Most business owners have done this: Stood at the door, coffee in hand, and sent a salesman out into the morning with the old battle cry: Get back out there. Nothing happens until money changes hands.
It’s a good line. It’s a true line. The whole enterprise — the operations desk, the books, the crew on the floor — every one of them is funded by the moment a customer says yes and the wire clears. Value isn’t what you think your product is worth. Value is what someone is willing to pay for it, and not one dollar of it is real until they do.
Touché, owner.
Because here’s the part you’ve been skipping for thirty years: that line points back at you.
You’ve built something. Real value, layered in over decades — relationships, systems, reputation, a name that means something in your market. You’ve poured your knowledge, your skill, your sweat into an asset most people will never come close to building. And here’s the hard truth, spoken in your own words: none of that value is realized until money changes hands. Until you’ve packaged what you built so well that someone wants to buy it — and actually does.
Until then, you are the one salesperson on your own payroll who never had to close.
And the close you keep deferring is the biggest one of your career.
The talent you buried
Scripture has a word for the man who’s handed something valuable and chooses to protect it instead of putting it to work.
In the Parable of the Talents, two servants take what their lord entrusted to them and trade with it. They put it in motion. They double it. And the master answers, “Well done, thou good and faithful servant… thou hast been faithful over a few things, I will make thee ruler over many things.”
The third servant was afraid. So he did the safe thing. “I was afraid, and went and hid thy talent in the earth.” He buried it. He kept it intact. He protected it.
And his lord called him wicked and slothful — “thou oughtest therefore to have put my money to the exchangers.”
An owner who builds something of real worth and then lets it wither, or dies still gripping it, or dumps it at fire-sale prices because he never planned — that owner has buried the talent. Realizing the value you’ve created isn’t greed. Done rightly, it is the opposite. It’s faithfulness. It’s stewardship. It’s refusing to let what God built through you rot in the ground.
You’ve been flying this thing for years
You’ve been the pilot in the left seat for as long as you can remember. Heads down, hands on the controls, every system your responsibility. You built the aircraft and you’ve flown it through weather most people would never have survived.
But every flight is meant to land.
A good landing isn’t a crash, and it isn’t a bailout. It’s deliberate. It’s planned miles out, with someone in the tower guiding you down — speed, heading, altitude — until you are Clear for Landing and the wheels touch with everything intact. That is what a real exit is. Not an ending. A Touchdown.
And on the other side of that landing is something you may have forgotten you were allowed to want: a future of your own. A chance to revisit what’s next. A chance to carve out the work you do best — the work you were built for, the way God wired your knowledge, skills, and abilities — and to finally set everything else down.
The biggest sale you’ll make
If you’re worried about what your company will be worth five or ten years from now, there is no surer way to protect that value than to sell it — and to sell it well. Not dump it at the first offer that knocks. Sell it the way you’d coach your sharpest closer to sell it.
And selling it well means exactly what it has always meant on your floor: packaging what you’ve built so the right buyer sees the worth, wants it, and pays for it. Gift-wrap the value. Make it plain. Make it undeniable. Then capture it — every dollar.
That is the close of your career. The single biggest sale you will ever make. And it happens to be a sale of the very thing you used to send other people out the door to chase.
Nothing happens until money changes hands. You’ve preached it your whole life.
Your life’s work is sitting right in front of you — built, but still unwrapped, its full worth still locked inside the business. The principle is laid out plain. It’s time to package what you’ve made and lock in its value. That last transaction is not the end — it is the dawn of a rebirth, with options shining out before you.


