March 27, 2026
ESOP vs. Third-Party Sale for Founders Nearing Retirement
By Andreas Schuhmacher

Most business founders don’t fear selling their business. They fear getting pulled back in after they have “retired.” Founders nearing retirement have three legitimate concerns:
- I want to slow down and no longer have the business run my life
- I want my legacy to continue and not have a newcomer destroy my reputation
- I no longer want to run the clean-up department, every time something doesn’t go as planned
This last concern often determines whether a Third-Party Sale or an ESOP is the better path. Both have pros and cons, and further on, a third model will be mentioned, which can achieve many of these goals while avoiding key drawbacks.
Third-Party Sale – Not All Buyers Are Villains
A third-party sale means selling the business to an individual buyer, a private equity group or an entrepreneur looking to acquire a company. Selling to an independent new owner sometimes has a bad reputation: “Sell to outsiders, culture dies, employees panic.” However, such a scenario can easily be avoided along with other mistakes that founders often make:
- Assuming all buyers slash costs and culture
- Believing earn-outs are unavoidable
- Prioritizing speed over the right fit
A comprehensive preparation of a sale will include a careful buyer selection with the right buyer very likely preserving the team and investing in growth. A thoughtful deal structure with optional earn-outs and a clear transition planning will address all perceived deficiencies of a transaction.
This way, the founder will experience a clean break at closing without harming their employees’ future, while avoiding multi-year earn-outs (unless preferred for tax reasons) and endless consulting obligations. Ideally, the seller will walk away with significant cash at closing, a manageable seller note, and a short and defined transition period. All this is made possible through diligent preparation and having multiple buyer candidates to choose from.
ESOPs: Employee Stock Ownership Plans & Problems
An Employee Stock Ownership Plan allows a company to sell shares to a trust that holds stocks on behalf of employees. The purchase is typically financed with bank debt that the company repays over time, which is often supported by seller guarantees or seller financing.
On paper, ESOPs sound perfect: Employees benefit through leadership continuity, the company culture stays intact and founders exit gradually. Sometimes that’s exactly how it works. However, unlike a third-party sale where risk largely transfers at closing, an ESOP often keeps the founder financially and operationally tied to the business. The founder becomes the company’s unofficial safety net and lender / guarantor, and the exit stretches out much longer than planned.
Founders frequently continue to play the roles of executives or advisors, board members, guarantors for the bank loan and lenders through seller notes. Most businesses face challenges daily, and when performance softens or leadership struggles, the familiar question appears: “You built this—can you help fix it?” Many founders do and stay far longer than planned.
More importantly, employees are employees for a reason: they mostly do not have the entrepreneurial drive and managerial whereabouts to run a mid-sized company as successful as the founding business owner. So why turn the company over to less qualified individuals and absorb the credit risk exposure?
Additional ESOP risks include that all ESOPs also come with structural obligations, such as independent trustees, annual valuations, regulatory compliance, and extensive documentation. These aren’t one-time legal tasks, fees or one-time expenses —they’re ongoing.
However, by far the biggest ESOP concern is that the former owner guarantees the bank loan becoming a creditor through a seller note in the process. This means a meaningful portion of their retirement depends on the company’s future cash flow. When employees leave the company, their ESOP shares must typically be repurchased at fair market value based on an annual independent valuation. Over time, these repurchase obligations can create meaningful cash-flow demands for the operating budget of the business. If the business also hits a recession, margin pressure or management missteps, payments to the founder can slow or be renegotiated. At that point, retirement starts to feel like a long-term monitoring project and the former owner’s annuity income heavily depends on the performance of a company, over which they have limited influence.
ESOP Myths & Facts
- Myth: ESOPs are safer for owners
- Fact: Risk shifts from market timing to long-term cash flow.
- Fact: Owners continues to carry the risk for the company’s well-being
- Myth: Founders naturally fade out
- Fact: Many founders remain involved for many years.
- Myth: ESOPs reduce complexity
- Fact: In most cases, complexity increases and becomes long term.
- Myth: ESOPs avoid sales commissions
- Fact: Long term, ESOP fees will substantially exceed brokerage fees.
Weigh the options
The real goal of a business exit isn’t simply transferring ownership but reducing personal exposure. This usually means less dependence on future company performance, fewer obligations to solve problems and more control over your time
ESOPs can be powerful tools, but they carry significant risks for the seller. The biggest mistake founders make is assuming the work ends at closing, when in fact the structure determines how often—and how urgently—the business may call you back. Choose the path that lets you step away on your terms.
Instead, third-party sales are very clean exits.
About A Neumann & Associates, LLC
A Neumann & Associates, LLC is a professional mergers & acquisitions and business brokerage firm having assisted business owners and buyers in the business valuation and business transfer process through its affiliations for the past 30 years. With an A+ Better Business Bureau rating, the company has senior trusted professionals with a deep knowledge based in multiple field offices along the East Coast and has performed hundreds of business valuations in its history. The firm’s competitive transaction fees are based on successfully completing transactions. For more information, please contact A Neumann & Associates at 732-872-6777 or info@neumannassociates.com
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