The following article was originally published by Printing Impressions. To read more of their content, subscribe to their newsletter, Today on PIWorld.
Almost everything that matters in business and life is the result of a process: a series of defined steps leading to a desired outcome. Over the years, we have seen that buying or selling a printing or a packaging company usually consists of a six-step sequence of events that every owner can follow to reach a successful deal:
- Forming the strategy
- Identifying the target
- Conducting the preliminary review
- Negotiating
- Performing due diligence
- Circling back to confirm the details
The process is the same for sellers and buyers, and its outcome is the closing of a transaction that rewards both parties. We’ll discuss steps one and two here, and address the rest of the sequence in columns to come.
The main thing to know about step one is that doing it properly can make step two a good deal easier. Case in point: the recent acquisition of the labels division of an NYSE publicly traded conglomerate by a leading U.S. label converter, in which New Direction Partners represented the buyer.
Our client knew exactly what it wanted a growth-by-acquisition strategy to deliver: a broader territorial footprint; a new cohort of highly skilled employees; and advanced equipment with new printing capabilities. This helped us target the search to qualified candidates that included the division that was ultimately acquired.
Too Many Is Too Much
Because the buyer’s strategy and objectives in the first step of the process were highly specific, the second step could be carried out much more efficiently. Admittedly, it doesn’t always happen this way. If a buying client were to come to us, as some have, with annual sales as the sole criterion, that might give us hundreds if not thousands of potential sellers to sift through before the rest of the process could move ahead.
As they form their strategies, buyers should be clear about what they want — as well as what they don’t want — in companies to be acquired. A want could be a capability that the buyer doesn’t already have, or a book of commodity business that can be folded into the buyer’s plant. For many buyers, a seller’s unionized workforce is a definite don’t-want. The more items that can be identified under both headings, the smarter the candidate search will be.
Sometimes, an owner’s first strategic decision is to determine which of the two roles to play. One of our clients, a major producer of POP displays, found itself outsourcing large volumes of other kinds of printing that its customers also wanted to buy. The fork in the road for this company was deciding whether to add these non-POP capabilities, or to sell its POP business to a printer that could provide everything under one roof. They chose selling as the best way to perpetuate their operation and keep their customers satisfied.
This story highlights the fact that sellers have to be just as certain of their strategies as buyers. In one sense, they have even more to think about, since selling a company changes the seller’s role in a way that an acquisition doesn’t — the buyer is still the person in charge. This means, for example, that a seller who wants to stay active in the business will want to connect with a different type of buyer than the seller whose goal is to move on to other things.
Second Act with Private Equity
A great match for a seller whose working years aren’t over is often a private equity (PE) buyer, who will typically expect the seller to continue in an executive role, as the PE buyer builds a platform of companies around the one initially acquired. On the other hand, a seller wishing for a quicker exit may be better off seeking a deal with a strategic buyer, where the seller probably would be asked to stay on only for a short transitional period after closing.
When buyers and sellers know precisely what they do and do not want, their well-defined strategies create better opportunities to bring them together.
Another one of our clients, the owner of a successful direct mail business, realized the segment was transitioning to digital and inkjet production. But he also knew that he did not want to make the inkjet investment himself. This was our cue to connect him with buyers who had the technology and could support his volume with it.
A client we recently helped sell to a group of PE investors is actively seeking to acquire a company with inkjet capability as part of the platform-building strategy it is now executing.
Real estate considerations also often dictate the strategies of sellers and buyers. The client who got the proverbial offer he couldn’t refuse for his building now faced the question of what to do with the printing operation inside it. The answer was the sale of the business to a strategic buyer that could absorb the workload, freeing the seller’s plant to be repurposed by its new owner.
All of these transactions succeeded for the same reason: they began with clear strategic objectives leading to the right choice of candidates for a mutually beneficial transaction. Completing the first two steps opens the way to carrying out the remaining four with equal efficiency and success.
Matchmaking Makes Sense
A caveat, however, is that steps one and two can be the most delicate of all because at these early stages, the parties are still strangers to one another. This can lead to misunderstandings that block further progress. A buyer making a cold approach to a seller could incorrectly be seen as an aggressive competitor. A seller making the overture might hesitate to share business details the buyer needs for fear of giving away competitive advantage.
Experience shows that the best way around these obstacles is to entrust the initial contacts to a qualified third-party advisor representing either the buyer or the seller. By acting as a knowledgeable go-between, the advisor can set the stage for a cordial first meeting and a productive series of engagements to follow. When that happens, the six-step process toward a successful deal will have gained a promising momentum of its own.
Peter Schaefer, partner at New Direction Partners, is an experienced dealmaker with more than 25 years of investment banking and valuation experience, 20 of which has been focused exclusively on the printing and packaging industries. He has closed more than one hundred transactions in virtually every segment of the printing and packaging industries. In addition, he has performed hundreds of valuations for ESOPs, estate and gift tax planning and strategic planning purposes. Contact him at (610) 230-0635, ext. 701.