When Mychael and Stephanie Wright began considering retirement and the process of handing off their 24-year-old business, Golden Thyme Coffee & Cafe on St. Paul's Selby Avenue, selling it to a land trust organization wasn't on the radar.
"I asked Mychael to really consider and work with Rondo Community Land Trust to not only preserve the legacy of the business, but turn it into something that could be owned by the community at the same time," said Mikeya Griffin, executive director of Rondo Community Land Trust.
After a year and a half of conversations, the parties agreed to a sale. Rondo Community Land Trust — formed 30 years ago to help preserve and create affordable housing in St. Paul — would buy the café and implement a cooperative-ownership model with the Wrights called Golden Thyme Presents. It will act as an incubator for restaurateurs and food vendors who are Black, Indigenous or other people of color.
Whether through a shared ownership, a competitor wanting a larger market share or a bigger company's plan to grow through acquisition, there are plenty of ways to sell your startup or small business. Entrepreneurs in the Twin Cities who've sold their businesses said navigating a deal is much more than handshakes and signing your name on the dotted line. Here's their advice on how to transition your venture into its next phase:
The whens and whos
Wright said he believes selling his café to the organization will create a resurgence of Black-owned businesses on Selby Avenue.
"I feel it's a way to give aspiring entrepreneurs who may not have that wherewithal to be able to be part owner in a business [a chance]," he said. "I thought that was so intriguing. I'd like to see all of our folks have that opportunity."
Whether it be a worker-owned cooperative, an employee stock ownership plan or an employee-ownership trust, "in times of crisis, but also as economies are in periods of growth, a shared ownership is a tested and proven model that can take communities further together," said Electra Skrzydlewski, director of the Metropolitan Consortium of Community Developers' (MCCD) shared ownership program. The program supports traditional sole proprietors and partnered-ownership structures considering a shared-ownership model.
In Minnesota, not many business owners at retirement age have an exit strategy or succession plan. The state has 53,000 baby boomer-owned small businesses, of which 85% don't have a succession plan, according to a study by the Minnesota Center for Employee Ownership, and Project Equity. In addition to MCCD, University of Minnesota Extension operates online courses about business succession and transition.