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NAWBO :: Why a Business Owner’s Exit Plan is so Important

Why a Business Owner’s Exit Plan is so Important

By the Financial Planning Association

Financial Planning AssociationWhat happens when we’re sick of a job we’ve created for ourselves in a business we’ve founded? 

The idea is to make a plan that allows you to get out before you tire of your company or before you are overwhelmed by personal, industrial or economic factors that force you to sell, transfer or close a company. This is called an exit plan.

Everyone glamorizes creating a business as a way to completely control one’s own destiny. But it’s ironic how many businesses go on day-to-day without any thought to a proper ending. An exit plan is not only a set of mental notes about how one should pack up and move on. It is a way to focus an owner’s thinking about:

Many financial experts think it’s wise for business owners to come up with an exit plan when they start a company if possible, and if not, within 3-5 years of the date they’d like to exit.  A CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ professional with specific expertise in working with business owners could be a helpful partner in helping you determine the following:  

An exit plan allows you to not only change your own employment, but to help you change your whole career if you choose. No one has to stay in the same industry – or company – for life, and with an exit plan, you can leave open the possibility for an endpoint that will allow you to travel, or do any number of new activities in business or other walks of life.

The financial planning aspect of the exit plan will align your monetary needs with your career or post-career needs. Some entrepreneurs build sabbatical time and other arrangements for study and learning into the timeframe leading up to their exit to help them refresh their minds and decide what their next career or vocation will be.

The bottom line is that it’s never really too early to start thinking of an exit plan for a business you’ve formed. Today, smart entrepreneurs start asking themselves those questions as they’re organizing and forming companies. Get some good advice to start that discussion.

©2008, Financial Planning Association.

The Financial Planning Association is the owner of trademark, service mark and collective membership mark rights in: FPA, FPA/Logo and FINANCIAL PLANNING ASSOCIATION.  The marks may not be used without written permission from the Financial Planning Association.

 
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