Your company has “grown up,” but that doesn’t mean it’s done growing.
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Your company has “grown up,” but that doesn’t mean it’s done growing.
Your strategic vision must align with the company’s future needs, whether you’re ready for an exit or not.
The people, systems and planning you require are very different for public vs. private exit.
The company has grown in complexity, expanded its reach and matured—in a sense, you have reached a graduation point, though that doesn’t mean the evolution of the enterprise is over. Where does the company go from here? What is the best form for the company to take to reach the next level? What is your exit plan and what do you need to figure out to execute that plan?
The technical aspects of the late-stage evolution of your tech company are significant, but the tax and legal considerations don’t exist in a vacuum. You also have considerable strategic and planning responsibilities to shoulder on the road to paperwork, due diligence, audits and all the rest. Here are some of the top issues on your plate:
Earlier-stage growth focuses on sales and market penetration. By this expanded growth stage, it’s about how to scale the business up operationally and in terms of infrastructure, how to do more things at less cost and how best to allocate resources.
Just because a company is mature in terms of sales, market presence, reputation, etc., it isn’t necessarily mature from a process, procedure, infrastructure and management perspective. Make sure to evaluate your company at this late stage—even if you aren’t ready to consider an exit strategy—to ensure that the company is ready to handle continued evolution. Some factors to consider include: