When the owner of a medium sized business is thinking of selling, the road in front to complete a transaction is a rocky one.

On top of the pressure and tension of financial and strategic due diligence, there are always questions about employee reaction.

  • Will it impact on the value of the business?
  • Will productivity drop?
  • Will key employees leave?
  • Will they disrupt the process?
  • How will I replace any that leave when the business is for sale?

These questions, and more will be out in force.

Given that the large majority of private sales processes do not end in a transaction, the long term impact of a failed process can be significant.

Is it better to take employees into your confidence, and include them in the process, giving them the opportunity to contribute, or better to keep quiet and hope they do not find out?

Employees in a medium sized business are generally close to each other. Rumour and assumptions that might impact them, accurate or otherwise, get around very quickly. It is also the case that employees are rarely stupid, they can see when the owner is getting near retirement, has had an approach, or just getting tired of the grind, and draw their own conclusions.

The stress of uncertainty is far more corrosive the certain knowledge of difficult things to come.

On several occasions, once in defiance of instructions, I have taken employees into my confidence when a plant has been nominated for closure. In every case, all I did was confirm what they suspected, and knowing the truth proved to be much better than the uncertainty of not knowing. In every case, the plant closure, or sale process has been greatly assisted by the employees, who now had a clear picture of what lay in front of them, and of the measures put in place to assist.

Similarly, I have been in several situations where the closure of a plant or sale of a business was kept as confidential as was humanly possible. In every case, the corrosive impact of the suspicion that something was up amongst employees greatly impacted the outcome negatively.

My recommendation: Always assume employees are not stupid, and that they will react positively to being taken into your confidence, and even assist the process, not just for your benefit, but for theirs. There are many examples around the world of the impact employees can have on the success of a business. I have been in a small way involved in several. The current poster-boy for employee engagement is Chobani founder and CEO Hamdi Ulukaya, who turned an old, broken yogurt plant in upstate New York into a global success by engaging employees, then told the story in this TED talk.

 

Cartoon credit: www.gapingvoid.com

 

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