhaps ever!). The best performing and operating Inns will likely still be very attractive at the right price with such low interest rates, but marginal operations simply will not sell at any price. In any event, we will be there to offer help when and where needed.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

HI

It is a great and nice post and I like it.