Decoding Executive Titles: The Difference Between Interim, Project, Part-Time & Fractional Executives

Decoding Executive Titles: The Difference Between Interim, Project, Part-Time & Fractional Executives

Interim, acting, project, contract, fractional, part-time. The array of executive titles can make your head spin. But they all point to a specialized type of executive that companies call on when they are going through transformation.

What is an interim executive and how does that differ from a part-time executive, a project executive, or fractional executive?

Let’s break it down.

What is an Interim Executive?

Interim executives are highly-skilled, experienced C-level executives who typically contract to work for a company for a defined period, versus full-time executives who are hired by the company. The defined period can be as little as one month or last as long as two years.

There are highly qualified interim CEOs, interim CFOs, interim COOs, interim CIOs, interim CMOs and CSOs ready to step into a position.

Why would a company choose an interim executive over a full-time executive?

There are many possible reasons, but in all cases, the company needs some kind of change or upgrade.

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12 Secrets to Family Business Success

12 Secrets to Family Business Success

There are some family businesses that have been around for 100 years and continue to thrive under the leadership of 5 or more generations. But they are rare – as rare as a child who loves basketball making his way to the NBA.

So notes John Messervey, an organizational behavior consultant who counsels high-wealth families through very difficult conversations about their family dynamic, their family business, and their hopes for the next generation.

His years of experience working with family businesses and entrepreneurs led him to develop these 12 lessons for family business success:

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2022 Year In Review

2022 Year In Review

InterimExecs 2022 Year in Review

The Top Five Highlights From Our Best Year Ever

Over the course of 2022 we worked with many HR leaders, company owners, boards and executives — some facing turmoil and some navigating through exponential growth. We deployed executive superheroes to provide strong leadership. There is no shortage of needs, and we are energized by the huge positive impact RED Team interim and fractional leaders continue to have as we experienced our best year to date in 2022.

Here are just a few ways InterimExecs and the RED Team jumped into action in 2022:

We Promoted Interim More Than Ever Before

In 2022 we saw a lot of interest from media in the interim and fractional landscape. The concept of the gig economy has expanded through the years up to the C-suite.

Our commitment to serve as the voice for the specialty stands strong: we see interim as it’s own specialty. This isn’t consulting – we provide strategy and execution, always being held accountable for results. No job seekers allowed. Give us a big challenge, not just a seat to keep warm. That led to lots of media coverage in outlets such as:

Leadership is the art of accomplishing more than the science of management says is possible.

-Colin Powell

We Deployed the RED Team

InterimExecs worked with PE funds, owners, and management teams navigating fast growth or still struggling with supply change, inflation, and other challenges. Through the Rapid Executive Deployment program, we deployed interim CEOs, CFOs, COOs, CIOs, and CMOs from the RED Team individually and as teams across many industries, including:

Food Manufacturer

Operations went haywire at a family-owned business. An Interim CFO expert in turnaround was quickly brought in to dissect the crisis and maximize the value of operational and real estate assets.

Consulting Services

A global services firm faced a daunting digital transformation and growing competition. An Interim CEO provided leadership in action to restore their values and vision and get back to fast expansion.

Energy Storage

A promising battery tech company had stalled within a bureaucracy. An Interim CTO parachuted in to take the component hardware and software development offerings to an industry-leading standard.

Learning Company

A fast-growing software and hardware company outgrew the current CFO, so called in an interim to upgrade financial structure and prepare the company for a roadshow to spin out and go public.

Healthcare Services

When the CEO exited the business to pursue a startup, an interim exec jumped in to assess the business, groom the COO to step into the CEO role, and expand in-home healthcare services.

Policy & Advocacy

After a non-profit’s rapid growth and leadership shake up, the organization engaged an Interim CFO/COO to lead a process improvement initiative and provide leadership for an expanding team.

The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.

-George Bernard Shaw

We Launched Right Leader Right Time

In March G&D Media published Right Leader Right Time: Discover Your Leadership Style for a Winning Career and Company authored by InterimExecs’ co-founders Robert Jordan and Olivia Wagner.

Jordan and Wagner drew on their executive matchmaking methodology to provide leaders with a framework to identify their FABS leadership style (Fixer, Builder, Artist, Strategist).

In September the audio version went live, including four bonus tracks featuring interviews with inspiring leaders who represent each leadership style (shoutout to InterimExecs RED Team members Eric Kish, Michelle Barnes, Russ Reeder, Joshua Katz, and Lisa Yarnell for your amazing insights).

Exceptional leaders reject what is not for their highest and best use.

-Robert Jordan & Olivia Wagner, Right Leader Right Time

Top 5 Reasons Companies Used Interim Executives in 2022

We surveyed 190 interim executives on a range of topics around the interim specialty including a look back at the top challenges executives were called in to tackle in 2022:

(1) Financial challenges were reported to be the top driver for bringing on an interim in 2022. Inadequate funding, cash management fluctuation, rising interests rates, expense increases, and changing consumer demand were a common theme. Some leaders were brought in to establish clear monthly reporting and others to navigate through erratic revenue generation or lack or profitability.

(2) Poor Team Communication was a second key driver with inability to generate superior performance and broken organizational structure as common themes. Whether it be leadership or a team resistant to change or lack of trust and transparency, many interims reported being brought on board to align the team around mission, vision, and values.

(3) Technology upgrade was no surprise as more businesses are driven to continue upgrading product offerings and platforms. ERP system integration and implementation, data security policies and procedures were common use cases expected to continue strongly in 2023.

(4) Hiring people presented big challenges for companies that drove the need for interim executives. Many executives reported that companies were frustrated with a lack of adequate staff. Finding experienced people, training remotely, and balancing the demands of employee work from anywhere versus the need for in-person interactions are ongoing challenges brought to light post-pandemic.

(5) Scaling a business was top of mind for many executives who jumped into fast growth situations. Quick expansion led many companies to call in an interim to put process, systems and documentation in place.

Interim and fractional executives predict rising demand, without any slowdown. 66% of executives predicted that opportunities for interim and fractional assignments will increase in 2023, while 30% said they will remain consistent.

Winning is not a sometime thing; it’s an all the time thing. You don’t win once in a while; you don’t do things right once in a while; you do them right all the time. Winning is a habit.

-Vincent Lombardi

We Developed the FABS Leadership Assessment™ to Build Complementary Teams

Alongside publication of Right Leader Right Time, we launched the FABS Leadership Assessment to help leaders discover their dominant and secondary leadership style.

By understanding each leader’s unique wiring, organizations can better collaborate among team members and bring in outside resources that match up with where they are right now and where they are going.

What’s your leadership style? Take the beta version of the assessment and let us know what you think of your result.

Genius is in the idea. Impact however comes from action.

-Simon Sinek

That’s a Wrap!
Wishing You Much Joy & Success in 2023

-The InterimExecs Team

Explore the Benefits of Interim

  • Access to top executives wired for challenge
  • Skip the long executive search process
  • Backed by a team and wealth of knowledge
  • Fresh thinking and best practices
  • Action and results – not just advice!
  • Proven process to look at your unique needs
  • Flexible contracts
  • Mentorship and development for your team

Business Exit Strategy: Owners Neglect at Their Peril

Business Exit Strategy: Owners Neglect at Their Peril

InterimExecs founder Robert Jordan learned early the tremendous weight an entrepreneur must bear: “When you own the company, it’s nothing like being an employee,” he writes in exploring the sacred trust of ownership. “You might as well compare lifting up a hundred pound weight versus a feather.”

Jordan, who founded his first small business at age 26 and “hit every speed bump you could possibly think of, and then a couple more just for creativity points,” has learned a lot along the way. Among the most important lessons: while business exit planning is critical, it is usually neglected – at the owner’s and board’s peril.

Alejandro Cremades, author of Selling Your Startup: Crafting the Perfect Exit, Selling Your Business, and Everything Else Entrepreneurs Need to Know, agrees. He says that a company’s management team must add “crafting an exit strategy” to their business goals.

Continue reading →

2021 Year In Review

2021 Year In Review

2021 Year In Review

5 Highlights from InterimExecs

Over the course of 2021 we worked with many company owners, boards and executives eager to charge forward, continuing to adapt and grow, flex and expand amid a new normal COVID landscape. It all reinforced for us why we do what we do, helping to build or fix as needs be. It can be lonely in positions of authority, yet we saw brave company owners, boards, and interims bring clarity and strength to their companies and teams.

Here are just a few ways InterimExecs and the RED Team jumped into action in 2021:

We Charted Trends

We surveyed 125 executives to ask what trends they anticipated would have the greatest effect on the interim specialty in the year ahead, and reported on the top 5 trends expanding the need for interim executives.

One thing was for sure: the vast majority saw the demand for interim would only continue to go up.

Did the interim predictions for 2021 play out? Here’s what they said:

> A virtual workforce and increasing tech-centricity would require organizations to modernize, transform data into a corporate asset, and place new priority around things like cyber security. Sure enough, looking back on the year, 2021 boasted the highest average cost from data breaches in the past 17 years — a whopping $4.24 million average per breach according to IBM.

> Businesses would continue to struggle and as investors saw performance objectives missed in 2020, outside leadership would be called in to restructure and set out a growth plan.

> M&A activity would rise. Deal activity in fact steadily rose through the year with Pitchbook reporting over 4,600 deals in Q3 combined for $708.3 billion. Healthcare and IT stood out as sectors trending up for deal activity.

> More CEOs and owners would retire leaving voids in the leadership team and creating opportunities to prepare the company for sale. In September Clarfeld Citizens Private Wealth found that 66% of high net-worth business owners planned on moving up their plan to retire or sell the company post-pandemic.

> The gig economy would continue to gain acceptance. As much of the workforce has gone virtual, we’ve seen companies more focused on finding the right skillset and expertise needed in the role versus focusing solely on location. Long executive search times and the high cost of a full-time hire has also fueled the desire for flexibility that comes with interim or fractional execs.

I don’t know where I am going from here, but I promise it won’t be boring.

-David Bowie

We Deployed the RED Team

InterimExecs worked with PE funds, owners, and management teams navigating fast growth or still struggling with the challenges these past few years imposed. Through the Rapid Executive Deployment program, we deployed interim executives from the RED Team individually and as teams across many industries, including:

Fintech Company

A Europe-based fintech company needed an expert CEO to create a plan, win beta customers, launch, and lead expansion into the United States

Transportation Provider

A RED Team CHRO provided fractional services to build a team of union employees and engineers while improving employee engagement

Construction Equipment

A private equity backed construction equipment company engaged an Interim CFO to optimize financial reporting and performance.

Healthcare Association

A nonprofit healthcare association called in a veteran CMO with B2B and B2C experience to transform the marketing function and build out a digital strategy

Wellness App

A fast growing online health and wellness company called in an Interim COO and CTO to help move to a membership model and develop a mobile app

Cannabis

As cannabis sales expand across the US, we deployed a team including an expert CFO and controller to upgrade financials and complete on-time audits

I called InterimExecs when I took on an estate with an operating company where the owner had passed away and there was no successor in place. InterimExecs quickly introduced me to a RED Team executive who perfectly fit the bill. She jumped in eagerly, making sure the business continued to function smoothly, and then helped to efficiently manage the process of successfully selling the company. It was a great outcome and I thank InterimExecs for providing expert leadership fast.

-Dan Felix, Professional Trustee

We Presented Private Equity Value Creation Strategies

In February we teamed up with Private Equity Career News and Private Equity Professional to host a panel exploring best practices for value creation within private equity portfolio companies. The panel, led by InterimExecs CEO, Robert Jordan touched on everything from pricing, to creating a playbook, and building trust within the management team. See highlights here:

Effective executives differ widely in their personalities, strengths, weaknesses, values, and beliefs. All they have in common is that they get the right things done.

-Peter Drucker

We Gathered as a Team

Our annual in-person meetup of RED Team executives went virtual for the second year in a row.

Forty+ executives came together to talk shop. In a mix of group and breakout sessions we covered topics ranging from how sales channels have changed and how to revamp marketing and sales to take advantage of digital channels, to how interims are working to helping client companies ramp up mergers and acquisitions.

Leadership is the art of accomplishing more than the science of management says is possible.

-Colin Powell

We Identified Four Unique Leadership Styles

How is it that some leaders win brilliantly and repeatedly, while many others suffer in frustration and defeat?

InterimExecs’ co-founders Robert Jordan and Olivia Wagner have spent a decade+ interviewing thousands of executives and matching leaders with organizations in need of help. They have co-authored a book coming out March 29, 2022: Right Leader Right Time: Discover Your Leadership Style for a Winning Career and Company.

Jordan and Wagner share their framework for elevating leaders to greater career success, while helping organizations win bigger opportunities and build more collaborative, intentional teams.

In parallel, we are transforming our matching methodology into a leadership assessment tool to help executives have more impact in the gigs they serve in. We invite you to learn more about your leadership style by taking this confidential survey at www.interimexecs.com/leadership-survey. We will share aggregated results and more updates on the book launch in 2022.

Genius is in the idea. Impact however comes from action.

-Simon Sinek

That’s a Wrap!
Wishing You Much Joy & Success in 2021

-The InterimExecs Team

Explore the Benefits of Interim

  • Access to top executives wired for challenge
  • Skip the long executive search process
  • Backed by a team and wealth of knowledge
  • Fresh thinking and best practices
  • Action and results – not just advice!
  • Proven process to look at your unique needs
  • Flexible contracts
  • Mentorship and development for your team

About Us

This is Leadership On-Demand

See how our experience running and building organizations has shaped how we help companies connect with the best leaders around the globe today.

Why We Started InterimExecs

Organizations fail or triumph, all based on leadership.

Running businesses and helping other owners and management teams, we found time and again that leadership is at the core of how organizations succeed or, more often than not, fail. Did you know:

71%

of companies do not think their current leaders are capable of driving them into the future

90

of well-formulated strategies fail due to poor execution

95

of employees do not understand their organization’s strategy

  • It’s easy to lose your way
    Strapped for time and resources, sucked into the day-to-day grind, many owners and managers lose sight of the bigger picture and of ambitious goals. The end result is an organization lacking purpose, stuck in old thinking, or that hit a ceiling in their growth. It’s our mission to change that.
  • You shouldn’t have to do it alone.
    Through an on-demand model of leadership, top executives can be accessed on an interim, fractional or project basis to provide specialized expertise, leading an organization to higher ground. We have set out to be the best matchmaker in the world between companies and executives, sending in the right leadership to achieve bigger and better results.
  • We stand for great leadership.
    We have a passionate belief that great leaders improve companies, lives, communities, and make a lasting improvement in the world. These leaders must act with integrity and be held accountable for results. That’s where so few actually make the grade, and why we created the RED Team. Your company is a sacred trust and you deserve the best.

Our Values

We value integrity and accountability above any commercialism. We only work with E3 executives:

Eager

You jump to be of service where needed with a desire to do purposeful work. You want to have a positive impact in the lives of people, organizations, and communities and have fight in the game to seize even the toughest challenges.

Enterprising

You have a curiosity to uncover hidden opportunities, working relentlessly to perfect and up your game to dominate, pivot, expand, and grow. Anything but sit still! You desire to be a leader in your space and are not afraid to make decisions and take action.

Engaging

You want the best for the organization, team, and customers, and will ask the tough questions to assess the strengths and gaps in the organization. You collaborate with others who bring complementary expertise to achieve bigger results together.

Meet Our Founders

Robert Jordan

Founder & CEO

Robert Jordan has launched companies and helped other owners and investors build their companies for 25+ years. After founding the first Internet-coverage magazine in the world, Online Access, and landing on the Inc 500 list of fastest-growing companies, Jordan sold the magazine and began taking on interim CEO gigs. In 2007 he started an online network for interim executives and then co-founded InterimExecs, helping owners and investors with powerful leadership on demand through InterimExecs RED Team (Rapid Executive Deployment). Jordan is author of How They Did It: Billion Dollar Insights from the Heart of America, and publishing partner for Start With No, Jim Camp’s bestselling book on negotiation.

Olivia Wagner

Founder & President

Olivia Wagner co-founded InterimExecs and directs the organization, matching owners and investors with powerful leadership on demand through InterimExecs RED Team (Rapid Executive Deployment). Olivia previously built the interimCEOinterimCFO network from a home-grown website to a robust social network with thousands of members. She directed publication of various ebook, website, and marketing initiatives and edited How They Did It: Billion Dollar Insights from the Heart of America. In conjunction with the book Olivia led a national event series, the Entrepreneurial Bash, which drew hundreds of attendees and over 30 co-hosting organizations.

The InterimExecs Dream Team

InterimExecs would not be possible without a driven and dedicated team that make the magic happen!

The InterimExecs Dream Team

InterimExecs would not be possible without a driven and dedicated team that make the magic happen!

4 Best Practices for Family Business Succession Planning

4 Best Practices for Family Business Succession Planning

Running a family business is no walk in the park. The family dinners or holiday gatherings could be mistaken for board room meetings, with topics of conversation jumping between family matters and minute business topics.

Discussions get further complicated when it comes time for a transition of ownership as the first generation of family businesses starts to look towards retirement and relinquishing control of day-to-day activities. Who will step in to lead the company?

A number of family business succession issues arise, from siblings quarreling about how to divide up the business and inheritance to instability within the organization as employees wonder what their future holds.

Continue reading →

A Surprising Source for Fraud? Check the IT Department.

A Surprising Source for Fraud? Check the IT Department.

No matter the industry, size, or scope, every business has to be wary of the f-word: fraud. We know virtually any department from marketing to HR is vulnerable, and the extra scrutiny typically targets finance and accounting — think embezzlement, payroll fraud, or fictitious revenue. But with the exponential growth of IT budgets‚ this unassuming area has become ripe for liabilities.

A top interim CIO from InterimExecs RED Team who has led complex IT turnarounds for Fortune 500 companies shares the warning signs of IT fraud and how to mitigate the risks. Continue reading →

4 Winning Strategies to Add Value to Portfolio Companies

4 Winning Strategies to Add Value to Portfolio Companies

“For private equity funds, the clock starts ticking the second you sign, the second you own your new portfolio company. So the Holy Grail is: how do you add superior value?” That’s how InterimExecs CEO Robert Jordan helped kick off a recent panel about adding value to portfolio companies. Sponsored by InterimExecs and hosted by Private Equity Career News publisher David Toll and John McNulty’s Private Equity Professional, panel experts shared best practices for value creation.

On the panel were Jordan, Micah Dawson, vice president of Portfolio Support at Trivest Partners; Pericles Mazarakis, managing partner of TriSpan; and Mike Zawalski, an InterimExecs RED Team member who serves in executive chairman roles with PE-backed portfolio companies.

Here, we round up the top insights from the panelists, everything from the importance of monthly operation reports to establishing trust with the business owner and investing in human capital. Continue reading →

How to Sell Your Company for Maximum Value

In the years you spend focused on building a business and making it more and more profitable, the process of selling your company isn’t top of mind. But when the day comes to start thinking about your exit strategy — whether it’s because you are ready to retire, the business is facing financial troubles, or you’re hoping to see big profits with a sale — you’ll quickly realize the work is far from straightforward or simple.

Preparing a business for exit can be a long and complicated process, and one that requires a whole new set of skills. You generally need to start working on an exit strategy a few years in advance of selling. Not only do you need to keep your business running effectively, but to get a good price you also want to work to increase the market value of your company before the sale date and during diligence and closing.

That’s a lot to take on. Most owners and executive teams do not have the skills necessary to plan and manage an exit successfully. And trying to add a whole new set of responsibilities on top of their current ones is usually a recipe for failure — especially while you’re trying to increase the value of your business and profitability for the sake of a better sale.

The solution more and more is to take on an interim CFO, temporary head of corporate development, or even a project-based Interim President skilled in M&A who can work alongside the owner.

Preparing for Exit with an Interim Executive

Interim executives parachute in for a short term to take on a vital project that could be beyond the regular skill set of the owners and day-to-day management team. For a company wanting to sell, you can hire an interim CFO who specializes in creating and executing the business exit strategy and playbook. They’ll work with you for the length of time needed to get your business ready for sale, handle negotiations with interested buyers, and make sure the process runs smoothly from start to finish – knowing that many transactions can start with high hopes but derail if not carefully managed.

When preparing for exit, an interim CFO expert in M&A brings:

  • Vast experience, having already helped other companies through the same sales process
  • The specific set of skills required to assess the current state of your business, prepare a realistic exit strategy, and lead execution on the plan
  • A fresh set of outside eyes to help you see your company the way potential buyers will and create an action plan to maximize the value of your business
  • Expertise for instilling confidence in prospective buyers and managing a smooth sales process

Creating a business exit strategy is not business as usual. No matter how skilled your current company leaders are you probably don’t have the right talent and experience within your company to do the best job at going through a sales process on your own. An interim CFO or temporary head of corporate development takes on the work they’re good at, empowering the rest of your team to keep focusing on doing their jobs as the company prepares to show itself off in a new way.

Selling your company has become incredibly complicated – the process of selling, diligence, documentation, and closing is fraught with land mines everywhere you look or move. Smart owners know better than to risk everything they’ve so carefully built over the years – they rely on outside expert resources to make sure everything goes well from start to finish.

Robert Jordan, CEO, InterimExecs

An Interim CFO’s Process for Selling a Business

An interim CFO or Head of Corporate Development knows the detailed playbook to guide you through the full process of preparing for exit and completing the sale of your company. That includes providing leadership during various stages of the exit process.

  1. Determine your exit strategy goals.

To develop the right plan for your business and needs, the interim executive brainstorms with owners and investors to align on the biggest goals including target sales price of your company.

Is your company doing well and you’re selling to achieve a big payday? Or is your company underperforming and in need of an exit strategy focused on merger or a longer term earnout? Are you happy to sell and ride off into the sunset, or do you want to still have some level of involvement with the business? Is it important to you that your employees continue with the company or that aspects of the company’s legacy are preserved?

If you’re not sure about your goals, an interim CFO will know the right questions to ask to help you gain clarity in what you really want to accomplish.

  1. Assess types of potential buyers

Looking at a world of potential acquirers from financial buyers to strategic buyers may be overwhelming, but owners should be sure that no stone is left unturned.

Financial buyers like private equity funds or investors will be looking for a company that has the potential for future growth or where operational efficiencies can increase their bottom line or add to an existing platform investment. Many company owners may not get the valuation they want because they have not put necessary processes or financial systems in place. An Interim CEO or Interim CFO can help while leading negotiations with investors, ensuring your best interests are represented.

Strategic buyers – often companies already in or looking to expand into your industry – have reasons beyond your company’s profitability. These established companies in your space may look to reduce the number of competitors, get a hold of your client list and product details, or add your product offerings to their business.

An interim CFO or Interim Head of Corporate Development will help you understand your options and make an analysis of which type of buyer to prioritize based on your goals and situation.

  1. Maximizing the value of your company. 

Part of running a business is learning how to successfully sell a product. When you’re preparing for exit, your business becomes the product. That can be a hard mental shift for a company’s owner and executive team to make.

An interim CFO knows how to assess and enhance all the valuable parts of your business to better understand where its value lies to an outside buyer. They can identify your top strengths and assets, whether that’s your employees, customer list, intellectual property, current branding and marketing strategies, business processes, or something else completely.

They’ll review your financials to make sure there are no underlying problems, but more often than not, there may be issues that need to be addressed prior to the sale. And they’ll consider what the company’s opportunities for future growth look like. All of that will help in evaluating what your company looks like as a product, so you’re able to start positioning it for highest return.

  1. Create a plan for preparing for exit.

A strong business exit strategy will include a plan to maximize the value of the company in sales before you start looking for a buyer. In the analysis phase, an interim CFO or interim executive expert in mergers and acquisitions will identify opportunities to increase profits by some combination of cutting costs, increasing sales, or raising prices. They’ll outline specific steps to help you reach a point where your revenue is higher and you’ll be more valuable to buyers.

And they’ll outline steps for getting the company ready for the big changes that come with a sale. That means thinking about how employees may be affected and how to communicate the situation to them. And it includes thinking about the influence on customers as well, and how to make sure they’ll want to stick around. For some types of businesses, it may include encouraging long-term agreements with employees and/or clients to provide reassurance to potential buyers that the company’s assets will stay in place after the sale.

  1. Executing the plan.

One of the big ways interim executives differ from consultants is that they don’t stop at performing an analysis and drawing up a plan. Talk is cheap, action is dear. They stay to lead, to be held accountable for results. An interim CFO will determine the best way to execute on each step they’ve recommended. They’ll be there to see if one of the strategies suggested doesn’t play out as intended, and make updates in real time.

They’ll establish key performance indicators (KPIs) to measure progress and set clear goals. They’ll help you benchmark success in a way that makes it demonstrable to buyers. And they’ll help owners and boards recognize the moment when your business is ready for prime time.

By this point, they’ll have helped position the company for best effect.

They’ll develop a pro forma that provides a realistic estimate for buyers of what the company’s future profits will look like if they follow suggested strategies. They’ll highlight the most valuable assets your company has now. And they’ll determine how best to tailor the message to the particular needs of the buyer.

  1. Finding the Buyers and Working with Your Investment Banker

An interim CFO will help lead the process of identifying potential buyers who are both likely to be interested in your company and match your exit strategy goals. This is never their first rodeo – for them to have already earned their spurs, even if they don’t know your industry, they know how to assess likely and appropriate buyers and evaluate the relative fit to each of your needs. If the company has also retained an investment banker, they’ll coordinate the investment banker’s work with the owner and board of directors.

  1. Manage and close the transaction.

An interim CFO also has skills to help you negotiate the best deal possible for your company. If multiple interested parties are bidding, your interim CFO or interim executive will help the board or investment banker to manage the bids to determine and secure the best buyer for the company. At this point, a cascade of documentation is triggered, from a term sheet, which could be binding or non-binding, to complex schedules of closing documents, due diligence, and transaction timing. The coordination of this process has become highly complex, meticulous and specialized. At no other point in the sale process is it more apparent how valuable outside leadership has become to make sure everything goes well and nothing derails a good result.

  1. Create a succession plan for after the handoff. 

You want to set up the buyer for success after the sale. The interim CFO helps with that as well. If part of their assignment, they’ll put an integration plan in place that considers your company’s current processes, your buyer’s needs, and how best to combine the two for long-term success.

For all the work that goes into preparation and the sale itself, many mergers and acquisitions fail after the sale is completed. A good post-sale strategy developed by someone with an extensive understanding of this area of business will increase the odds that your successor finds success after you exit.

Find the Right Interim Executive for Your Business Exit Strategy

Even if you’re just starting to think about preparing for exit, the sooner you bring on an interim executive to help you with the process, the better. InterimExecs has a proven process for matching smart companies with smart talent. The InterimExecs RED team is full of seasoned leaders with a wide range of experience, including CFOs who have helped companies hit home run exits.

To start the process of finding your powerful interim CFO or interim head or corporate development, call (847) 849-2800 or set up a discussion today.


Interim CFO Case Study:
After a failed sales process of a SaaS company, a $5B private equity fund decided they needed outside leadership. InterimExecs brought on board an Interim Executive Chairman to serve alongside the CEO and management team while making operational improvements, increasing accountability, and ultimately growing the business to point of sale.

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