q Organization and Good Standing
q Capitalization and Stockholders
q Authorization of Acquisitions and the
Transactions
q Financial Statements
q Tax Matters
q Employees Records, Benefit Plans, Salaries,
Labor Disputes.
q Material Contracts and Commitments
q Licenses
q Insurance
q Litigation, corporate and personal
q Patents and Trademarks
q Real Properties owned and leased
q Inventory
q Books and Records
q Operating Plans
Some information
will strike a potential investor differently than a potential merger partner,
while other information will be equally important to both groups. Knowing the interests of each will enable the
principals of a company to assemble records that matter to that target
group.
For example:q Corporate structure: Is the firm a corporation or a partnership? In what state? The answer has implications that make your company more or less attractive to your target audience than competing firms. Ask your attorney.
q Stockholders: What do the bylaws say about the rights of major/minor stockholders? Who are they? How many are there? Is management invested? Stockholders, like staff, can be perceived as either an asset or a liability to a deal. Do the shareholders bring value beyond money or do they have a history of litigiousness?
*Potential buyers will demonstrate particular interests. One might care about owner expense add-backs or owner assets; another may be concerned about related party transactions. Others will have strong wishes for management to leave or to stay. A company can’t anticipate everything, but its records will be scrutinized for “deal breakers,” omissions, and evasions. Anticipate logical questions.
q Management: Be prepared for tough questions. Have background checks, performance reviews, and updated resumes handy. Explain attrition. Know which managers wish to remain with the company after a deal is struck and who wishes to leave. Are non-compete documents in order?
q Licenses: Technology companies often base their valuations on their intellectual property, so records can quickly inflate or deflate suitor interest. Patents “to be filed” or “pending” are a lot less attractive than patents awarded or defended. Equally important is who owns the technology. Is it clearly the company or could it be an employee? Was it developed in conjunction with another firm or university? The answers can substantially raise or lower the valuation. Professional service firms should have current records of all licenses, compliance forms, and proof of professional good standing.
q Insurance: Physical assets can be strengths or
liabilities, too. If the company owns
buildings or land, have records of ecological due diligence. A building with a demonstrated lack of
mold or property with no history of chemical storage or oil spills is worth a
lot more than one without such a pedigree.
How is inventory insured in case of flooding the day the contract is
signed? Does the company have key man insurance? What about Errors and Omissions? Such evidence assures suitors that they are
unlikely to suffer buyer’s remorse, and therefore, can move a deal along faster
than a company that leaves such questions unanswered.
Public records:
In addition to
organizing records for outsider scrutiny, a company’s strategy should include a
survey of its electronic presence. It is
very easy to check up on other companies, so each firm should do a regular
Internet search of its company name and staff.
For example, www.hcad.org indicates
whether Harris County based companies (and home owners) have paid their taxes
for the year, how much they are, and the appraised value of the property.
Licensing agencies, like the FINRA, have websites (www.finra.org) on which the public can search
for the names of broker-dealers in good standing. A company’s own website can be very
revealing. Is it current? Clear? If you contact the business through its
website, does someone actually get back to you?
A search on www.google.com or
another search engine for the company or management team names can reveal
useful information – positive or negative.
For example a Google search for recent potential clients revealed: (1) a
businessman who has gotten a Cease and Desist Order from California for a
business he was now trying to register in Maryland (2) a CEO who lied about his
education background (he made up a university) in his SEC filings and (3) a
company seeking investment that hadn’t paid its property taxes for the
year. Surely none of these is the first
professional impression one wants to make on the World Wide Web. Some records can be purged by corrective
action; others can be buried by generating appropriate news items, like press
releases, speeches, and article bylines.
Entrepreneurs seeking funding from others must be willing to undergo scrutiny from others, so do it yourself, first.
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