Structure, Protection, and Exit Planning
Engineered as One System
A business is not protected by any single decision.
It is protected by decisions that work together.
This book engineers them as one structure.
Ira S. Koyner
Available on Amazon Hardcover, Paperback & DigitalThe Problem
Most owners manage one or two of these well. Few manage all four. None of them announce themselves in a given year. They accumulate at the seams, in the gap between decisions that each made sense on their own and the structure that never fully held together.
The entity chosen at formation rarely fits the business it becomes. The wrong structure quietly overpays self-employment tax, strands the QBI deduction, or double-taxes the profit a different entity would have shielded.
A partner death, a disability, or the loss of the one producer the business cannot replace does not wait for a plan. Without an agreement and the capital to fund it, the business becomes the asset everyone fights over.
Owners pull money out the way they always have, taxed at the top, when the same dollars routed through a retirement, benefit, or insurance structure would reach them at a fraction of the cost.
The exit is treated as a single transaction at the end. In reality it is a multi-year process, and the structures that lower the tax and protect the estate have to be installed years before the sale.
What's Inside
What Makes This Business Planning Book Different
Every case study uses specific tax rates, entity structures, and dollar figures. Lewis moved $2.7 million more to his heirs from the same estate. Solomon funded five separate obligations from a single premium. The math is shown, not assumed.
Written by a financial advisor who spent nearly three decades managing institutional risk in global currency markets. Hope and prayer were not acceptable strategies on a trading floor. They are not acceptable in business planning either.
Most books cover the entity or the buy-sell or the exit. This book shows what happens when those decisions collide. The S-corp that strands a benefit. The buy-sell with no money behind it. The exit planned the year of the sale.
The book shows when a structure is not the answer, not just when it is. The deals that are not tax plays are labeled as such. Any comparison that does not show the other side is selling something.
From the Case Studies
Solomon installed one cash-value policy at age 51 that, over 34 years, funded a buy-sell, backed a bank loan, bridged a benefit, and delivered a tax-free death benefit. One structure, five jobs.
Lewis moved $2.7 million more to his heirs, 8.5% more value, from the same estate and the same business, by coordinating the exit and the estate plan instead of running them separately.
Dominique reached the full $72,000 retirement contribution limit while the plan cost just 26 cents on the dollar in employee contributions, by stacking the plan design instead of using an off-the-shelf SEP.
Donald and Gil funded their buyout with $2.7 million in premiums instead of self-funding $4.1 million, putting an asset behind the agreement rather than a hope.
Shalom directed more than five dollars to charity for every dollar of reduced inheritance, while the full trust principal still passed to his children free of estate and income tax.
Who This Book Is For
This book is for the owner of a closely held business who has built real value and wants a structure that holds through a partner's exit, a key person's loss, a tax change, and the eventual sale or transfer.
If you have ever wondered whether your entity, your buy-sell, your benefits, and your exit plan are working together or merely coexisting, this book is for you.
If you want a quick tax trick or a one-size template, read something else.
Financial Fortress for Business Owners covers the entity selection mistake most owners never revisit, the buy-sell agreement with no funding behind it, the benefit extraction strategies that move money to the owner at a fraction of the tax cost, and the exit and estate planning that has to begin years before the sale. It is a business plan built around coordination, not checklists. If your entity structure, your continuity plan, your retirement and benefit design, and your exit strategy have never been evaluated as a single system, this is where to start.
Ira S. Koyner managed foreign exchange options portfolios at major global banks for nearly three decades. He holds a degree from the Wharton School and is the founder of Triathlon Partners LLC, a financial advisory firm serving business owners and clients approaching and in retirement.
This book began with the gaps he kept finding between his clients' advisors, where each decision was sound on its own and no one was accountable for how they fit together. If you want to look closely at yours, he is glad to help.
Does anyone see the whole picture, and is anyone accountable for how the pieces interact?
If reading this book raised questions about your own business structure, that is a useful signal. The conversation does not have to start with a product. It starts with a look at what you have built.
Schedule a Planning Conversationor
Available in hardcover, paperback, and digital