Monday 23 January 2012

Insolvency and Financial Distress - My new book


This is my new book. And it is all described in the name, it deals with avoiding and getting out of problems rather than focusing on the legal technicalities. Of course there has to be some discussion of the different types of insolvency proceeding because this sets out your options, so there is some legal stuff; but I hope that is readable for anyone. If you plan to use insolvency proceedings or if you have no choice then you will need professional advice - this book will guide you towards understanding what your legal options but do not rely on it for legal advice. The law is complex and changing all the time, a tiny difference in circumstances can make all the difference to what you should or can do.

Concentrate on avoiding trouble.

The first thing is to recognise you have a problem. I set out in the book the signs you should not ignore. Are you constantly juggling payments to your creditors, delaying them and choosing which one to pay today? Has this been going on for long?

I have been there. I am a qualified accountant who held senior management positions in big businesses before co-founding a business that we believed would make us rich. It traded for more than 13 years. Towards the end of that time it appeared to have discovered a route to real success before rapidly changing markets, management disagreements and rising lease costs led us into difficulties. I have spent time preparing daily cash forecasts and deciding who to pay, in which order and how to delay some. I have watched the overdraft anxiously as it got close to the limit and we never had surplus cash in the bank. If this sounds familiar and goes on for long then you have a problem too.

There are ways to address these problems. It does not have to be a slippery slope to oblivion. You start by recognising there is a problem and then you address that. You don't spend all your time dealing with the symptoms of the cold - because soon you will find it has turned into pneumonia - you deal with the causes first. If you have management disagreement then sort that out. If you can't, then leave and do something else. If you keep fighting old battles then things will just get worse. If you have a broad agreement then agree the business strategy that will deal with the problems and exploit the opportunities. There are always opportunities.

If the strategy makes sense then there are usually ways to raise cash to deal with short term problems. But if the banks and investors see long-term problems then they will fight to be first to pull the plug and get their money back.