Living The Red Life - How I Sold a Company for $16M and Bought It Back for Pennies on the Dollar w/Ryan Moran
Episode Date: November 28, 2024Ryan Moran, an entrepreneur and investor known for his expertise in e-commerce and brand-building, shares the incredible story of how he sold his company for $16 million, only to buy it back later for... pennies on the dollar. Moran takes listeners through his journey of building the company from the ground up, scaling it, and eventually making the decision to sell. He reflects on the highs and lows of the sale process and the unexpected challenges that came after the deal was done. Despite the success, Moran reveals how losing control of the business led him to rethink his approach to entrepreneurship and what he values most.The episode then shifts to a fascinating discussion of Moran’s decision to repurchase the company, a move that required not just financial investment, but a new mindset and a willingness to start over. Moran explains the process of buying back his company, the lessons he learned from both the success and failure of the sale, and the strategies he employed to rebuild the business stronger than before. Through his candid storytelling, Moran emphasizes the importance of resilience, the power of learning from mistakes, and how the experience has shaped his perspective on business and life. This episode provides invaluable insights into the entrepreneurial journey, showcasing the significance of persistence and the ability to pivot when faced with unforeseen circumstances.CHAPTER TITLES3:00 - The Journey Begins: Selling for $16M5:30 - Early Days: Growing the Company8:00 - The $16M Sale: What Went Right10:30 - Post-Sale Realities: A Sudden Shift13:00 - Buying It Back: The Big Decision15:00 - Rebuilding the Business from Scratch17:30 - Overcoming New Challenges19:00 - What I Learned from Losing the Company20:30 - The Power of Persistence in Entrepreneurship22:00 - Future Plans: Moving Forward After the ComebackConnect with Ryan Moran:SOCIALS - Ryan Daniel Moranhttps://www.capitalism.com/https://www.capitalism.com/playbookConnect with Rudy Mawer:LinkedInInstagramFacebookTwitter
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Our business at its peak, we sold it for $16 million.
Rudy, we were doing $10 million a year in sales when we sold it.
It was doing a few hundred thousand dollars in revenue.
That's how much that it had degraded.
So we bought it back, put on the same exact playbook, hadn't changed.
Same product, same people, same strategies.
And guess what? The company is growing again.
Here's the takeaway that was so profound for me.
My name's Rudy Moore, host of Living the Red Life podcast.
I'm here to change the way you see your life
in your earpiece every single week.
If you're ready to start living the red life,
ditch the blue pill, take the red pill,
join me in Wonderland and change your life.
What's up guys?
Welcome back to another episode
of Living the Red Life.
We have a special episode today
with one of my longest internet marketing entrepreneur
friends and a really cool story
how he sold his supplement companies for 16 million
and then re-bought it for pennies on the dollar
and a very close friend for many years.
Ryan, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me, Rudy.
I mean, we knew each other when I was just scraping
this little company together on the climb up,
even before I sold it and then bought it back.
So you've seen the entire journey.
Thank you.
Yeah, yeah, a long time.
Literally, I moved to America,
joined a couple of masterminds,
met you at like one of the first.
I was just like finishing grad school
and started my fitness business. And I think I shared this with you, I met you at like one of the first, I was just like finishing grad school and
started my fitness business.
And I think I shared this with you, like one of the first marketing events I ever
went to in my life, especially in America was your event, sat at the back of the
room and like taking notes.
And it was right before we went to Ben Greenfield's house.
And I think you were there too.
This was like, what, eight years ago.
And then, you know, a few years later, we became close friends and I spoke on that stage.
And then, you know, we've been friends ever since.
So cool full circle story, but let's dive in.
Tell us about you and the supplements to kick us off.
I cut my teeth as your traditional internet marketer, like many of us do
learning affiliate marketing or a skillset like SEO or pay-per-click
marketing or whatever the hack is at the time, but about eight, nine years
into my career, I realized that if you do this stuff for a real business, a real
business, meaning something that you can
scale and sell, then it works a lot better.
So I applied my skillset into a physical products brand.
This was early days in the dawn of Amazon FBA and when that was kind of a new
platform and I put all of my marketing efforts
into customer acquisition and followup sequences
and search engine optimization and content marketing
into what I would call a real business,
which allowed me to launch products quickly.
And I ran the math when I was, you know,
25 years old seeing that if I could just get four products
to 25 sales a day,
that would be 100 sales a day. And at a $30 price point, that would be a million dollar business,
which to me at 25, I never had a million dollar business before. So that was the end goal. But
then you realize as you get to a certain point that, oh my goodness, there's something called
enterprise value in business. We forget about this as cash flow
entrepreneurs. We think about cash in, cash out. Wait a minute, there's this whole other side of
it called enterprise value. That's the value of your business when it is sold. And of course,
there's a variety of different ways that you can calculate how much a business is worth.
Poor man's math just is a multiple of profit.
And our business at its peak was doing about $4 million.
I think maybe, maybe now I forget it's been so long.
We sold it for $16 million.
That was the valuation, but here's the kicker.
Here's the asterisk.
I didn't get all that money upfront.
I got most of it split with my partner 50 50, but we didn't get all that money up front. I got most of it split with my partner 50 50
But we didn't get all that up front
We carried some to ride with the private equity group because they wanted to take it to 50 million dollars
100 million dollars and me at 29 going you guys are the big guys with these with these deep pockets
You've done this before you know how to build businesses to 50 and 100 million dollars
Well, they don't know internet marketing.
They don't know the skills that you and I have
and everybody listening to this is so good at.
It gets corporatized and bureaucracized.
And so a few years after selling the company,
the company went bankrupt.
They got away from the playbook that made it successful.
They got away from the playbook that made it successful. They got away from the
Entrepreneurial spirit and I bought it back for a few pennies on the dollar. I've now been rebuilding that business It's now pacing seven figures again when we brought bought it back
It was doing a few hundred thousand dollars in revenue Rudy
We were doing ten million dollars a year in sales when we sold it ten million dollars a year in sales when we sold it. $10 million.
It was doing a few hundred thousand dollars in revenue.
That's how much that it had degraded.
So we bought it back.
But on the same exact playbook, hadn't changed.
Same product, same people, same strategies.
And guess what?
The company is growing again.
And we're still fairly early in that climb up process,
but now we're pacing seven figures again.
We're still relaunching the product line.
And the intent is to bring it back to its old glory days.
And then we'll see what happens.
We could sell it again, or we could just build a really great business
that we're excited to have.
That's the full story.
Yeah, it's a great story.
And I always love, like I've heard a few of the stories where
entrepreneur sells it, PE tanks it, entrepreneur buys it back.
I think it's like the David and Goliath.
That's one of the best stories.
And I've worked with some PE firms and I think they even admit like their
success rate is like two out of 10, but the two percent is like they get
get it to nine figures or whatever. So it still makes sense
for them, you know, but it's just funny.
Here's, here's the takeaway that was so profound for me. This is
how valuable our skill set is as entrepreneurs or marketers or
founders. Sometimes we forget because most of us grew up just wanting to make money.
We just wanted to have a different life and so we learn a skill set, we learn to monetize it.
But when you apply it to a real business and you think about the enterprise value that it can create,
oh my goodness, we have such a skill set.
And we often as entrepreneurs sell ourselves short because we see all the problems in our
businesses.
But when you see that really deep pocketed investors and private equity groups buy companies,
get away from the thing that made it special and take it, you realize, wait, maybe we're
good at this.
And maybe if we can combine those different frameworks, we can take some lessons from
the finance world, we can take some lessons from the finance
world, we can take some lessons from the PE world, and we combine it with our entrepreneurial
spirit and our marketing know-how, maybe we can build some really exciting special enterprises.
Yeah.
And I think it's interesting because I've obviously had a mastermind and coached hundreds
of people now, and I've seen like, there's a certain
percent, probably a small percent that actually can take companies, entrepreneurs that can take
their company to 10 million and beyond because they're able to merge the entrepreneurial side
and the corporate side. Sadly, I don't think most entrepreneurs can, which is why most never get
past the coupler meal. And it, you know, I'm always emphasizing, I say people buy my masterminds and stuff for ad
funnels, marketing, branding, social, but half of what we're teaching is the
boring stuff, right? How to make a higher VA, how to delegate, how to track KPIs
and you can learn a lot of that great stuff from corporate. But I would
love to just talk about the 16 million in sales.
So we don't, or exit.
So we don't graze past it.
If someone's listening, um, that, you know, doing a couple of million
a year or scaling their business.
What was some key lessons to actually building it to that level?
And then the exit part.
Well, the first is thinking about enterprise value as separate from cash flow.
So I like to say there's three types of money.
There's cash flow, there's wealth, and there's enterprise value.
Cash flow, obvious, you're not listening to this podcast if you don't know what that is.
Wealth is the total amount of your net worth, what you could sell everything for from your
investments and your real estate and all that. Enterprise
value is what you can sell your company for. Now, most entrepreneurs, if they're smart,
they take cashflow from their business and they invest for wealth. That's better than
most. You have your cashflow business, you invest it into long-term index funds or real
estate or whatever you invest in. That's better than most people do. But if you flip all thing and you focus on enterprise value, you can build a
company that is worth and can be sold for millions of dollars within a handful of
years, and then you can invest and never have to worry about cashflow again.
So we can flip the whole order.
Of course you can do both, but by prioritizing enterprise value, we think
about the business differently. When you are thinking about how I'm going to maximize and
increase my cash flows six months from now, the approach is going to be different than
how do I build enterprise value over the next four, five, six years. Very different paths.
Both are fine, but if you want to build something you sell,
you think about enterprise value.
You think about the person who's going to be
buying the company.
You think about where there is value different
than the other businesses in your sector.
When you start looking at that,
then the guiding principles start
to be a little bit different.
Well, I'll give you a real life example.
Me growing this company to you know, to sort
of 30 million or so in sales, I probably made less profit than like pretty much every other
internet marketer, but I grew my team to 100 employees, big offices, TV shows, big celebrity
projects.
So, you know, I had the option to like, Hey, do I want to have really high margins, take
it out and put it in real estate and stuff like a lot of the I to like, Hey, do I want to have really high margins, take it out and put it in real estate and stuff?
Like a lot of the I am space do, or do I want to like put it back into the
business and expand all these projects?
And, and I don't think there's a right or wrong anytime will tell, but like,
I'm always like, no, I want to build this hundred million dollar company.
And then, you know, it's, it's kind of like, if you draw, drew it on a graph,
like, you know, I'm behind, behind, behind, but then I peek, right?
Whereas other people are more slow and steady.
And again, no right or wrong.
It's like personal preference.
Do you want to go low carb or high carb?
Right.
It's a great analogy.
You're...
Yeah.
Yeah.
Cause everyone wants to say, oh, well, you shouldn't be doing this and that, but it's like time will tell.
Right. And I think you need to be true to yourself too. A lot of people don't ever
want to run a hundred person company and probably never should. And they love having 10 employees
and making 4 million a year net and having Lamborghinis and putting it all in real estate,
right? Whereas that doesn't even fulfill me, but fulfillment for me is big projects,
big teams, big offices.
Like I genuinely enjoy that.
So I also think to your point, like grow the company you want to grow, right?
And to that point, Rudy, I don't know that I could have focused on building
enterprise value
until I had satisfied the cashflow part of my life.
And I did that by having clients on the side.
I did that by leveraging the skill set that I built previously.
I did that as an affiliate marketer.
Today I have two businesses.
One is capitalism.com that is more of a cashflow business.
And that gives me the space to be able to roll everything
profit-wise back into the companies that I invest in
and the brands that I hope to exit and sell
or borrow against tax-free someday.
And having that separation allows me to just let that ride,
allows me to just keep compounding that.
So I don't know that I could have done that
and I not had my cashflow satisfied in a different way.
So in some cases, it's okay to just say,
this is my cashflow business.
I don't need to scale this to a hundred million,
let it pay for my life.
Now let me put my attention into the thing
that can compound over the next four or five years.
And if we let all that ride, the enterprise value compounds very, very quickly.
Well, I hit it exactly same as you know, I had an agency and I kind of said,
actually, I want to keep this a couple of million year making 33% profit margins.
Right.
That makes me 600 K profit and I can just use all that money to pay my own stuff,
my own investments, blah, blah, blah.
And then more capital, this red company, I didn't take any money out of it for the
first two years.
I just put every penny back.
So I think that is a really neglected thing for entrepreneurs listening.
Like if you want to build a business to sell, having that nest egg and stuff is
really important because in the other side of business well, you know, if you go to Silicon Valley, they don't have
that but they just keep raising, right?
And raising and raising and raising, liquidating and liquidating.
As entrepreneurs do it in some ways a better way where, you know, we try and scale but
also, you know, we're not going and diluting our own shares and stock. Um, so, so Ryan, quick question, building to sell, um, like you talked about the
free types of wealth, I think it's important, but you know, I've been
part of obviously a lot of M and A stuff in recent years and there's so much that
goes into like building to sell versus building a normal marketing based
entrepreneur company.
I would love for you to talk a few
things you learned during that process on how to maximize valuation and stuff too.
Well, one of the things I learned, but I learned this the hard way, is that as the controller of
a very profitable company, I have the asset that everybody wants. So at 29 when I'm selling a company and people are dangling eight-figure checks in front of me,
I'm sitting here going,
Oh, oh, these people, there's this big checks.
Yes, what do you want me to do, Mr. So-and-so?
I felt like I had none of the control, none of the leverage.
I learned that I had all of the leverage.
And if I had done one thing differently,
or if I could go back and change one thing,
I would have shown up to every one of those discussions
with a potential buyer with my term sheet,
saying these are the terms we will accept,
these are the things that we will and will not accept,
this is what we'd like to do,
let me know if you would like to proceed.
We didn't do that.
And so we were the insecure guy
trying to approach a cute girl in public.
That's how we probably use that analogy
that it's our human nature that once the first few times
we don't have the confidence.
And then, you know, if we've dated a bunch of pretty girls
or handsome guys
eventually we're like well this is what I want in a relationship and let's tolerate and that
exact same thing it's interesting. That's right that's right so I would have shown up with
what I was looking for and who I was going to get into business with and I didn't feel like I had
that leverage because people were
dangling big checks in front of me.
And so when you realize that you're the hot girl at the dance, you are the
thing that everybody wants, you show up with more confidence, and then you
can find the right partner.
And that's the one thing I wish I could do over.
Yeah.
And especially back then, right?
Like you had a super profitable,
econ business, good brand.
It wasn't like it was linked to your like
big personal fitness brand.
I'm sure it was a perfect buy.
So at least I think the positive of that
is you learn that at 29, not 49, right?
That's exactly right.
Wherever I was at, did I write.
The last thing that I'll add to
maximizing enterprise value is
how dramatically things
can change with a few relationships.
So I'll give you an example. I now invest in
e-commerce companies and
we have a low-carb
snack brand, a high-protein, low-carb
snack brand. And
that brand, if
we were to just sell it to somebody
right now just based on numbers and profit it might it might sell for like
a million dollars but we partnered with an influencer who's huge in the space
perfect person or this brand specifically. And we did not pay this person in the form of us dollars in order
to talk about our products.
We gave him shares in the business.
It was small minority share, but it was, if you calculate shares to a dollar value,
it's way more than he would get from a sponsorship deal.
And we've said, as soon as you sign this deal, the value of your shares actually
goes up by 200%, maybe 300%. Why? Because the business with this person on the cap
table is now a more predictable high growth company, and we could raise capital against that
at two to three times what we could do
if we were just valuing on the revenue profit or loss.
So we can double the enterprise value
with one key relationship.
That's also true if we start adding advisors or CEOs,
and we start seeing these relationships
as things that don't just make the company create more cash flow, they raise the enterprise value of what someone would be willing to pay for the asset.
That, that, when I started seeing how all that all played out and how the numbers ran, that was where I realized how the big boys play. Well, yeah, and there's also, you know, if you are listening to this looking to get into selling,
there's that, and there's a few other tricks as well.
You know, like if you can build
reoccurring revenue in your business,
though if you make 200 grand a month,
but now it's 200 grand a month of reoccurring,
that drastically changes it.
Or if you have multiple income channels,
or you get in physical locations and online.
So there's a lot of, you know, we don't have time for it all today but just to that point to
there's a lot of things you learn over time where it's like well if I just get YouTube ads working as well as Facebook
now I have at least multiple you know in multiple advertising streams right so
there's a lot of nifty ways and that's why
to your point having board members as well that aren't just big personal brands or influencers, but actually advisors can make such a difference.
You might give them 5% or 2%, but they can help you get another, you know, one on your multiple and it's now increased it proportionately.
Yeah, so when you start adding 1x multiple, now we're talking about multi-millions of dollars in value.
But we as entrepreneurs are trying to just hold on to the whole pie.
That might be why you're stalled out in your growth.
Yeah, I think, you know, like I used to be like that and then you just learn and
that's why podcasts like this are great.
So, Ryan, last question as we come to the end of today.
Talk about the, we'll have to get you back on for a whole another episode on capitalism.com.
Cause you build a massive business there too, and events and
community I'd love to dive into.
But just talk about for today, buying it back for pennies on the dollar.
I'm sure people are interested.
Like, how did that happen?
Give me the one minute summary to rat today.
people are interested, like how do that happen? Give me the one minute summary to rat today.
The company declared bankruptcy and the bank had to choose who they were going to
partner with to get the assets and I made a bid. I didn't get the bid. In fact, the bank went with another private equity group instead and that private equity group ran the business even further into the ground.
So there were two owners after me that just beat up this dog.
And the private equity group that owned it the second time had an acquisition for one
of their other brands.
And so there was someone who was in charge of selling off or getting rid of the non-performing asset.
That person gave me a call and we started having some discussions.
I knew that person from other relationships and they were now working at this private
equity group.
They called me and said, would you like to have your old company back?
When they told me the number they wanted, I walked away.
And we came back to the table and we negotiated and they had another number and I walked away a second time.
And then there was a third round of negotiations and we got close to the
price that I wanted to pay and I bought it for pennies on the dollar.
I basically bought it for the cost of inventory that was stored up in the
warehouse and I'm quite honestly, but that's what it was worth. It may not have even been worth that. The company had been completely
destroyed. It was a total do-over. I brought this back because I wrote a book about building and
selling this company. I didn't want the story to end with a bankruptcy. Let's at least have a good
ending to the story. Well, I mean, it's a great, great add-on to the story and hopefully it can create a whole new book
on how you re-grew it.
That'll be fun.
Yeah, that'll be good.
Cool.
Well, let's, you know, just to wrap today, obviously people, if they are listening to
the first time, as I kind of mentioned in T, it will definitely get you back on.
There's a whole other side of your genius on the Catalyst side.
So where, if they do want to learn more about you in the meantime, can they find you?
Thanks for asking.
The most affordable and direct way that I could serve somebody is for them to grab my
book which is called 12 months to 1 million.
That's my formula for building million dollar businesses.
They want more advanced stuff.
I'm on YouTube.
Everything that I know is free.
And I'm just my name on YouTube, Ryan Moran.
If you want to build a brand that you can scale and sell, all my best free resources
are available at capitalism.com slash playbook.
That's our free resources for those who want to build a brand that they want to scale and
sell.
It's tough.
Ryan, pleasure.
Great to see you again.
Thank you for having me, Rudy.
It's been a pleasure guys
I hope you can all sell a business for at least 16 million, but by just you did and
Ryan thank you so much and you can too
Thank you. Keep living the red life everyone. Take care [♪ music playing [♪ [♪ music playing [♪ [♪ music playing
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