Exit Planning Review  
  Exit Planning Information & Education for America's Business Owners  
 


The Exit Planning Review is an opt-in,
bi-monthly newsletter published by Business Enterprise Institute, Inc.

This issue is provided to you by Business Exit Planners, LLC Exit Planning Specialist, Michael C. Valdez, CFP, CLU, REBC, AIF.

For an overview of Exit Planning, please visit our web site.

View my Executive Briefing schedule



PROVIDED BY:
Issue 100

Using Short-Term Incentive Plans to Retain Key Employees during the Transfer of a Business
Developing The Lifetime Stay Bonus Plan

In the last issue (for a copy of Issue 99, please contact Michael C. Valdez, CFP, CLU, REBC, AIF), we have discussed the importance of Lifetime Stay Bonuses and the considerations that you must address prior to developing and implementing successful Stay Bonus Plans for your key employees. In the previous issues, we also have followed fictional owner John Ewing through the decision making process of creating Stay Bonuses to ensure the continued presence of his key employees during the transition of his business.

When we last left John, he had already "informally" promised his three key managers a total of 10 percent of the anticipated sale price. Using that as a basis for his Stay Bonus Plan, John and his Exit Planning Advisor Team began designing a plan using the following steps.

Step 1. Upon the sale of the company, John agrees to escrow an amount equal to 10 percent of the purchase price. The escrow will be outside of the acquiring company’s ownership. In effect, John will own the monies in the escrow account, subject to the three key managers vesting in that money.

Step 2. Each manager will be entitled to a Stay Bonus equal to his or her prorata share of the escrow amount, as he or she becomes vested.

Step 3. Unlike typical key employee compensation plans, the vesting schedule is also the payment schedule for this Stay Bonus Plan. A manager becomes vested in his or her share at the closing of the sale and receives one-third of the payment at that time, one-third at the first anniversary, and the remainder at the second anniversary of the closing date. If a manager chooses not to remain with the new company for the entire two years, he or she will not receive the full amount of the Stay Bonus. Any funds remaining in the escrow after two years will revert to John. If the employee is involuntarily terminated by the new owner, he or she will still receive the balance of the escrow amount.

This stay bonus program helps to accomplishes several vital objectives for John’s management team. These include:

Cash. The key employee’s economic reward is divorced from the rise or fall in the value of the acquiring company’s stock. Rather, it is based upon the value of the company at the date of sale. Payments are in cash, not in stock of the new company.

Accelerated vesting and pay out. Payment will be made from the escrow account when the key employee vests in that portion of this account. Unlike most incentive plans that vest over an extended period of time and pay only after vesting is completed, this program provides a rapid reward for the key employees — provided they remain with the new organization.

Minimal risk. Because the money is in escrow for the exclusive benefit of the management team and is not controlled or owned by the acquiring company, the chance that key employees will leave the new organization is minimized or eliminated. The key employees must simply remain employed for a period of two years. As they stay, they receive their entire benefit amount, in cash.

Outside of new employer control. Because the Stay Bonus Plan is completely separate from the acquiring company, it is easier to negotiate the management team’s participation in the acquiring company’s stock option program, or other program, it provides for its key employees. Ewing Lubricants’ existing stock option and deferred compensation plans for its key employees were replaced with a Stay Bonus program, thus making it easier for the key employees to participate in any new plans.

The Stay Bonus program meets John’s exit objective of selling his company for top dollar. Having the plan in place makes the company more "saleable" and makes Ewing Lubricants more valuable in the eyes of a prospective buyer due to management continuity and the simplification of key benefit programs. The next step, then, is to properly present the plan to the employees. If both the employees and the employer are to view the benefit plan as a "win-win," the manner in which the program is presented to key employees is critical. The next issue of the Exit Planning Review™ will discuss an approach for successfully presenting the plan to employees.

Subsequent issues of The Exit Planning Review™ discuss all aspects of Exit Planning. The provider of this Newsletter (Michael C. Valdez, CFP, CLU, REBC, AIF) offer you unbiased information about what you may need to know — How To Run Your Business So You Can Leave It In Style™.

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DISCLAIMER: The information contained in this article is general in nature and is not legal advice. For information regarding your particular situation, contact an attorney or tax advisor. This newsletter is believed to provide accurate and authoritative information related to the subject matter. The accuracy of the information is not guaranteed and is provided with the understanding that none of the providers of this newsletter, including Business Enterprise Institute, Inc., is rendering legal, accounting or tax advice. In specific cases, clients should consult their legal, accounting or tax advisors.

The example provided is hypothetical and for illustrative purposes only. It includes ficticious names and does not represent any particular person or entity.



Circular 230 Disclosure: To ensure compliance with requirements imposed by the IRS under circular 230, we inform you that any U.S. Federal tax advice contained in this communication, unless otherwise specifically stated, was not intended or written to be used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of (1) avoiding penalties under the Internal Revenue Code or (2) promoting, marketing, or recommending to another party any matters addressed herein.

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Exit Planning Information & Education for America's Business Owners

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