You’re a small business owner who has spent years developing and growing your company from a start-up to a fully established operation. Now that you have reached your initial long-term goal of becoming a successful enterprise, you can start thinking about the next chapters.
Are you content to maintain the current profile of the business and hope for consistent revenue with modest growth over the next 5+ years, or potentially capitalize on your expanded knowledge, market share, and client base to take a bigger leap forward that could possibly put the company in the next tier of small businesses?
To put this in perspective using an arbitrary example, let’s say a small landscaping business just surpassed $1,000,000 in gross revenue with a 20% profit margin after doubling these figures compared with 3 years ago. The business hasn’t needed to take on any additional working capital or expand its employee base over this period to realize this initial level of growth.
The business owner may determine two forward paths over the next 5-year plan that will shape the company's future. The first would be to remain content with the fact that they have reached this initial goal and can look to grow 5%+/- per year based on their existing structure and try to trim expenses and improve profit margins by 10-15%.
This scenario would keep the current employees and clients happy and allow for a steady income stream for the owner who might want to retire or sell the business to its employees or a competitor sometime in the next few years.
The second option would be to take an aggressive growth position now that the company is firmly established with a broader goal of doubling or tripling the size of the company over the next 5 years. What might be a reasonable strategy to accomplish this loftier goal?
The first may be to leverage the existing demand and reputation the company has in the existing market areas while realizing that hiring additional employees would enable them to take on the extra work without overtaxing their current staff. This may lead to significantly increased gross revenue but might reduce profit margins given the expanded overhead.
Another strategy might be to research your competition in nearby market locations and attempt to acquire one of these businesses and expand the company’s territory. This effort would require a lot of due diligence to target the right business and might require a working capital loan to purchase the company. The short-term effects may result in lower margins and a greater risk associated with the transaction, however, the potential of creating a more diversified business with immediately impactful growth results will go a long way to increasing the value of the company.
Either path you decide to go down will be an exciting one.