Broker Vs. No Broker
Thinking of selling your practice but don’t want to pay the broker’s commission? Think again. History shows that any time you sell your business and/or real estate yourself, the chance of failure of the transaction is over 50%. A commission will be much more digestible than the result if you try to do it yourself. We receive calls from senior veterinarians stating they sold their practices and took payments and it didn’t work out. After one year, they often must take the practice back and struggle to resurrect it to try and sell again. This is typically an experience that is new to both buyers and sellers. It takes time, marketing expertise, sales experience, buyer and advisor contacts, and lots of patience.
Your broker may spend hundreds of hours on your transition and your time is better spent at the clinic and planning your retirement agenda. Brokers do lots of specialized marketing which can be costly and time-consuming, and it includes many weekends and evenings meeting with potential buyers. When working with a broker, the average practice sells in about 6 months so selling it alone can be much longer. Your broker should have a list of qualified buyers and a commercial real estate license. If you own your space, it’s often critical to sell the building at the same time or get a solid agreement together for future purchase. Time and time again we see senior veterinarians sell the practice and lease the space with a loose agreement and lose their renter. The buyer decides they like a newer building down the street and leave you with an empty veterinary building.
A good broker will determine the value of your practice and there is much that goes into this process. It’s not just about collections. Everyone’s goal should be to sell at a fair price in a timely manner. If the price isn’t “right”, the banks won’t finance, and you certainly don’t want to carry the loan. If you get pressured to sell too low, which we often see, you can lose tens of thousands of dollars. Brokers spend a lot of time working with all the trusted advisors you need such as veterinary specific banks, CPAs, and attorneys to determine the value of your practice and facilitate a smooth and successful transition.
Broker Vs. No Broker
Thinking of selling your practice but don’t want to pay the broker’s commission? Think again. History shows that any time you sell your business and/or real estate yourself, the chance of failure of the transaction is over 50%. A commission will be much more digestible than the result if you try to do it yourself. We receive calls from senior veterinarians stating they sold their practices and took payments and it didn’t work out. After one year, they often must take the practice back and struggle to resurrect it to try and sell again. This is typically an experience that is new to both buyers and sellers. It takes time, marketing expertise, sales experience, buyer and advisor contacts, and lots of patience.
Your broker may spend hundreds of hours on your transition and your time is better spent at the clinic and planning your retirement agenda. Brokers do lots of specialized marketing which can be costly and time-consuming, and it includes many weekends and evenings meeting with potential buyers. When working with a broker, the average practice sells in about 6 months so selling it alone can be much longer. Your broker should have a list of qualified buyers and a commercial real estate license. If you own your space, it’s often critical to sell the building at the same time or get a solid agreement together for future purchase. Time and time again we see senior veterinarians sell the practice and lease the space with a loose agreement and lose their renter. The buyer decides they like a newer building down the street and leave you with an empty veterinary building.
A good broker will determine the value of your practice and there is much that goes into this process. It’s not just about collections. Everyone’s goal should be to sell at a fair price in a timely manner. If the price isn’t “right”, the banks won’t finance, and you certainly don’t want to carry the loan. If you get pressured to sell too low, which we often see, you can lose tens of thousands of dollars. Brokers spend a lot of time working with all the trusted advisors you need such as veterinary specific banks, CPAs, and attorneys to determine the value of your practice and facilitate a smooth and successful transition.
HARVESTING YOUR EQUITY IN YOUR PRACTICE
You Don’t Have To Retire If You Sell Your Practice
By Rod Johnston, MBA, CMA
A few years ago, I decided to sell my house in Kirkland, WA. I wasn’t planning on moving anywhere. I still planned on living for quite a while longer. I didn’t have any health issues, nor was I downsizing from my 1,100 square foot house to a smaller house. I purchased the house almost 20 years prior and it was nearly paid off, so I had quite a bit of equity built up into it. I had just decided it was time to harvest the equity I had built up in the house and use part of the equity to buy something else, part of it to put towards retirement, and part of it to have as a safety cushion for a rainy day. I’m glad I sold the house as it was over 1/3 of an acre and had a lot of flower beds and landscaping. It was also getting older and required quite a bit of maintenance.
I’m telling you this story because you can do the same thing with your practice. You have put in many years of hard work in your practice. It may need maintenance every year that you may be tired of taking care of. After 20 years of staff issues, they may be getting to you. Maybe you just had a new corporate move in down the street, and you’re worried about competing against them. It could be that you just want to be a veterinarian and just want to see patients – not manage staff, clean the office, pay the bills, deal with the leaking roof, post to the office Facebook or Twitter pages, come up with new ads to get clients in the door or any of the other 100 items that are required of a veterinary practice owner. I know, as I’m also a business owner – and who do you think cleans our toilets on the weekends?
No laws say you must own a practice to be a veterinarian. You can Harvest your Equity from your practice and continue to be a veterinarian. Imagine getting hundreds of thousands, if not millions, out of your practice, continue to work in your own practice, or go to work in a different practice if you choose and no longer have to manage a practice. You can put the money you receive to work for you in a retirement or investment account. You can free up some of your time to enjoy your family. You can buy a vacation home that you’ve always dreamed of, or just simply put the money away for a rainy day and continue to work.
So, what are the steps to Harvesting Your Practice Equity?
- Set up a free consultation with one of our advisors.
- Have a practice valuation done on your practice.
- Meet with your financial advisor to discuss your plan and the valuation.
- Meet again with an Omni Advisor to discuss possible options in selling your practice and the feasibility of working back in the practice.
- Let Omni take over the selling process and find a buyer that matches your needs. The “your” is vitally important as we are matchmakers and want to find a buyer who will be a near-perfect fit for you, your practice staff, clients, and the community.
- Close on the sale of your practice and plan your new, less stressful life.
That’s all there is to it to take back control of your life. Of course, there will be some work between steps such as running reports, meeting with a potential buyer(s), and discussing options with your advisors. But if you rely on Omni and other experts, the process can be simple.
We have helped numerous veterinarians who sold their practice and are working back in their practice or are working for someone else and appreciating their newfound joy again being a veterinarian and helping animals get better. The first step is the easiest. Just give us a call at 360-941-2341.
The Cost of Waiting to Sell
Everything has a cost. If I hit the snooze button on the alarm one time, my cost could be that I potentially get to work late. If I get up early and don’t hit the snooze button, the cost is not being able to sleep an additional 10 or 15 minutes. I’ve been around the block long enough to know timing is everything. If I would have bought $10,000 worth of Microsoft stock in 1985, I would have stock worth $3,000,000 today. On the flip side, how many near-death experiences can I account for where if I would have stepped off the curb a split second earlier, I would have ended up in the hospital?
So, just like choosing to hit your snooze button versus continuing to sleep in, there is a cost in holding onto your practice. The smart thing to do would be to sit down with your trusted advisor. Whether it be your accountant, financial planner, or your friendly neighborhood broker, someone can help you analyze how much it may cost you to hold onto your practice. We can always be reached, at no charge at info@omnipg-vet.com.
Should I Sell My Real Estate?
A high percentage of veterinary practice owners own the building their practice is located. The longer the doctor has owned the practice, the more equity they may have in the building. They also are paying themselves a high rent for tax planning purposes. One of the questions we get asked when a veterinarian is considering selling their practice is, “Should I also sell my building?”
One thing to consider when selling your practice regarding the real estate is, do you want to be a landlord? We have years of experience being a landlord and there are pros and cons. The pros are that you retain the building and get a monthly rental payment. Hopefully, that rental payment covers the mortgage, taxes, maintenance, insurance, and any replacement of major capital items. That includes when the HVAC system or roof fails and they need replacing. The other pro may be an appreciation of the real estate. Currently, we are in a high real estate market. Real estate markets are cyclical. They go up and they go down. There is timing involved in a sale. You time it right and you can reap your rewards of all the years you have owned the building. Time it wrong, and you feel a little pain from not selling at the height of the market.
The cons are like the pros. Being a landlord requires you to be on call 24 hours per day and 7 days per week. If a heavy storm occurs and the snow collapses the roof, the wind blows a tree onto the building, or the parking lot floods into the building, guess who gets the phone call? That’s correct, you! We have been on the receiving end on calls that happen at 2:00 in the morning when the building started to flood.
Another con is when the lease is up and the tenant decides they want to own their own building. They didn’t tell you that they purchased the building next door and you now no longer have a tenant! The odds of getting another veterinarian to start up a practice in your building is very low. It will also be difficult to get another tenant quickly. Potential tenants are scared away because the building was formerly occupied by a veterinarian. They think there will be odors, or the general public has known that location as a veterinary practice location and it may be hard to change the general public’s view of that location. There are three veterinary buildings within five miles of our office that have been vacant for several years due to this exact thing happening.
The third con is timing the market. We’re currently in an up-cycle market. With interest rates and building inventory low and demand high, building values and prices are on the high end. Holding onto the building so you can get some cash flow and then sell the building later could cause you to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars. Also, a building has more value to an owner/user than it does to an investor. That means when you sell your practice, a buyer may be willing to pay 100% of market value, or slightly higher than market value in order to acquire the building. Whereas, an investor will try to negotiate and get the best possible price they can get.
In summary, owning your own building while you are in practice is the smart thing to do. You build equity, pay yourself rent, and can do anything you want to the building. But after you sell your practice, it may be a different story. Consult with your transition broker, who should also have commercial real estate experience, and get sound advice to help you make the right decision.
