November 22, 2024

The Boss: Arrowsight’s C.E.O., on Building Companies That Last

As a teenager, I worked in a fruit and vegetable store. My job was to make orange juice in the basement. Whenever the longtime employees walked down, I’d pepper them with questions about how everything worked. It was my introduction to business.

In sixth grade, I moved to Boston to live with my father, a physician, then returned to Vermont for college. I graduated from the University of Vermont in 1990 with a bachelor’s degree in economics and history.

During college, I developed a relationship with a financial adviser who worked at what was then Dean Witter Reynolds and was involved in technical trading analysis. He introduced me to a Japanese trading method called candlestick charting. I took the charts along with me on a summer vacation in Greece and continued to study with him for a few months after I graduated.

In 1991, I got a job on Wall Street at what was then CS First Boston as a currency trader, and in 1993 I moved to Paine Webber for a year. I had about 10 bosses in that time, so it didn’t seem like a stable industry. I hoped to start my own trading company. From 1994 to 1999, I was a co-founder of two money management firms that traded currency. When the euro was adopted in 1999, I thought that currency trading would become less profitable, so it was time for another career change.

Around 1997, my wife, Alison, and I watched a television program that included a day care center with a worker who possibly abused drugs. Putting cameras in these centers, enabling parents to see their children in real time by logging into a Web site, seemed like a good idea, and in 1999 I started ParentWatch, the precursor of Arrowsight. ParentWatch is now a division of Arrowsight.

I felt that the beef production industry, with its need for safety, offered greater potential for using video cameras. I thought of how sports teams use game films to improve, and I wondered why businesses weren’t doing something similar.

For three years while running ParentWatch, I studied the beef industry and raised capital for my idea, starting Arrowsight in 2002. My finance background helped me find start-up funding, and I met a senior executive in the meat industry who gave me a fast-track education in the field. I spent hours in meat processing plants.

Using cameras, sensors and remote video software, we started out checking food safety and animal welfare in meat processing plants. In 2004, a beef industry consultant introduced me to Temple Grandin, an expert in the humane treatment of animals. Temple endorsed our operations, which use auditing methods she developed, and she became one of our advisers.

Our customers include Cargill and the OSI Group, and, since we expanded our monitoring services into the health care industry, the North Shore-LIJ Health System and the medical center of the University of California, San Francisco.

When I started Arrowsight, I underestimated how difficult it is to convince potential customers to buy a system that doesn’t currently exist in their budget. I’d advise other entrepreneurs to look for investors who have a long-term view, and to forget their ego and choose colleagues who are smarter than they are.

As told to Patricia R. Olsen.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/02/jobs/arrowsights-ceo-on-building-companies-that-last.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

You’re the Boss: Business-for-Sale Market Shows Improvement

Transaction

Putting a price on business.

BizBuySell.com recently released its latest Insight Report on trends in the business-for-sale marketplace, showing an increase in closed transactions for the second quarter of 2011. While access to credit remains tight, the number of  deals completed was up 8 percent over the same period last year.

“We’ve been anticipating an upward trend in the business-for-sale market as more profitable businesses start to become available for sale,” said Mike Handelsman, group general manager, in a press release. Mr. Handelsman also attributed the uptick to business owners who were finally emerging from survival mode and returning to profitability. An industry breakdown of the 1,198 small businesses sold during the second quarter showed that almost half were in the service sector, while 26 percent were in retail, 18 percent were restaurants and 5 percent were in manufacturing.

The small-business economy continues to send mixed signals, with some saying that the recession has not ended on Main Street and with others reporting a surge of confidence among owners of privately held companies. Personally, my favorite economic indicator is the phone in my office, which has indeed started ringing more often with business owners calling to begin the process of a sale or exit. Many business owners have been asking me if now is a good time to sell, a question that I try to answer with as much candor as possible.

If you own a Main Street business — which I’ll define here as an owner-operated business with less than $2 million in annual gross revenue — things are still a bit hit and miss. If your business has performed well throughout the economic downturn (“flat is the new growth”) and is in a stable industry, there’s no reason not to take your business to market. Good businesses sell in any economy, and there are plenty of worthy buyers out there who have been looking hard for businesses to buy.

Businesses that are in the fortunate position of attracting interest from either a strategic acquirer or a private equity group are truly in a seller’s market. While Main Street America has muddled through the recession and uncertain recovery, larger companies and investors have been sitting on great gobs of cash — which they are actively looking to deploy. It used to be that I would only see interest from a private equity group on businesses with a minimum of $2 million in pre-tax earnings. Over the last two years that earnings floor has dropped to $1 million, as good deals have presumably been in short supply and the private equity folks look to do smaller “add-on” acquisitions of businesses that complement one of the larger companies in their portfolio.

Even if you’re on the fence as to whether now is a good time to sell, it is always a good time to start planning for what can be a lengthy and complex process. I’ve had a number of business owners approach me recently about building value in their businesses with an eye toward selling in the next year or two, a topic that I am more than happy to discuss. In fact, the phone ringing and the question of value enhancement are music to my ears.

Barbara Taylor is co-owner of a business brokerage, Synergy Business Services, in Bentonville, Ark. Here is her guide to selling a business.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=b9ce63c6be5976abf8ed7f7876706620