Chris went on to grow the company to over 100 million dollars in annual revenue, diversifying their products and target markets along the way. After successfully growing the company over 15 years, Chris sold Sportech to a private equity firm in November 2019 and received all of his cash up front. Chris accomplished what many entrepreneurs strive too and is willing to share what strategies grew value, his successes along the way and what he would do different if he were to do it again.


What You Will Learn in Today’s Podcast Interview:

How Chris grew his company to over $100M in revenue without debt
Why Chris was able to get all his cash up front when selling to Private Equity
The difference between enterprise value, equity value and net proceeds
How Chris shifted his mindset away from only top line revenue to long term value creation
How to identify the key value drivers in your business
How to reduce client concentration and why it pays off
How one’s willingness to evolve and stay relevant are keys to success
Why passion can get you started but value growth education will get you to the top
The importance of differentiation and how to make your company invaluable to your customers
Why betting on yourself as an entrepreneur can have the biggest ROI
Where to spend your time and energy educating yourself as a business owner
The biggest differences between Strategic Buyers and Financial Buyers
Chris’s grueling experience going through due diligence when selling
Why a culture of trust and integrity is hard to quantify in the valuation (it’s not on the spreadsheet)

Podcast Summary:


In today’s episode, Chris Carlson shares how his passion for driving snow mobiles let him to starting Sportech—the company’s original product protects the lights of snow mobiles from snow in order to see clearly while driving.

Chris tell his story about how he adapted the business to match the changes in the market, invested time and resources to further his own knowledge—including joining a peer group, understanding value growth, investment banking, and implementing EOS—and what he learned from his experience selling Sportech to private equity.

Chris went on to grow the company to over 100 million dollars in annual revenue, diversifying their products and target markets along the way. After successfully growing the company over 15 years, Chris sold Sportech to a private equity firm in November 2019 and received all of his cash up front.

I’m excited about today’s episode because Chris’s story clearly explains how investing in yourself as an entrepreneur can lead to long-term success, as well as illustrating the many aspects of selling a business he wishes he knew at the time.

We get to benefit from Chris’s experience as a business owner who accomplished what many people strive to achieve, while also recognizing that even incredibly successful companies and owners can benefit from understanding value growth with your end goals in mind, the difference between financial and strategic buyers, and the key components needed to approach a sale. 


 


// Sign up for the Intentional Growth™ Starter Kit: the kit has intro videos on each o

Chris went on to grow the company to over 100 million dollars in annual revenue, diversifying their products and target markets along the way. After successfully growing the company over 15 years, Chris sold Sportech to a private equity firm in November 2019 and received all of his cash up front. Chris accomplished what many entrepreneurs strive too and is willing to share what strategies grew value, his successes along the way and what he would do different if he were to do it again.


What You Will Learn in Today’s Podcast Interview:

How Chris grew his company to over $100M in revenue without debt
Why Chris was able to get all his cash up front when selling to Private Equity
The difference between enterprise value, equity value and net proceeds
How Chris shifted his mindset away from only top line revenue to long term value creation
How to identify the key value drivers in your business
How to reduce client concentration and why it pays off
How one’s willingness to evolve and stay relevant are keys to success
Why passion can get you started but value growth education will get you to the top
The importance of differentiation and how to make your company invaluable to your customers
Why betting on yourself as an entrepreneur can have the biggest ROI
Where to spend your time and energy educating yourself as a business owner
The biggest differences between Strategic Buyers and Financial Buyers
Chris’s grueling experience going through due diligence when selling
Why a culture of trust and integrity is hard to quantify in the valuation (it’s not on the spreadsheet)

Podcast Summary:


In today’s episode, Chris Carlson shares how his passion for driving snow mobiles let him to starting Sportech—the company’s original product protects the lights of snow mobiles from snow in order to see clearly while driving.

Chris tell his story about how he adapted the business to match the changes in the market, invested time and resources to further his own knowledge—including joining a peer group, understanding value growth, investment banking, and implementing EOS—and what he learned from his experience selling Sportech to private equity.

Chris went on to grow the company to over 100 million dollars in annual revenue, diversifying their products and target markets along the way. After successfully growing the company over 15 years, Chris sold Sportech to a private equity firm in November 2019 and received all of his cash up front.

I’m excited about today’s episode because Chris’s story clearly explains how investing in yourself as an entrepreneur can lead to long-term success, as well as illustrating the many aspects of selling a business he wishes he knew at the time.

We get to benefit from Chris’s experience as a business owner who accomplished what many people strive to achieve, while also recognizing that even incredibly successful companies and owners can benefit from understanding value growth with your end goals in mind, the difference between financial and strategic buyers, and the key components needed to approach a sale. 


 


// Sign up for the Intentional Growth™ Starter Kit: the kit has intro videos on each of the 5 Intentional Growth™ Principles, the Intentional Growth™ Financial Scorecard along with videos reviewing a case study on how to project out the value of your company, and the entire Intentional Growth™ Podcast Library.


 


Bio:

Chris Carlson is the Founder of the Family Office Envision and was the CEO and Owner of Sportech (a leader in OEM thermoformed plastic products). The company specializes in the design, development, and production of premium products and accessories for numerous markets including power sports. He bootstrapped that business out of personal necessity since he was a snowmobile enthusiast.


Chris grew up in an entrepreneurial family, and hopes to raise his kids in that type of environment as well.


Quotes:


11:55 – “It became fairly obvious that if we didn’t change, if we didn’t start working on products and developing products for ATVs and motorcycles and other areas (where I had passion but not equal to what I had for snowmobiles), had we not done that, our business would have died.” – Chris Carlson


19:45 – “It started with snowmobiles and I thought it had to be about snowmobiles but in the end it was really about value creation through design.” – Chris Carlson


34:00 – “I’m going to run this thing like it’s for sale, even though it’s not. Because it’s the right thing to do.” – Chris Carlson


 


 


Links and Resources:

Chris Carlson email: [email protected]


Envision Company: website


Intentional Growth™ Vision Board


Intentional Growth™ Online Training


 


Reach out to me if you have questions about the Intentional Growth™ Training or Fractional CFO services