David Tramontana started a healthcare business (Home Care by Black Stone) back in the ’90s. It grew from 2 employees to nearly 2000 employees and from $0 in revenue to over $50 million in revenue.Today we’re talking about his challenges in growing and how growth consumes capital, his experiences with bringing on investors, and the dynamics of planning for distributions for the investors while you’re growing.
The big question is: do you reinvest your EBITA to grow a valuable business (long term) or do you create your company to create distributions for yourself so you can live your best life (however, at some point, you will be sacrificing value creation for annual distribution)?
Don’t just go grab an investor or a private equity firm because you can’t afford to grow. Instead, sit down and make a plan for your finances and understand your value. Everyone has different motives and you want to make sure that you intentionally get what you want.
What you will learn:
How David started the company from 2 employees to $50 Million and 2,000
What it was like going through two rounds of capital raises in order to fuel growth
The trials and tribulations involved in growing so quickly and so much
How 14 acquisitions helped David the business from $20M to $50M
How strategic planning helped navigate the changing industry and Obamacare
David’s experiences working with investors
What it was like shifting focus from an income business to a growth business
Managing expectations of distributions versus long term value creation
What it was like trying to sell the business over 12 months and why they took it off the market
Why David choose to sell for over $40 Million to a strategic buyer (public company)
What is it like being on the selling side after acquiring so many different businesses How David is able to reconcile the financial from the emotional aspects of business
Quotes:
“Should you reinvest your EBITA to grow a value long term, or do you want to create a business that has good cash flow where you can take the distributions (but at some point, you’re going to be sacrificing value creation for annual distribution)? It’s always give or take because growth consumes capital.” - Ryan Tansom
“Everybody was either going for the private pay (in the personal care side cause it had higher margins) or they had a sales team going after the skilled cause they had good margins. And we took the low margin but steady cash flow, Medicaid business, and then coordinated their care with the skilled care and it was an area where we didn’t have a lot of competition so we were very successful in the [...] market and so we took it to Cincinnati and we just kept going with it.” - David Tramontana
Takeaway:
The big question is, do you reinvest your EBITA to grow a valuable business (long term) or do you create your company to create distributions for yourself so you can live your best life (however, at some point, you will be sacrificing value creation for annual