• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Scale FinanceScale Finance Logo, Interim CFO, Part Time CFO Services, Accounting Support, Temporary CFO, Accounting Bookkeeping Services

Interim CFO, Part Time CFO Services, Accounting Support, Temporary CFO, Accounting Bookkeeping Services

Charlotte · Raleigh – Durham · Chapel Hill · Triad · Southern Pines · Coastal Carolina
Closing the GAAP to Scale Your Business
The FINACA Logo
919-230-4667
Scale Finance, LLC, Financing, North Myrtle Beach, SC
  • Home
  • Services
    • CFO & Controller Services
    • Capital Raise Services
    • Business Valuations
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Professional Consultations at No Cost
  • Professionals
    • Partners
    • Charlotte Team
    • Raleigh – Durham – Chapel Hill Team
    • Greensboro-Southern Pines
    • Coastal Carolina Team
  • Client Experience
    • Closed Capital Raise Transactions
    • Closed M&A Transactions
    • Client Endorsements
    • Information Technology
    • Healthcare, Biopharma & Medical Device
    • Services, Energy, Industrial
    • Consumer, Retail, Media
    • Real Estate
    • Private Equity Groups
  • Recent News
  • Knowledge Bank
    • Best Practices in Scaling Companies
    • Entrepreneurial Management Skill- Building
    • Financial Management
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Regulatory Developments
    • Venture Capital
  • Contact Us
    • Charlotte
    • Raleigh – Durham – Chapel Hill
    • Triad – Southern Pines
    • Coastal Carolina
  • Joining Our Firm

Surviving an Earnout Provision While Selling Your Business


If you are selling a business, the buyer may want to pay part of the price through an Earnout provision. This is a contractual arrangement in which the seller receives additional payment in the future if certain financial goals are met. In other words, part of the price is contingent on the performance of the company after the sale.

Earnout sales have been around for a long time and are increasingly common, especially in high growth businesses, those with unproven products, and/or situations where the buyer and seller disagree on valuation issues (i.e. often). By some estimates, up to half of small business sales involve Earnout provisions lasting two to five years, and involving 15 to 50 percent of the purchase price. What are Earnout provisions based on? It varies depending on the agreement, but the target goals generally involve net income, gross revenue, the number of new customers or earnings.

An Earnout may sound attractive but there are a number of dangers to watch out for. Here are five:

Danger #1
Losing Control

Obviously, after you sell the business, you’re no longer in control. This factor can affect the bottom line and ultimately, your payout. For example, let’s say your payout is based on the net income of the company for the next few years. You’re now subject to someone else’s management and accounting practices. There are a lot of ways the new owner could intentionally or unintentionally suppress net income by inflating overhead or accelerating capital expenditures.

The new owner might also make substantial changes to the company’s processes and operations, which could affect net income negatively. Perhaps the new owner doesn’t have much expertise in the industry. Or the customers may prefer dealing with the current management. That could result in the business suffering through a few rough years of low revenue – the very years that determine your Earnout payments.

What can you do? The most obvious answer is to get the biggest upfront payout possible. Try to limit the Earnout to the amount you are willing to lose. Then, if the business begins sliding after the sale, at least you have some level of protection.

Next, have your Earnout payments based on a target other than net income. You may want use gross profit or some measurement that is less easy to manipulate.

Ideally, you should build some measures into the contract that will help ensure that the target goals are achievable. For instance, say your Earnout is based on the number of new customers, but the new owner slashes the marketing budget. Without any control over marketing, the chances of meeting the new customer target are slim.

Danger #2
An Ambiguous New Role

Often, when a business is sold, part of the package involves the seller staying with the company in a new role as an employee or consultant. This allows the seller to ease into retirement or another project while providing guidance to the new owner. If you agree to a new position, you’ll obviously be in a better position to keep an eye on the bottom line, although ultimately, you’re still not in control. You want to make sure that employment or consulting contracts do not include clauses that allow the new owner to demote or replace you after the sale closes. There may be personality clashes or the new owner may be ambivalent about having you stay on in the first place.

Make sure that a non-compete clause doesn’t keep you from pursuing other projects you are interested in. You also want the contract to include a way to exit gracefully. Suppose you agree to remain during a three-year Earnout period, but find yourself miserable in the role. Negotiate an exit strategy that allows you to leave early without forfeiting the payments.

Danger #3
Not Getting the Details Right

Disagreements can crop up if the parties interpret the terms of the agreement differently. In some cases, buyers and sellers wind up in court. That’s why it’s important to have a professional adviser iron out the details. You need someone who thoroughly understands your business to facilitate the best results.

The basis for your compensation needs to be spelled out in clear terms. When will the payments be made? How will they be structured? The buyer may want payments to be based on net income, arguing that it is the best indicator of the business’s performance. But it may be better to base payments on gross revenue or another measure. As the seller, you can insist that the Earnout formula include certain caps on items, such as on the amortization of goodwill, or the depreciation claimed on capital investments after the sale.

Another issue to consider is the possibility that the buyer will turn around and sell the business before all the payments are made. You may want to include a clause in the contract that accelerates your payments if the business is resold. Or, negotiate a guarantee that you will have a stake in the proceeds if a sale occurs before your Earnout is complete.

Danger #4
Overlooking Tax Considerations

When a business is sold with an Earnout provision, the buyer and seller should plan carefully for the tax consequences. You want to structure the sale to minimize the tax liability. There are important considerations depending on factors such as:

  • Whether you sell stock or assets.
  • How the Earnout formula is designed with respect to the tax rules for installment sales.
  • What type of business structure is in place a the time of the sale (C corporation, sole proprietorship, S corporation, partnership, LLC, etc.).

Consult with your tax adviser about the best way to proceed in your situation.

Danger #5
Not having the Right to Audit

It’s a good idea to retain the right to have an independent review of the financial statements that determine your Earnout payments. Since there will probably be changes in the company’s accounting or management practices, an independent review can frame the post-closing financial statements in terms that are comparable to the way business was conducted before the sale. In other words, you want to compare apples to apples.

Keep in mind that no matter how many details and scenarios you plan for, there may be some unpredictable situations. Decide in advance how disputes will be settled. It’s generally a good idea to stipulate in writing that the agreement will be subject to binding arbitration.

An Earnout might be a good way to bridge the valuation gap when selling a business. But it is not a do-it-yourself project. A professional experienced in mergers and acquisitions can help protect future earnings, point out pitfalls that might be overlooked, and keep a lid on emotions that may boil over when discussions get heated.

About Scale Finance

Scale Finance LLC (www.scalefinance.com) provides contract CFO services, Controller solutions, and support in raising capital, or executing M&A transactions, to entrepreneurial companies. The firm specializes in cost-effective financial reporting, budgeting & forecasting, implementing controls, complex modeling, business valuations, and other financial management, and provides strategic help for companies raising growth capital or considering M&A/recapitalization opportunities. Most of the firm’s clients are growing technology, healthcare, business services, consumer, and industrial companies at various stages of development from start-up to tens of millions in annual revenue. Scale Finance LLC has offices throughout the southeast including Charlotte, Raleigh/Durham, Greensboro, Wilmington, Washington D.C. and South Florida with a team of more than 30 professionals serving more than 100 companies throughout the region.

Primary Sidebar

Knowledge Bank

Hiring a Startup CFO – When to Hire a CFO & Why You Need One

Owner Financing of Small Companies – Debt or Equity Considerations

Will Your Merger be Blindsided by Fraud?

Series C & Beyond: How Growth Investing is Different Than Early Stage

5 Rules for an A+ Board Meeting for Investor-backed Companies

Understanding & Using Your Cash Flow Statement

Why Business Valuations are Helpful (& What do they Typically Cost)?

Managing Merchant Fees – Role of Zero Fee Processing

Can Accountants Value a Business?

Personal Guarantees – Should You Grant One?

10 Pieces of Advice When Someone Wants to Buy Your Company

Convertible Note Financing – Payback Time

Due Diligence Fiasco – A Look Back at HP-Autonomy

Applying for Business Loans – Hard Credit Checks

7 Ways a Business Name Generator Can Help Entrepreneurs

Citizenship by Investment Overview

Understanding the True Cost of Employee Turnover

How to Think About Valuation When Raising Venture Capital

What it Takes to Shift to a Recurring Revenue Model in Hardware & Software

Differences Between Major SBA Loan Programs – SBA 7(a) vs. SBA 504

Explore the Knowledge Bank…

Secondary Sidebar

Recent News

Scale Finance Closes $20M ABL Financing for TRA

Scale Finance Leads the Successful Sale of Carolina Restoration Services

Scale Finance Advises FX HedgePool on $8M Series A Funding

SF Closes Acquisition of Midwest Outdoor Resorts for Travel Resorts of America

Scale Finance Closes $7 Million Senior Debt Financing for Travel Resorts of America

Scale Finance Advises on Acquisition of Falcone Crawl Space & Structural Repair

Congrats to Payzer for Closing $23 Million Equity Financing

SF Client Headbands of Hope Closes Strategic Growth Investment

SF Assists Semper Investment Company in Acquisition of ACM Removal

SF Client SentryOne Acquired by SolarWinds (NYSE: SWI)

Scale Finance Assists GPM with Acquisition by Netsmart

SF Client Broadstep Behavioral Health Continues National Growth Through Acquisitions

SF Client Impact Financial Systems (IFS) Acquired by iPipeline

Scale Finance Assists TrueLearn with Investment by LLR Partners

Scale Finance Assists Textum Weaving with Investment by Quad-C

Scale Finance Closes Debt Financing for Horizon Eye Care

Scale Finance Closes Acquisition of Horsepower Site Services by MCG Civil

More News…

Footer

Media

Scale Finance Managing Director Dave Gilroy interviewed on WSIC Radio (local Fox affiliate)

/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/David-Gilroy-Interview-Local-Biz-Now-2-7-14.mp3

Entrepreneurial Tips

  • Funding Tips from Scale Finance
  • CIE Life Sciences Panel Discussion
  • Why Use Fractional CFO Services

Sign Up—Finance Bulletin

Monthly insights into corporate finance for entrepreneurial companies

Sending

FINACA is a nationwide network of independent finance and accounting consulting firms focused on delivering exceptional client service.

FINACA is a nationwide network of independent finance and accounting consulting firms focused on delivering exceptional client service.

Return to top of page

Copyright © 2008–2023 Scale Finance, LLC
Securities and offering services through Charles Towne Securities, LLC. Members FINRA and SIPC.