DEG execs reflect on $100M+ exit: Join an armada before success puts a target on your back

March 7, 2019  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

Neal Sharma, DEG exit

Riding into battle solo won’t help a company win the war that is business, Neal Sharma told a crowd of ACG Kansas City members gathered to hear details behind the exit of homegrown marketing giant DEG.

Neal Sharma, DEG

Neal Sharma, DEG

“One of the things we realized three years ago — about DEG — is it was a completely successful, self satisfied, super happy, $100 million firm. … A single ship, open water. Meanwhile there is an armada [of competitors] over there,” said Sharma, CEO and co-founder of newly sold DEG, reflecting on the day he and co-founder Dale Hazlett realized they had to find a better way to arm themselves.

“The [competitors] are all these big, big, big, amount of ships, right? And they could bomb our $100 million, self satisfied, super happy, national player out of the water,” Sharma explained during the local chapter of the Association for Corporate Growth’s quarterly breakfast.

Figuring out a way DEG could secure its success for both clients and employees, redirected the attention of Sharma and Hazlett, leading them down a path that resulted in a hefty exit late last year — exact financial details of which were not disclosed — Sharma said during what was one of the founding duo’s first speaking appearances since the exit was announced.

Sharma continues to lead the agency, and the DEG management team is expected to remain unchanged.

Click here to read more about DEG’s acquisition by Japanese Dentsu Aegis Network.

“They have a very large Asian Pacific presence and in Europe. In the U.S. they’re not as big  — or weren’t until they purchased us,” Hazlett said of the deal that capitalized on DEG’s national presence. “I think there were about 450 [clients] and then with us, now they’re closer to about 800. … That was their primary purpose in purchasing [DEG.]”

Dale Hazlett, DEG

Dale Hazlett, DEG

Approached with acquisition offers multiple times since DEG was founded in 1999, finding the right fit is crucial for any company looking to sell — not just the benefits of a pay day, Hazlett said.

“We did the deal because we knew that we were — at the time — a small fish in a very big pond. And the bigger that we got, the more exposure that we had, because we become noticed by the big guys,” he said of the way founders should be self-aware of where their company sits on industry spectrums and look for opportunities that will arm their teams with new skill sets — which could lead to increased market reach and attention from buyers.

Evaluating DEG’s position in the marketing space and bringing in skilled, diverse teams — through small acquisitions of their own — helped Sharma and Hazlett achieve a deal that not only benefited the company — but helped the pair (along with Jeff Eden, principal and CRO) even the playing field as the company looked to strengthen itself, Hazlett added.

Neal Sharma, DEG

Neal Sharma, DEG

“We were targeted more for our talent. When [a company such as] Accenture wants somebody that works for you, they can offer a lot more money than you can,” he said in example of competitive struggles DEG faced. “We were targeted on our skill sets, we were targeted and we really found that we needed friends, that we needed allies.”

Such a realization was the final clue the pair needed to sell the company, Hazlett suggested.

Going it alone can only get a company so far, Sharma added.

“[Before selling the company] were we really helping our people at that point? Were we really giving them that great of an experience?  Were we really making sure that over time our people we’ll have the careers [they want?]” he asked.

Ensuring the people who’ve helped build a company from the ground up can live on within it after an acquisition is completed, should weigh heavy on founders approaching an exit, Sharma added.

 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , , , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2019 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        ‘People pay for value’: How a young mom’s plan to hold passion tight drives her baby apparel side hustle

        By Tommy Felts | February 11, 2025

        Coming from a family of business owners, Riley Rhoads knew she wanted to pursue entrepreneurship: starting her own business — but with a goal to help others, the founder of Hold Tight Baby said. “When I hear people talk about, ‘Oh, I want to be an entrepreneur; I want to start and own my own…

        New in KC: Ops leader joins KCSourceLink to strengthen network’s collective impact for entrepreneurs

        By Tommy Felts | February 10, 2025

        A newly created director of operations role at KCSourceLink is expected to boost efforts to connect entrepreneurs and small businesses with hundreds of resources for growing and scaling their ventures in Kansas City, as well as across the state through MOSourceLink. Dena Thomas Aouassou, a veteran of nonprofit entrepreneurship support and workforce training, recently relocated…

        Cultura con carácter: How JEFES inks DINKC’s hometown team with drops of KC Latino hustle

        By Tommy Felts | February 7, 2025

        Laedan “DINKC” Galicia draws a fine line between his creative mediums: skin, pen, fabric, and paint — now from a artists hub in Kansas City’s Columbus Park neighborhood. From his signature tattoo style to his JEFES clothing line, DINKC’s bold perspective is leaving a mark on Kansas City culture (and the Super Bowl). “With JEFES, I…

        BKS Artisan Ales plans Crossroads nanobrewery, tapping additional location closer to KC’s hub of activity

        By Tommy Felts | February 7, 2025

        BKS Artisan Ales — dubbed a “little beer heaven” by industry insiders — is bringing its award-winning operation to the Crossroads, adding a second, smaller brewery location near what founders Brian and Mary Rooney see as a downtown tourism market that also is easily accessible to some of their business’ biggest local fans. The space…