RIM leadership may have got arrogant but they also gave a great deal to the Canadian entrepreneur scene. Jim Balsillie was generous enough to give me an interview in 1999 for my book, e-Volution: How to use the Internet to grow your business. He has done his strategy very well - something I see rarely done by Canadian owner/founders.
All this talk we are hearing from the USA about how "private equity destroys jobs" and "capitalism is evil" completely by passes the fact that humans create businesses and destroy businesses. The best businesses rarely go beyond a founder's life cycle and both founders of RIM are past their peak entrepreneurial risk taking days.
There is your problem.
Where were the Board Director experts to point out this fact? As I have hammered in my blog, advisers and board directors appointed by the owners will never say what needs to be said. Have them appointed by an outsider and you will have a very different result.
Wealth Management
Voted #6 on Top 100 Family Business influencer on Wealth, Legacy, Finance and Investments: Jacoline Loewen My Amazon Authors' page Twitter:@ jacolineloewen Linkedin: Jacoline Loewen Profile
January 24, 2012
January 23, 2012
Lessons from the recession for business owners
When I worked at a strategist for a bank and wrote the
speeches for the CEO, who was also the founder, he would confuse me with his insistence
on always bringing up complacency. As a young MBA with my career before me, I could not see wasting time on such a mundane topic which seemed more of a downer and something your mother would say.
As I look back, I realize he was wise with his observation that success brings complacency and complacency brings failure.
Lesson
from the recession: Run your company during boom times as if times were lean.
We have heard many leaders bemoaning that their companies would be far
more successful if they had run them during the boom period as they are running
them now. Without question, success can bring complacency. However, the best
leaders we know resist this tendency. Their companies’ cultures foster
continuous improvement and cost-reduction regardless of great performance.
Similarly, the advice we often give entrepreneurial and family business
owners is, “Run your company as if you are preparing to sell it in three years.”
This means eliminating under performing employees (which can be difficult, even
when done with great care and consideration, but is critical), and building
cost-cutting and improvement initiatives. These efforts will grow EBITDA and
result in a more successful, resilient and valuable company.
As for my old boss, his bank is still in business, having
survived the derivatives madness, and has achieved its vision to be global.
Complacency is indeed the key word to put in all your leadership speeches.
January 19, 2012
Barry McKenna on how Canada can be competitive
How to get the Canadian economy to grow is on everyone's priority list. There were 65 recommendations made by Red Wilson's panel set up to make recommendations.
My time in private equity has shown me that "Growth and innovation" is an attitude.
Canadian business owners have managed to tuck in behind the American economy and grab a good enough market share, but not build its own global winning companies.
Here is an excellent article by Barry McKenna in the Globe and Mail discussing the problem on business innovation further:
My time in private equity has shown me that "Growth and innovation" is an attitude.
Canadian business owners have managed to tuck in behind the American economy and grab a good enough market share, but not build its own global winning companies.
Here is an excellent article by Barry McKenna in the Globe and Mail discussing the problem on business innovation further:
Putting Canada on a more competitive footing will likely mean diversifying trade links beyond the U.S., converting corporate profits into world-beating innovation and pursuing big infrastructure projects. It also means welcoming more foreign investment from places such as China and the Middle East and deregulating a host of stodgy pre-Internet industries, such as telecommunications, cable and transportation.Such a campaign has a long way to go – as is highlighted by the comments of foreign investors like Naguib Sawiris, the Egyptian telecommunications tycoon. It was his money, controversially, that helped fund the startup of Wind Mobile in this country. In an interview with The Globe and Mail this week, he blamed Ottawa’s telecommunications policy for making it harder for new wireless companies to establish themselves. “Anybody who asks me, I tell him look, we are the stupid investors that poured a billion dollars into Canada here and created 1,000 new jobs, please don’t do this mistake. Don’t come here,” Mr. Sawiris said. He also drew a direct link between the long-standing federal policy of limiting foreign investment and the lack of global presence of Canada’s major telcos.
“If they were that good, why are they just in Canada here? Why don’t we have Rogers in the U.K. or Germany? Why is Vodafone everywhere? Why is France Télécom everywhere? And this national champion Rogers is only in Canada? Because only in Canada it gets pampered and it can kill its competitors.”
A push for reform
In 2008, an expert panel set up by the Harper government to examine Canada’s competitiveness recommended a major shift in Ottawa’s approach to telecom, in favour of opening it up to far more foreign investment. Three and half years later, the chairman of that panel, Red Wilson, looks back on his effort with a mixture of pride and regret. Pride because his panel’s findings are just as relevant today as they were then. But it’s tinged with disappointment because most of the 65 recommendations, including the one on foreign ownership of telecom companies, remain on the shelf even as the country’s innovation and productivity performance sputters.
January 18, 2012
Can I sell my company even if it is not profitable?
The question of the week is one asked by many of my clients:
Can I sell my company even if I have not made any profit the last couple of years?
Jacoline Loewen
is a Director of Loewen & Partners Inc., an Exempt Market Dealer,
specializing in finance for owner operators and family businesses, specifically
acquisitions, restructurings, sales, successions, strategy and private equity financing.
Can I sell my company even if I have not made any profit the last couple of years?
The answer I give is a whole-hearted, "Yes!"
You can always sell your company. The correct question though is: Will you receive a value sufficient to satisfy your personal
objectives?
Many of my clients have become used to withdrawing capital from the company and once profits erode, become nervous and think that they need to sell before profits decline further. This is where valuation and sale of your business by a professional EMD or corporate finance expert will make a significant difference.
Although your historical EBITDA certainly is a factor, the value
will depend largely on what EBITDA you can prove for the future. If, for
example, you have landed large new contracts, you likely will be able to get
value for most of the EBITDA that those contracts will generate over the years to come.
I suppose the
tougher question here is: Why are you selling your company now? If you have no
choice, then you should prepare the best you can, potentially hire a broker or Exempt Market Dealer to
help you tell the story, and get the best value possible.
If you don’t have to
sell now and you think the future looks better, you likely will get more value
if you wait. Taking on 30% sale to Private Equity would be your best option. They will fill up the tank again, revitalize your strategy and get you looking at what options you have - most often, hiring a CEO and encouraging you to do the work you love to do.
Jacoline
began her career with Granduc Mines, Northern BC, and then Deloitte in their
strategy unit. She
developed a strategic planning model and published it in a book called "The Power of Strategy”. She also wrote
"Business e-Volution" and “Money Magnet: How to Attract Investors to
Your Business” (Wiley), which has been used by Ivey as a text book.
She is a Director on the Board of
the Exempt Market Dealers Association (EMDA) responsible for brand and
communications. She is on the advisory board of DCL International, Bilingo
China and Flint Business Acceleration. She has been a Director for other Boards
such as the Strategic Leadership Forum.
She is a regular panellist on
BNN: The Pitch, a contributor to the
Globe & Mail and National Post, serves as a judge for the UBC and the
Richard Ivey School of Business’ Business Plan Competitions and is a guest
lecturer at Ivey and Rotman Universities. Jacoline
holds an arts degree in Industrial Relations from McGill University and a MBA
from the University of the Witwatersrand.
Her MBA thesis was selected by Cambridge University and published by
Cambridge’s Engineering faculty.
January 16, 2012
Jacoline Loewen on 3 Rules for every Start Up - BNN The Pitch
Putting more into production of the The Pitch by pre-taping, rather than doing it live. We start today.
Up first to pitch are two start-ups that look promising for the financial returns and interesting, compelling products that they are already selling.
I will tell you their names later this week and give you a heads up on how they did with the private equity panel on BNN.
I thought I would add the 3 rules I liked the most from a great list by Mark Evens in The Globe and Mail on 10 rules for start ups. Here's Mark:
Up first to pitch are two start-ups that look promising for the financial returns and interesting, compelling products that they are already selling.
I will tell you their names later this week and give you a heads up on how they did with the private equity panel on BNN.
I thought I would add the 3 rules I liked the most from a great list by Mark Evens in The Globe and Mail on 10 rules for start ups. Here's Mark:
8. Understand that raising money is time-consuming and disruptive
From the outside looking in, raising venture capital looks sexy and exciting. The reality is that it involves a lot of grunt work, energy, numerous meetings and lots of patience to convince investors to commit. It also takes entrepreneurs away from running the business.
9. Recognize that once you raise money, it and your investors need to be managed
When investors decide to give startups money, they expect progress, traction and regular updates on what is happening. It’s not like they hand over the cash and then go away while the entrepreneur gets to do what he or she wants. Instead, startups need to continually manage their investors, which takes time and effort.
10. Enjoy the work because startups can be a 7/24 activity
Startups are not a 9-to-5 job that lets you go home at the end of the day without any work distractions. Startups are beasts that can be consuming so you had better enjoy the journey.
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