A shareholder agreement isn’t just a legal document, it’s the essence of what your company is.

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A shareholder agreement isn’t just a legal document, it’s the essence of what your company is.

 
 

Setting up your own business is a hugely inspiring experience. Most founders will talk of the thrill of the first day of trading, opening up new offices, hiring their first employees or winning that first customer and making a sale.

One thing you’re unlikely to hear being remembered with fondness is the day the founders sat down with their lawyers and wrote the shareholder agreement. That’s a chore, isn’t it? Something to be endured, rather than enjoyed.

Well, not quite. The shareholder agreement should be a bit more than that. A lot more, in fact. Here’s how you can turn what’s usually seen as a dry legal document into something that can inspire and drive your team on to success as well as help you avoid potential obstacles down the road.

 

More than just words

Shareholder agreements are, in legal speak, ‘a binding contract between a company’s shareholders which defines shareholders’ rights, privileges, protections and obligations’.

It’s understandable why that kind of language hardly makes the hair on the neck of an entrepreneur stand up. But while it’s absolutely vital to make sure your shareholder agreement is legally sound and drawn up correctly, smart leaders see an agreement as far more than just a formal document.

A good agreement will reflect your business. It will accurately present the structure you have in place, the processes that drive it and contain the essence of what your company ultimately wants to be. Get these things right and the agreement will be far easier to draft.

This is where you can put in writing clearly what the roles and responsibilities of your team are. Where you can set the goals for your company growth and put in place the rewards that will come when everyone works together to hit those targets. Think of it not as a mill around the neck, but a strategic document to help pull you up and keep reaching for where you want to be.


Avoid cookie cutter templates, build an agreement unique to you

A frequent mistake made by many founders is to craft an agreement from a template online, or base it on a previous agreement they may have been seen before.

This is dangerous. Your company is unique. It has unique goals and a unique team striving to reach them. Therefore, your agreement must be built with all these factors in mind.

To truly motivate the agreement has to consider the skills, roles and contributions of the people who will be working together to make your company succeed. Putting this in a formal document will give your team confidence that their work will be recognised and that the company is heading in the right direction.


Don’t avoid the awkward conversations

There’s little doubt shareholder agreements can be an emotional issue. Especially when a company is founded by close friends. As a result, many shy away from having tough conversations about the legal side of things until it is too late.

So if later on something goes wrong, someone wants to leave or somebody doesn’t fulfil expectations, then if the right agreement isn’t in place it can be a genuine roadblock to growing your company. In extreme (but not uncommon) cases it can actually rip a company apart.

Which is why it’s better to go through the ‘awkward stuff’ at the start, when relationships are at their best, rather than later when the pressure of running a larger operation is on and you can’t see the wood for the trees.

If you can educate your team as to why it’s important to get things right from the off, it’ll help bring them on board as well as make them realise just how important the right agreement is.


Always ask the experts

Lawyers are expensive. In an organisation’s early days, when capital is low and so much money needs to be found for setting up, it’s common to cut costs when it comes to hiring a lawyer to help with things like your shareholder agreement.

However tempting that is, resist. Think of it as investment. While you should approach your agreement in a positive sense to motivate your team, getting even the most minor detail wrong can by incredibly costly at a later time.

Take the hit now and you can avoid all sorts of possible issues. Additionally, a sound legal agreement will also impress future investors when they carry out due diligence, showing you are professional to the very core of what you do.


Keep it flexible

Finally, your agreement shouldn’t be set in stone. Your company is an evolving organism, changing as you hire new staff, open new offices and launch new products and services. So your agreement needs to change as well.

As mentioned earlier, your agreement should reflect what your company is and where it is going. So as these things change so must your agreement.

You can set a date to review annually or look to make changes when a major hiring is made or new goal set. Again, work with a lawyer to forge a mechanism that allows for flexibility.

An evolving agreement presents an image to your team of a company that refuses to stand still and keeps looking to improve itself.

So stop thinking of your shareholder agreement as a legal process, think of it as your company charter, leading you forward.

 
 

Accelerating towards your Exit Strategy

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Accelerating Towards your Exit Strategy

 
 

At ValueMaker we obsess about what it takes to grow a business successfully. Why some SME’s can increase their business value effortlessly and why others, which seem equally well set up, have difficulty. We notice that the most successful SME’s relentlessly close the gap between what they intend to do and what they actually do.

This may not seem like a very revealing insight or one that can be a foundation of rapid business growth, but in our experience this explains differences in performance more precisely than any other measure. And it is a measure many SME’s are unaware of.

All SME’s that are planning to realise capital via an exit are on a journey from small to larger - and that journey is one of mind-set more than anything else. The journey can be made difficult as the motivation that leads an entrepreneur to set up his or her own business may conflict with the development of a large-business mind-set. Freedom and control, being in charge of your own destiny, are often more powerful motivators than the desire to be rich, yet for many entrepreneurs the aim of scaling the business to the point where it has realisable value is at least part of the dream.

 

Doing this involves the willingness to forgo some aspects of freedom and control. It involves working in a disciplined, planned way (closing the gap between intention and execution) and allowing others in the business to make decisions and initiate actions. (We would never advocate switching completely to a large-business way of operating – just recognising there are some key strengths that are characteristic of big-company thinking).

Many of the businesses we talk to believe they are doing just this. However, too often what we find is businesses where the leaders are involved in every aspect of business delivery, have no confidence in the ability of the business to deliver the everyday without their active intervention and are therefore committing too little time to the issues of accelerating growth and profitability.

The big strategies that could deliver transformation remain just that, strategies, while the leadership team run the day-to-day.

The good news is that it’s possible to change. The bad news is that the necessary changes may not be obvious, desirable or even, at first glance, that important.

 
 

Things to do more of in 2017

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Things to do more of in 2017

 
 

How will 2018 start for you? If 2017 has begun with a clear plan and an aligned and focused leadership team it is likely that 2018 will begin with a buzz of happy optimism. If things aren’t quite so clear it’s time to get focused.

2017 feels like the kind of year that isn’t going to be waiting around for stragglers. With that in mind – this is our check list of things to be on top of throughout 2017.

 
 
 

One

Focus on your customers’ needs, not what you need their needs to be. Get radical if you want to remain relevant.

Two

Focus on your people. Aligned, engaged, motivated people will change what the business is capable of.

Three

Achieve forward financial clarity. Knowing where you are and the effects of any changes instantly will transform the quality of your decision making.

Four

Identify the blind spots in the business and attack them. These often form around things the business doesn’t want to address so be prepared to enter the discomfort zone.

Five

Understand the AI revolution, how quickly it’s coming and what it might mean for your business – good and bad. If you think it won’t affect you - be prepared to be tsunamied.

 
 
 

ValueMaker would like to wish every SME good luck in 2017. And remember, the best SME’s will make their own luck!