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Lendaddy I hate to hear of your struggles. I lost a business also, and it just about broke my family. I still pay 1k a month on it and it is closed. My pride cost me tens of thousand of $$.
Keep your chin up, and never be ashamed. You can work things out. GOOD LUCK!!
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I'm sorry for your situation, but you have a lot of good advice so far. Based on the limited information, I agree that it's too early for a BK or workout attorney. But you might want to have the number of a good attorney at hand so if bad goes to worse, 30 days before lights out you can be proactive with your creditors to minimize your personal exposure.
You sound like a small job-shop contract manufacturer. So there are two basis of competitive advantage you can choose: Specialty or Volume. I'd guess that the volume race is lost to off-shore so your choice is high-precision, specialty work. Can you do this without additional capital? The hard question I would ask again is in regards to your cost structure and what you know you can sell your products for. If your cost structure (debts, OH, salaries, etc.) plus a reasonable Profit is not available in today's market, then all you are doing is prolonging the agony. For sake of discussion, let's assume you can. For your existing business, are you confident of your total burdened cost per piece? After taking over a manufacturing company, I did a quick analysis of our cost per product line and found part numbers that were minimally profitable to losing money every time we took an order. That was changed within days - communicated to the customers personally (I flew out to see the big ones) and explained exactly what we had to do or I would discontinue making the product. That change dropped 4 to 6 points to GM, and of course falls right to the bottom line. It also improved morale at the factory because people intrinsically know that something was not right and were thrilled someone was willing to stand up to the customers. As others have mentioned, you have to cut operating costs. I imagine your operation is very lean as it is, so probably not a lot of fat there. Do you have excess inventory to dump? How about old or obsolete equipment? Finally, as you know it is an input problem - not enough orders. I concur that manufacturer's reps are not ideal for your circumstance. You need to pick up a bag and start seeing potential customers daily. You can't solve the order problem from behind a desk or computer. And not those cheesy networking events, go knock on doors. Make connections, ask for referrals, talk to anyone. You might be able to convince a semi-retired or retired sales guy to pick up your cause for expenses and a very generous commission plan. But remember that part above about costs? You need to charge a premium for your products and you must make enough money to support the enterprise. Be as dispassionate about your analysis as possible. I know that's nearly impossible in a family business. But numbers are your friends here - and they will tell you what to do without emotion. I'm also happy to chat with you about this - pm me anytime. Don
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Thanks Don,
Not much fat to cut or inventory to liquidate but maybe a little. I really see the truth in the "beat the pavement" approach and that has generally been handled by my father. I had him on the road for a month or two straight recently and he came back empty and depressed about bad things had gotten since he last had to do that. He did get a couple of jobs but we had to come in so cheap to get the work that it was actually counter productive. But I should and will get out there myself. It's very easy to get caught up working in the business rather than on it. A wakeup call helps.
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Len, even though you're a small shop, you need a financial professional to analyze your books and help you develop a business plan to keep your business open. If you can't generate large amounts of new income quickly, you need to cut costs brutally in a way that doesn't cut bottom line income. You also can't take on new business that costs you more money than it is worth. A financial professional can help you do these things. You need a real pro who has a track record of advising people in your situation. Do you have a business plan? You need a solid understanding of your financials, top line and bottom line before you can draft the business plan that will get you back on your feet. You don't have much time, but if you do the right things now you should be ok.
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What Don said about analyzing the true costs of production is absolutely essential. Get a firm view of that and work from there.
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That info gives me a lot of concern. How easy would it be to re-lease (or sublease) the building at $6500? With that level of guaranteed obligations, you need to really think through what you are doing. It isn't as simple as waiting until the end, and then dumping the company into bky in 30 days. When substantially all the obligations are personally guaranteed, putting the company into bky is in many instances a basically useless exercise that won't do you much good. With $40-60K per month in income, there definitely are pre-bky strategies you can employ, but with that level of debt, you'd need a good 6 months or more to really make them work. What are the personal assets of you and your family like, generally? Is there real property with significant equity in any of the names of the personal guarantors? |
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Joel, you've already gotten great advice here. I can't add much more other than as someone who recently had a company fail, one in which I invested everything I ever had, save for the E, I can only suggest that you take 2 hours and do an Achieve-Preserve-Avoid analysis, WRITE IT ALL DOWN and the prioritize each bullet point within each column.
OK, so it sounds like some goofball management consulting thing, and it is. But it's really helps to clarify a very complicated situation, one in which the emotional often battles with the pragmatic in making a decision, showing a clear path to take. Getting it out of your head and onto paper also frees up your mind for more creative thinking. Hope it's not too touchy-feely. it's also great to show to a completely uninterested outsider to get a reality check on how honest you are being about the present situation and future prospects. This was the process that allowed me to finally dump G9Girl and get Little Traveler going. Good luck, I know how it feels.
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Can you give a sysnopsys on the strategies assuming I can make it 6-9 months? I jsut want to have all the information. My father has some assets. He has some property on a small airport with hangers that is currently for sale ~ 250k-300k Beyond that he has his home on 13 acres ~300k-500k (market is all over the place in Michigan, so it's a tough call as the land is developable). $245k mort One of the leases is a piece of equipment worth 200k+ (fair market) and $50k liquidation. All other equipment here is worth maybe another 40k at auction, maybe 3 times that fair market.
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Cornpoppin' Pony Soldier Last edited by lendaddy; 11-17-2007 at 11:06 AM.. |
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what about finding someone else to come in with his company to share cost?
if your fix cost are x and his is x then yours would be 1/2 of x or however you can split it
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It's worth looking into, but the building really doesn't lend itself to double occupancy. You never know though.
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We are VERY small right now, 8-9 people total. There is maybe a small amount of fat to be trimmed but I've been pretty liberal with the carving knife. Getting good advise on who, how and when to pay would be helpful as we don't know the "rules" and could easily be making mistakes. I will give this much consideration and am honestly torn a bit between the accountant route and the workout attorney route. I have a CPA now, but he's useless for advice. The 40-60k income we have is pretty stable.
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You already have by recommending more sex on my stress thread. How can the wife deny the obvious expertise of an internet buddy ![]()
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Believe it or not I'm not depressed. I know that I'll land on my feet one way or another. I have the most wonderful wife and my two boys are just amazing, in a broad look my life is absolutely charmed. Even if I lose everything material I'll be ok, my parents on the other hand I just don't know. I mean I know they'll be ok as well, I just wish they could retire in more/some comfort.
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It sure was, but I'm very glad that I finally did it as I've gotten much good/great advice. This is truly an amazing assembly of people.
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Thanks and I'm sorry you had to go through this. How did you and your father come out the other end if I may ask?
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![]() I appreciate the offer on the reference, are you talking a lawyer or an accountant? Again, very generous thank you.
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1. With everything guaranteed, a bky isn't going to bail you out. They will ignore the bky carcass and come after each of you individually on the guaranteed debt. 2. Therefore, before a bky is filed, many people find it beneficial if the corporate assets are used in a way that pays down the guaranteed debt. In some order of priority where the largest and/or most aggressive creditors are paid first. (Usually "largest" = "most aggressive"). In a bky, unsecured/unguaranteed creditors have almost no rights and usually just go away. In the event that certain creditors (i.e. those holding guarantees) are paid down before others in a bky, it is best if those payments are made at least 91 days before the bky is filed, as they are outside of the "preference" period. All payments made in the 90 days before the filing will be very carefully analyzed, and if they are not in the "ordinary course" and are large enough, the creditor may be sued by the bky trustee and have to give those payments back (of course, they will then seek recovery of those lost payments from the guarantors). 3. In the event a bky is filed, and the case is administered in any way (in other words, it isn't a simple no asset case - yours probably would be an asset case with a trustee appointed) payments to any company insiders are going to be very carefully analyzed, ESP. payments within a year of the filing of the bky. Payments made to insiders outside a year are outside the "preferential payment" period. 4. The biggest issue is going to be the lease. $70K per year is substantial, and the landlord is going to come after the company for it if you close down, and look to the guarantors if the co. files bky. That's a very difficult issue. 5. While the biz is operational, try not to let on to your creditors that you are having difficulties. That may make them nervous and make them seek legal advice. If they sense there is going to be a run on you, they will want to be the first creditor to strike, while assets are there to pay them. I've seen lots of biz's make this mistake, and it has hastened their demise. Some of your contracts may have "insecurity" provisions, where if they feel insecure because of your condition, they can make demands on you. Or, even if they don't have that in the contract, they can choose to strike fast on any minor default, if they are feeling insecure. Always remember, your creditor are going to look after their interests first, esp. if they talk to a lawyer. 6. If the biz goes down, and creditors start coming after the guarantors, one of the first things they are going to do is a collection analysis. That will determine how hard they come. For instance, if a person has no assets and moved to mexico, a creditor a lot of time would just write the debt off, or get a default judgment and stick it in a drawer. If a person has a $1 million house owned outright, the creditor is going to be on them like glue. In a collection analysis, the first thing they will do is a real property search. Real property is the easiest to collect on. The other thing they will look at is the financials you submitted to them. But a lot of creditors find that when a business has been struggling for a couple of years, the owners have had to use up a lot of their assets, and the stuff that was on their financials is unfortunately gone. If for some reason a guarantor were to transfer their real property to a relative, that is usually a mistake, esp. if it was done while a business was struggling. That is looked at as a fraudulent conveyance, and can be undone by the court. But, sometimes creditors are unlucky, and the guarantor sold the property to a legit third person (a bona fide purchaser) who has nothing to do with the guarantor. Nobody could ever take the property from that person. The only thing the creditor could do is try to track down and recover from the sale proceeds (i.e., the cash). Cash is very often difficult to track down. Most creditors usually find that the guarantor doesn't just have it sitting in a bank account waiting to be levied on. In fact, it is usually gone, used up in living expenses and the costs of running the business. If the biz goes sideways, and creditors come after the guarantors, the matters are much easier to settle, and creditors pursue less, when there are no assets to come after. Keep in mind that a creditor, esp. one that gets a judgment or a provisional remedy, has a lot of rights, including the right to do debtor examination, which includes subpoening banks for account records, etc. These are just some of the things I've seen in the past. There are a lot if issues involved, as I'm sure you can begin to see. |
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