Salons are service industry with subcontractorish environments, so it's not
all that different than wisp, except it's all broads.
The salon my woman works at is failing, poor management decisions, partners
who are family (mother funded, daughter managed) mother owns 51 percent
daughter 49. At one point it was an established and successful business,
but feelings got hurt, partners fighting, a staff coup that took a
substantial amount of clientelle, facilities not maintained. No clear
company structure as far as owners getting paid. A 7 thousand dollar and 13
thousand dollar note owed to the mother partner, etc. Management software
client capture went from over 800 clients to under 200 captures over a one
year span indicating to me the "staff" quit putting a lot of services on
the books and was pocketing the cash. It was an llc but they quit paying it
and transferred it into what they refer to as a partnership with the 51 49
thing, I have not seen that documentation

I assume a lot of this could be correlated to many of your purchases of
family run wisps.

This has the potential to be turned around, the salon had a good
reputation, and volume at one point, and its the only full service one in
the town, so it's not completely failed. There also is room to incorporate
some other sources of revenue into the mix.

The 51 percent partner wants out, they would like to simply recoup the
majority of their outstanding debt and was their hands of the matter.
Initially this was offered to us for 7k but that left an outstanding
liability of 13 on the business to the same person, and that note is secure
via a mortgage extension. That didn't sound like a good risk so we told
them to get a better proposal consisting of buying out that half of the
partnership as well as a second proposal for buying out the entire
partnership. The "assets" including minimal revenue of a single occupied
station for a year was informally estimated at around 34k.

The daughter partner who is the primary "contractor" had a 45k recorded
revenue. I don't recall the revenue from the other occupied chair of the 5
chairs and the retail had substantially dropped, I suspect due to it
becoming free when nobody was looking.

Recovery could take place, as they offer the full spa set of services,
however they currently are limited in their massage and facials by
contractors who don't show up. This can be resolved fairly quickly for the
massage therapist by recruiting one I'm aware of who is looking for a new
place to operate because her stand alone office did not generate the
revenue to justify the expense and overhead. Also my it job has allowed me
to build good personal relationships with a lot of beneficial businesses,
primarily the beauty school for recruiting fresh "contractors" to fill the
empty chairs, they just don't come with clients.

This is a more rushed scenario than I would prefer, this was a 3-5 year
plan, but circumstances presented. Our lust for business ownership stands
to cloud judgement, and that in itself is enough to walk away.

We have a meeting later this week for presentation of the proposals. What I
don't know is what documentation in particular I should request. I can ask
for "financials" but I don't know what that actually means, or what further
information to ask for.

I'm reaching out here because you guys are my favorite cheap dates, and a
lot of you have experiences more valuable than any advice I could pay an
attorney for. After this next meeting is when our expenses start, so we
need to be able to make a personal judgement at that point if it's a good
enough opportunity to go to a lawyer and start paying for the non
refundable advice. It's also when we make the decision of how foolish we
want to look in front of our bankers. I like my banker though, and he might
be in poor spirits and need a good laugh.

Smart me knows this is not the right time to take risks like this when I
only have 7 short years til my boy needs a college education and if this
goes south, mom and dads financial support will be out. But the potential
makes it worth looking at, like watching a train wreck. There are also some
other long term prospects this makes possible so that benefit alone makes
it well worth an investigation.

I really would appreciate some sage advice from experience in small
business.


>From what I have seen, there is no formal business structure, in other
words I don't see

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