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Monday, July 19, 2010

What Matters Most to Business Owners

I’m going to interrupt my series of posts on the subject of opportunity cost to share some information about the motivations of private business owners that I found very interesting.

The data comes from the Pepperdine University Private Capital Markets Project, which conducts extensive regular interviews among both the providers of capital to privately-owned business and the businesses that seek private capital (as opposed, that is, to raising capital in the public bond and stock markets).

In the Winter 2010 edition of the Pepperdine report is a fascinating section entitled “What is most important to you as a business owner?”.

The three goals to which the participants were asked to respond were:

1. Maintaining current lifestyle.

2. Dramatically increasing lifestyle.

3. Financial independence (defined as increasing the value of their business by at least 3 times)

The possible answers were:

a. Most Important

b. Next most important.

c. Least important.

Here’s what I found most interesting.

The least important goal of these business owners, by far, was “Dramatically Increasing Lifestyle” with only 9.9% choosing that as their most important objective.

By far the MOST important goal, chosen by 67.3%, was “Financial Independence”.

Note the definition of “financial independence” is a function of building value in their businesses; specifically, increasing value by at least 3 times.

“Maintaining current lifestyle” was actually seen as more important than dramatically increasing lifestyle.

So these owners of private business are pretty much content with their CURRENT income. What’s really important to them is building value in their business to provide for their FUTURE independence.

This idea of weighing current benefits against future benefits is a fundamental issue in applying opportunity cost analysis, which is why I bring this topic up now.

In my next post I’ll get back to opportunity cost and bring this issue of motivation into that discussion.

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