jbarbery | Venture Growth Partners https://venturegrowthpartners.com Part-time CFO, COO Services Wed, 03 Dec 2025 14:34:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.1 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/VGP-favicon-100x100.png jbarbery | Venture Growth Partners https://venturegrowthpartners.com 32 32 Laying the Groundwork:How to Prepare for a High-Value Exit https://venturegrowthpartners.com/laying-the-groundworkhow-to-prepare-for-a-high-value-exit/ Wed, 03 Dec 2025 14:33:09 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=7588 The unseen work that separates the best outcomes from average ones in sell-side M&A.

The post Laying the Groundwork:
How to Prepare for a High-Value Exit
first appeared on Venture Growth Partners.]]>

The unseen work that separates the best outcomes from average ones in sell-side M&A.

A successful M&A transaction doesn’t begin with a buyer. It starts with preparation.

At Venture Growth Partners, we help founders and operators set the stage for a sale long before the market becomes aware of the opportunity. The foundational phase is where enterprise value is enhanced, not just defended, and where outcomes are shaped before the first conversation with a buyer even takes place.

The first phase of our Sell-Side M&A process focuses on two parallel tracks: operational and financial optimization, as well as the development of marketing materials. Together, they ensure that the company’s story is strong, its risks are mitigated, and its numbers are both clean and compelling.

Operational & Financial Review

Before buyers even see your numbers, our team helps improve them: realistically and responsibly. We work alongside our clients and other advisors to:

  • Identify and activate opportunities for revenue growth.
  • Review the cost structure and implement cost-saving measures to optimize efficiency.
  • Assess and mitigate risk (including strategic insurance coverage).
  • Design option/bonus plans to retain key employees through the transaction.
  • Execute R&D tax credit studies and prepare Quality of Earnings reports.
  • Coordinate audits of financials.
  • Lead tax planning for both the company and its shareholders.

This is about more than cleanup. It’s about progress. The more momentum ​​we can show buyers, the more credible our growth narrative becomes.

Building the Narrative and Assets

The story you tell in a sale matters. Our job is to help craft that narrative with precision and transparency. We support management in preparing:

  • A curated list of strategic and financial buyers.
  • A compelling Investor Teaser (2 to 3 pages in Word/PDF, or 5 to 6 in slides).
  • A strong Management Presentation (10–15 pages for Phase I, 20–30 for Phase II).
  • A robust 5-year financial forecast (including synergy potential for strategics).
  • An internal valuation using multiple methods (DCF, comps, precedents).
  • A technology and product roadmap presentation.
  • A structured and secure data room for due diligence.

Excellent materials don’t just inform: they build confidence. The better prepared you are, the more leverage you’ll have later.

This foundational phase is where you take control of your story, elevate your numbers, and reduce the risk of surprises down the line. In our next article, we’ll explore how to take that foundation to market and drive interest from the right buyers.

Thinking about an exit in the next 12–36 months? Let’s build your strategy now, so you’re ready when it matters. Don’t waste time and fill out the form on this page for a free consultation!

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How to Prepare for a High-Value Exit
first appeared on Venture Growth Partners.]]>
Designing Smarter Bonus Plans: Principles That Drive Real Business Outcomes https://venturegrowthpartners.com/designing-smarter-bonus-plans/ Wed, 15 Oct 2025 19:17:53 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=7231 A strategic approach to aligning employee incentives with company goals.

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A strategic approach to aligning employee incentives with company goals

At Venture Growth Partners, we’ve had the privilege of helping high-growth companies implement scalable compensation strategies. One area we’re consistently called on to refine is bonus plan design, specifically, how to create plans that actually drive results.

Through our work with operators and leadership teams, our team has developed a set of guiding principles that we believe every bonus plan should follow. These aren’t theoretical. They’re built from real-world experience, and they’ve helped our clients align incentives, increase team accountability, and accelerate business performance.

The Five Principles of Effective Bonus Plan Design

  1. Align with What Matters Most: The different bonus criteria you use for your team members should reflect the proper drivers of business success. This creates clarity and focus: everyone knows exactly what matters and where to aim their efforts.
  2. Keep It Measurable (with Just a Bit of Flexibility): Objectivity is key, but so is sound judgment. Define clear, measurable goals while still allowing leadership to apply context when needed.
  3. Set Aggressive, Yet Achievable Goals: Bonuses should stretch the team, but not break them. When targets are grounded in available resources and supported with performance checkpoints, motivation increases across the board.
  4. Incorporate Performance Ranges: Avoid “all-or-nothing” thinking. Build in ranges for performance, so partial achievement still drives reward and signals progress.
  5. Focus on What Employees Can Actually Influence: The best bonus plans empower individuals. You should tie incentives to outcomes that each team member can directly impact. Thus, it needs to be tailored to each role or position – i.e., the bonus criteria for sales people should be different from production personnel or customer service agents. You shouldn’t tie the bonus of a sales person to production volume or product quality, as you shouldn’t link the bonus of a production manager to sales growth.This approach ensures that the bonus structure reflects both the strategic weight of the role and the specific levers each person can effectively influence.
better bonus plan secondary

If you’re a founder, CEO, or operations leader considering your next step in compensation strategy, you just found out who to reach out to. Let’s make sure your bonus plan is working as hard as your team is.

When properly designed, a bonus plan lightens your load as a manager, incetivizes the workforce and aligns company and employee objectives.

For a free consultation, fill out the form on this page!

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Closing the Books for the Year https://venturegrowthpartners.com/closing-the-books-for-the-year/ Sat, 09 Dec 2023 15:26:31 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3933 Many steps are required to close the books and issue financial statements. This article provides an overview & checklist of the most common closing activities.

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It’s that time of the year – for companies to ‘close their books,’ an accounting procedure that ensures financial information is accurate and comprehensive for a given period.

Closing the books must be done in advance of filing the company’s income tax return and preparing annual financial statements – documents that are essential for reporting the company’s performance, complying with tax laws, securing financing, preparing for due diligence for a potential sale, and most importantly, planning for the future.

Some companies choose to close their books at the end of each month or quarter, depending on their business needs and preferences. This can help monitor cash flow, track progress, make timely adjustments, and make the year-end close easier and more efficient.

Many steps are required to close the books and issue financial statements – and this article provides an overview and checklist of the most common closing activities:

CLOSING CHECKLIST

Customer Billings

  • Verify all billable time is included in timekeeping system.
  • Issue invoices to customers for all services provided and goods shipped though month-end.
  • Reconcile invoices to shipping logs.
  • Issue recurring invoices to customers.
  • Verify that all subcontractor invoices were received and included in customer billings.
  • For project job costing clients, like construction companies: Prepare AIA billing based on scheduled values in contract and percentage of completion.

Accounts Payable

  • Enter all vendor and supplier invoices in the systems by the designated cutoff to match income and expense according to GAAP (generally accepted accounting principles).
  • Enter all employee expense reports.
  • Accrue for all material expenses for which the vendor or supplier invoice has not been received.

Fixed Assets

  • Verify fixed asset additions and deletions are correctly reflected.
  • Record depreciation and amortization expenses.
  • Record the impairment of applicable fixed assets.

Inventory

  • Verify there was a proper inventory cut-off.
  • Count the inventory or run a perpetual inventory report.
  • Determine cost of ending inventory.
  • Adjust the ending inventory valuation for the lower of cost or market rule.

Journal Entries

  • Allowance for doubtful accounts.
  • Accrue:
    • Revenue
    • Supplier billings
    • Vacations
    • Wages
    • Bonus expense
    • Commission expense
  • Accrue interest expense for any loans
  • Depreciation and amortization
  • Income tax liability
  • Reserve for:
    • Obsolete inventory
    • Sales returns
    • Warranty claims

Balance Sheet Reconciliations

  • Bank reconciliations: Access bank’s online account records and reconcile all cash and credit card accounts.
  • Accounts receivable (trade): Match the total in the ending aged accounts receivable report to related general ledger account.
  • Prepaid expenses: Review this general ledger account to see if any items should be charged to expense.
  • Inventory: Match the total in the extended ending inventory report to the related general ledger account.
  • Work in Process: The WIP report identifies whether active jobs are over-or-under billed, compared to the percentage completion for each job. Based on this report, an adjustment should be made to costs in excess of billings or billings in excess of costs.
  • Intercompany Balances: Verify intercompany balances tie in with each other.
  • Accrued liabilities: Review each accrued liability account in the general ledger and verify that it matches supporting detail.
  • Notes Payable: The balance in this general ledger account should match the account balance provided by the lender.
  • Equity: Verify that equity accounts match the supporting detail.

Consolidate Results

  • Eliminate intercompany transactions.
  • Convert currencies.

Year-end closing summary

It is critical to have your closing financial statements and related reconciliations documented in one place – to support your closing of your books, and as a basis to start your books for the following year. As reference, a sample Excel report:

balance sheet sampleThis sample worksheet is a tool to help you in ‘cleaning up your books’ -and provide documentation to support your current year numbers, as needed. This informational roadmap can be used as a starting point to navigate to the new year with a fresh set of books.

While closing your books can be a complex process, creating this spreadsheet will help streamline the procedure.

Let’s discuss more about closing the books in a complimentary consultation!

Article written by our team member Ed Scordato, CPA, Certified QuickBooks Advisor

To learn more about how Venture Growth Partners can help you turbocharge your business through our fractional CFO and COO services and our capital raise and M&A advisory services, please schedule a free consultation by filling out the form below.

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Optimizing Your Back Office Tech Stack: A CFO’s Guide for Early Stage Startups https://venturegrowthpartners.com/optimizing-your-back-office-tech-stack-a-cfos-guide-for-early-stage-startups/ Thu, 17 Aug 2023 18:40:49 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3709 Effectively managing back-office operations of early stage startups may not feel like the highest priority for your company, and it’s not.

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By Chris Seidensticker

Effectively managing back-office operations of early stage startups may not feel like the highest priority for your company, and it’s not. Developing and iterating upon your go-to-market strategy, achieving product market fit, continuing to build out your product’s features and functionality—all these are a higher priority. But ignoring your back-office tech stack is not something you can afford to do either, especially if all that work on sales and product are effective, and you find yourself on a rocket ship. A flexible, efficient, and scalable tech stack with all the pieces integrating with each other will be crucial for financial efficiency and sustainable growth. Optimizing your tech stack in key areas such as expense management, revenue management, and payroll is essential for streamlined operations, accurate financial reporting, and cost savings.

Before getting in to the different areas of a company’s tech stack, if optimization of that tech stack is not priority #1 for the founders, who should lead the charge in ensuring you’re set up for success? In an ideal world, you’ve engaged a fractional CFO who can fully assess your company’s needs, build a plan to allow you to understand your growth trajectory and what it will take to achieve those projections, and design a back-office architecture that will optimize your probability of successful scaling.

Expense Management

Efficient expense management is crucial for controlling costs and optimizing resource allocation. Sure, you can pay vendors out of QBO or even use Bill.com and get a couple of credit cards from your bank, but the overall expense management universe has evolved tremendously recently, and the controls, visibility, efficiently, and ease of use of options like Ramp, Brex, Divvy, and Airbase are leaps and bounds beyond what used to be available. For example, Ramp offers AI-powered algorithms that analyze expenses, identify savings opportunities, and provide real-time visibility for your entire leadership team. It offers vendor payments via ACH or check, credit cards, and employee expense reimbursement. It seamlessly integrates with accounting systems, automates reconciliation, and offers corporate card solutions with spending controls. On top of all that, if your credit card spend is large enough, Ramp is not only free, you’d also earn cash back!

Revenue Management

Optimizing revenue management processes is essential for accurate forecasting and sustainable growth. If you sell one product at one price to one customer segment, manage it all in QBO and bless your stars for having such a simple business model. But for the rest of us, a revenue management solution can make the difference between efficiently growing your company and having happy customers and missing invoices, missing collections, miscalculating revenue, and spending a massive amount of money down the road to clean up the entire mess. Revenue management solutions are as varied as revenue models, so have your CFO do their research to ensure that the solution chosen is the right size for where you are today and where you will be, given your projected growth, in 12-24 months. Look for solutions that are flexible, easy to use, and integrate well with your accounting system. Examples on the SaaS side include Maxio, TrueRev, Chargebee, and Recurly.

Payroll

Efficient payroll management ensures accurate and timely payments while maintaining compliance. In today’s mostly remote world, working with a payroll partner that minimizes or eliminates the administrative burden of multiple state payroll tax registrations and filings is paramount. Of course, not only do you need to pay your employees, but you also need to offer benefits and hopefully an intuitive interface for your employees to review their options and make their selections. Although Professional Employer Organizations (PEOs) are a popular option given their promise to offer outsourced HR support plus lower benefits costs, the reality oftentimes leads to frustration and false promises. PEOs are expensive, tend not to help as much as expected with compliance and taxes, and oftentimes don’t achieve the benefits savings expected. Alternatives to PEOs include the standard-bearer, Gusto, and Rippling, which offers global payment features and employee hardware and onboarding management.

Conclusion

Optimizing your back-office tech stack as an early stage startup requires careful consideration of the right solutions but will ensure your company grows in as efficient a manner as possible and minimizes regulatory, compliance, and tax risks. For expense management, look for solutions that offer cost optimization and real-time expense monitoring. Revenue management depends on your company’s requirements, but the more complex your product offering, pricing, and customer base, the more important it will be to work with a flexible, powerful, and easy to use revenue management system. Finally, your payroll system needs to ensure your team gets paid, compliance and tax requirements are fulfilled, and benefits are managed as efficiently as possible. Remember to assess your specific requirements, cost factors, and scalability needs before making final decisions. Engaging a fractional CFO will pay dividends galore in this area. By selecting the appropriate tech stack, you can drive efficiency, accuracy, and growth in your back office operations. Good luck!

Article originally posted on June 11, 2023 at: www.fractionalsunitedblog.com

To learn more about how Venture Growth Partners can help you turbocharge your business through our fractional CFO and COO services and our capital raise and M&A advisory services, please schedule a free consultation by filling out the form below.

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Is it time to Onboard a CFO or COO? https://venturegrowthpartners.com/is-it-time-to-onboard-a-cfo-or-coo-post/ Wed, 24 May 2023 18:18:32 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3406 Hiring a CFO or COO, on a full-time or fractional basis, is an important decision and milestone for small and medium-sized businesses.

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Hiring a CFO or COO, on a full-time or fractional basis, is an important decision and milestone for small and medium-sized businesses.

In our experience, if you can relate to some of the issues listed below, you would greatly benefit from having a high-caliber CFO or COO by your side. On the other hand, we also know that it is often both unwarranted and cost prohibitive to go from having no CFO or COO in place to hiring one on a full-time basis. And herein lies the dilemma for many small and medium sized businesses.

Enter VGP’s fractional executive services – enabling you to retain a world-class CFO or COO on a part-time basis for a fraction of the cost, matching your needs and budget.

1. lonely at the top 2
no 1
IT’S LONELY AT THE TOP:  You lack an experienced business partner and “consiglieri” at your elbow who is objective, strategic and fact-based, yet passionate about growing the value of your company. There is a substantial gap in business experience and acumen between you and other members of your team
2. not enough hours in the day
no 2
THERE ARE NOT ENOUGH HOURS IN THE DAY:  You have no time to deal with important financial or operating tasks, which keep on being postponed or falling through the cracks…or worse still, such financial and operating tasks continuously crowd out your pivotal duties related to customer acquisition and products
3. No Strategy Insights Analysis From Finance
no 3
NO STRATEGY, INSIGHTS & ANALYSIS FROM FINANCE:  Your finance function is limited to producing the monthly P&L and Balance Sheet. It provides no: strategic input, detailed profitability analysis of your products/services, a rolling cash flow forecast, benchmarking, Key Performance Indicators, etc. You feel like you are flying the proverbial airplane with no instrument panel
4. Old Ways 2
no 4
OLD WAYS:  Your business operations have been run in the same way for several years, with no attention paid to process improvement, productivity increases and reengineering efforts
5. Cash Flow and Profitability Surprises 2
no 5
CASH FLOW AND PROFITABILITY “SURPRISES”:  Your business is experiencing profitability or cash flow problems, is missing bank covenants or is underperforming the budget – and you are often surprised by it
6. The People Problem 2
no 6
THE PEOPLE PROBLEM:  Employee morale and communication are suffering.  Turnover is high and productivity is less than you expected. Accountability is also lacking. You don’t seem to have the right roles or people
7. 20 MM Company Stuck in the Body of a 4 MM Business
no 7
$20 MM COMPANY STUCK IN THE BODY OF A $4 MM BUSINESS:  Your business is growing fast and requires more robust finance and operating functions to deal with the challenges and opportunities that come with such rapid growth. Increasingly, you feel like your company’s accelerated expansion is being restricted or held back by its own lack of infrastructure
8. Time for a New Approach
no 8
TIME FOR A NEW APPROACH:  You are looking to deploy a new major system at your company and would like to ensure both adherence to it and a smooth implementation process, whether it is a new managerial approach (EOS, Rockefeller, Agile) or technology platform (ERP, CRM, etc.)
9. Short Sighted
no 9
SHORT-SIGHTED:  You don’t have a long-term view of your business, including: (i) a 3 to 5-year strategic plan and financial forecast and (ii) a sense of the business value, currently and in the future
10. Deal Making 2
no 10
DEAL MAKING:  You are looking to raise capital to fund growth or acquisition opportunities and reach your ambitious goals. Or you plan to sell in the short to medium-term and have not prepared your company for it

To learn more about how Venture Growth Partners can help you turbocharge your business through our fractional CFO and COO services and our capital raise and M&A advisory services, please schedule a free consultation by filling out the form below.

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Budgeting Best Practices https://venturegrowthpartners.com/budgeting-best-practices-post/ Sat, 15 Apr 2023 18:57:27 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3395 A few budgeting best practices that we as a team have learned over many decades acting as the CEO, CFO and/or COO for a variety of businesses.

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We would like to share with you a few budgeting best practices that we as a team have learned over many decades acting as the CEO, CFO and/or COO for a variety of businesses – both large and small, domestic and international, during periods of crisis and rapid growth.

We hope you will find these nuggets of budget wisdom useful.

Q1 strategy

1. Strategy First, Budget Second

Before you start working on next year’s budget, we consider it wise to first review your strategic plan. After all, the budget should reflect your strategic goals and priorities. It should help you allocate your scarce resources in alignment with your strategy. Therefore, we recommend updating your 3-5 year strategic plan and SWOT (Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats) analysis as the first step of your annual budgeting process. Then, determine what you want to accomplish next year based on how it will help you achieve your long-term goals – and budget accordingly.

Q2 questions

2. Question Everything

While we expect that the pandemic has caused you and your team to question everything about your business already, the preparation of a new budget offers a great opportunity to reflect on existing business practices, processes, vendor relationships, etc. Do they still make sense in light of what has transpired over the past year and the strategic goals for next year and beyond? Should you discontinue product or service X given its low gross margin? Should you bring in-house some marketing expertise? Does it make sense to switch vendors or seek a different raw material or component for your product? There should be no sacred cows – question everything!

Q3 Better Faster Cheaper

3. Faster, Better, Cheaper

One of the main goals of a business should be to develop sustainable competitive advantages – as they increase your chances of achieving long-term, profitable growth. In simple terms, competitive advantages often come from having a product or service that is either faster, better or cheaper than the competition (or all of the above). As such, one of the goals of your budget exercise should be to make your different business functions/departments faster, better and/or cheaper. This will invariably result in a competitive advantage – or at a minimum, lead to greater operating efficiency and profitability.

Q4 agressive

4. Be aggressive, yet realistic

A very aggressive budget (either on the revenue or cost front) will often backfire. Very early on in the year the company’s performance may start falling short of expectations, which can be demoralizing and time-consuming, as revisions will need to be made, team members may start playing the blame-game, etc. It will also cause you to lose face with the company’s stakeholders – and as we all know, credibility is key in business. To avoid significant underperformance, be realistic and track budget-to-actual variances monthly – taking the appropriate corrective action swiftly.

Q5 cashisking

5. Cash is King

Along with next year’s budget, make sure to develop a cash flow forecast with a very precise view of what the following 13-weeks will look like, and update this forecast monthly or quarterly. Take into account the seasonality of your business as well as the differences between GAAP Accounting and the cash realities of the business (e.g., the sale of an annual license may be recognized as revenue over the term of the license, and budgeted as such. However, the cash inflow may come in much sooner if the license is paid upfront). Remember that fast-growing businesses tend to require a lot of working capital.

trends

6. Monitor and incorporate macro trends into your business planning and strategy

As 2020 has shown us, public health, economic, demographic, political, technological and social factors are powerful forces that may greatly impact your business – in a positive or negative way. Ignore them at your own peril. To account for them, consider developing more than one budget scenario, and ideally, have a plan for expense reductions if things don’t go as planned. Perform “what-if” analysis to develop the appropriate contingency plans. And if your business was severely impacted by the pandemic, consider 3 budget scenarios with different Covid-19 outcomes for 2021.

Recap

7. Create alignment by implementing a well-designed bonus plan

A well-designed bonus plan is fundamental in motivating key employees and aligning interests. It also has the great additional benefit of doing the “managing” for you. I.e., when people know exactly what is expected of them and that they will be rewarded based on how they perform against those metrics, they stay focused and increase their productivity. As a result, they require less guidance and oversight from you. Note: A well-designed incentive plan does not tie bonus payouts only to hitting the financial goals of the business (e.g., Revenues, EBITDA, etc.), but also to operating metrics specific to each department/function (e.g., churn rate, Net Promoter Score, etc.). In fact, operating metrics can actually be more powerful in incentivizing the kind of behavior that you want your employees to display, as they are more tangible and easier to relate to – which in turn should make it easier to achieve your financial goals.

If you need help developing a strategic plan, preparing your annual budget, designing an incentive plan or if you would like a fresh perspective from experienced executives, please fill in the form below and we’ll be in touch shortly.

To learn more about how Venture Growth Partners can help you turbocharge your business through our fractional CFO and COO services and our capital raise and M&A advisory services, please schedule a free consultation by filling out the form below.

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Conscience of the CEO(Additional Thoughts) https://venturegrowthpartners.com/conscience-of-the-ceo-thoughts/ Sat, 25 Mar 2023 19:18:41 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3401 A friend of our firm, Jeff Horine, wrote a very interesting article that we would like to share and add our commentary to.

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(Additional Thoughts)
first appeared on Venture Growth Partners.]]>

A friend of our firm, Jeff Horine, wrote a very interesting article that we would like to share and add our commentary to. Jeff is an experienced CFO and turnaround expert. The article he wrote reflects lessons learned and common threads of turnaround situations he worked on. To read Jeff’s article (a 5-minute read), please click here.

Having been involved in a few turnaround situations ourselves, and with dozens of client engagements across various industries, we have seen some of the same predictors of failure or success, and a couple of others worth mentioning:

1) The lack of a strong number 2 on the team.

To Jeff’s point, the lack of a strong number 2 person on the team (or the Conscience of the CEO, as he calls it) makes it very difficult for a company to succeed and realize its true potential in the long run. Diversity of thoughts and the open debate of ideas invariably bring out the best solutions and strategies, which are key to maintaining sustainable, profitable growth. Having this sounding board, both internal (CFO, COO) or external (board of directors or advisors, CEO peer group), will invariably make the CEO better at his/her craft; improve decision making; and lead to superior financial and operating results. So, if the competition has a strong number 2 in place and your firm doesn’t, they will likely outperform yours.

2) GroupThink / Yes Culture.

When everyone is drinking the kool-aid, the blinders are on. While having a strong company culture and being proud of one’s accomplishments are a good thing, the danger is that it leads to GroupThink and corporate myopia. Unfortunately, we have come into a number of situations where it was obvious for any experienced outsider that the company had the wrong strategy or product, or that what worked in the past would no longer work in the future, and yet no one inside would see it or admit to it. To avoid this, build a strong culture that is keen on innovation, fresh and new perspectives. It is important to embrace the notion of “Fail Fast / Fail Forward”. Recognize when things are not working, learn the lessons, fix the problem and build a better solution.

3) A weak Marketing or Finance Function.

  • SMEs often have little sophistication or strategic thinking in the key functional areas of Finance and Marketing.
  • SMEs often underinvest in Marketing, and therefore don’t get to fully monetize the potential of their products or services. Marketing is equal parts art and science, and the trial and error involved in refining one’s strategy can be frustrating, and expensive. Effective Marketing typically (i) utilizes more than one channel (e.g., digital, TV, print, etc.); (ii) takes time to produce results and (iii) can be hard to determine the ROI (except for digital). However, if you have the ambition of growing your business significantly, you simply can’t rely only on word of mouth, referrals and personal connections. These methods typically don’t scale. And that’s where Marketing shines.
  • SMEs also are lacking in the Finance function, which can be very costly and dangerous as they look to scale-up.  A weak Finance function typically results in: poor resource allocation; bad investment decisions; no financial discipline on pricing decisions; cash flow problems; bad deals on debt and equity financing; and ultimately a lower valuation at exit.

In our experience, a fractional CFO or COO can effectively play the role of the strong number 2, perhaps even more so than a full-time executive. The reasons include:

  • The fractional executive’s livelihood does not depend on any single client, which would naturally make them more inclined to challenge the thinking of the CEO and give the CEO their unvarnished opinion;
  • Fractional executives are both insiders and outsiders. As such, they are a lot less likely to suffer from GroupThink or tunnel vision;
  • Fractional executives are often very experienced, having worked across a number of industries and companies or having held other C-suite positions. This helps expand their creativity and problem solving capability.

To learn more about how Venture Growth Partners can help you turbocharge your business through our fractional CFO and COO services and our capital raise and M&A advisory services, please schedule a free consultation by filling out the form below.

The post Conscience of the CEO
(Additional Thoughts)
first appeared on Venture Growth Partners.]]>
Conscience of the CEO https://venturegrowthpartners.com/conscience-of-the-ceo-post/ Tue, 28 Feb 2023 19:16:06 +0000 https://venturegrowthpartners.com/?p=3383 The number one predictor of success (or failure) for many businesses-regardless of industry or company size – is rarely diligenced by most investors and lenders.

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By Jeffrey Horine

JHorineThe number one predictor of success (or failure) for many businesses-regardless of industry or company size – is rarely diligenced by most investors and lenders.

During the course of completing six turnaround and restructuring engagements for the portfolio companies of large financial institutions, I uncovered a recurring theme of five early predictors of trouble. The most common predictor may be the least obvious and most difficult for an outsider to diagnose. However, it is one of the keys to understanding a company’s likelihood of success.

The most common predictor? In every single engagement, the CEO lacked a strong number two. Strong enough to voice a dissenting opinion. Strong enough to be valued by the CEO. Strong enough to navigate uncertain situations as a co-pilot with the CEO. Strong enough to be the Conscience of the CEO.

I briefly discuss all five predictors below, and then explain how to diagnose the number one predictor of trouble by looking for the Conscience of the CEO.

Predictor #5: Competitiveness

Competitiveness, which is an indication that a company’s products and/or services are providing differentiated value in the marketplace, was the least common of the five predictors. Although it is a predictor, declining revenue was a problem at only two of the six engagements Icompleted. For mature companies, this trouble is evident in the form of declining market share, not necessarily revenue. For early stage companies, this trouble manifests in a difficulty to attract or convert beta customers.

Predictor #4: Unit Economics

This theme occurred in three of the six engagements and manifests in the form of lower than required gross margins. Often, management did not properly understand the profitability of each customer, product or service. Without proper costing information, poor pricing decisions were made.

Predictor#3: Financial Management

This theme occurred in five of the six engagements and was a direct result of management’s failure to prioritize these activities. The companies were all generating sales and acceptable gross profit and EBITDA. However, in many cases, accounts receivable weren’t being collected in a timely manner, nor were such delays factored into the cash flow forecast, leading to sudden liquidity crises.

Predictor #2: Operational Execution

This theme occurred in five of the six engagements. It manifests in the form of inadequate, inconsistent or non-existent milestones or KPIs. In most cases, there was no causality with the metrics being evaluated. Management teams that couldn’t agree on the drivers of success typically took actions in reaction to results rather than proactively to impact results.

Predictor #1: Leadership Alignment

This theme was the most common of the five predictors and a problem at all six of the engagements. The trouble in each case is apparent in the form of unhealthy C-suite dissension. Healthy debate is an essential part of evaluating a proposed course of action and can help a CEO lead a company to a better ultimate result, having addressed potential problems upfront. At these troubled companies, however, when management disagreed on the key problems and opportunities in the business, the CEO either dismissed the dissenting opinions or the opinions themselves were never voiced to the CEO for fear of reprisal. Without the presence of a Conscience of the CEO, the fate of these businesses was at the mercy of the CEO – alone – – to gather and filter information and make decisions without a proper vetting process. The key to uncovering this dissension and void in a business begins with interviewing the management team members, individually, to get a sense of the group dynamics and the CEO’s affinity for soliciting meaningful input from what should be his most valuable resource.

The CEOs of the most successful companies I know have strong support systems. The CEO may be smart, decisive and tough. Yet, in every case, the CEO also has one or more people who effectively act as the Conscience of the CEO. Boards of Directors, Advisory Boards and Scientific Advisory Boards are considered places for the CEO to obtain constructive input. However, a CEO may be wary of the fiduciary obligations that could be triggered by candid brain-storming with a Board member, or concerned with demonstrating leadership abilities with respect to an SAB member or other Advisory Board member. Some successful CEOs assemble “shadow” advisory boards comprised of trusted former colleagues with no direct connection to the company, and this can be a useful approach. Others participate in CEO forums with other CEOs, although there are shortcomings with these arrangements.

Most successful companies have in place one or more members of the executive team, often the CFO or COO, who function as the Conscience of the CEO. To be clear, my observations do not underestimate the importance of the CEO to the success of a company. However, companies are more likely to achieve success when there is someone firmly in place as the Conscience of the CEO.

Jeffrey Horine has more than 20 years of executive level operating and consulting experience. Jeff recently served as the CEO of an early stage technology company with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, USAID and the CDC. Previously, Jeff was the CFO and Interim CEO at a 828 IT company where he raised $40 million 1n venture capital. Earlier, Jeff was recruited to form and lead the Industry Consolidations Group at Citadel Investment Group, a $25 billion hedge fund, after negotiating five acquisitions as the principal architect of a roll-up IPO with a $140 million valuation. Contact: www.linkedin.com/in/JeffHorine.

As published in Startup Magazine at https://thestartupmag.com/conscience-of-the-ceo/ and on Medium at
https://medium.com/@ieffrev.horine/conscience-of-the-ceo-178cc230a256

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