The Identity Crisis Nobody Warns You About

When You Sell Your Business

Three years after selling her business, William Bissett’s client sat across from him and said something that stopped him cold.

She said she finally feels like she is starting to understand what life looks like as a non-business owner.

Three years.

By any measure, this was a well-planned exit. William had been working with her since 2007. Conversations about selling started as early as 2012. Key employee buyout discussions followed later that same year. M&A advisors were brought in and consulted multiple times between 2016 and 2022. Retirement projections were run again and again. Homework assignments were given. Hobbies were explored. Future goals were mapped out in detail.

And still, three years after the sale closed, she was only just beginning to feel disconnected from the business she had built.

When the Business Becomes Your Identity

What William landed on as he mentally worked back through everything they had done together wasn’t a planning failure. It was something much harder to plan around.

The business had become who she was.

She had ridden the highs and lows of the housing and construction market for decades. She had watched friends and competitors go out of business during the crash and climbed back through it herself. The business wasn’t just an economic instrument. It was her story, her identity, and the lens through which she understood herself and her place in the world.

No retirement projection addresses that. No homework assignment fully prepares you for the morning you wake up and that chapter is simply over.

You Aren’t Alone

The reason William shares this story is not to discourage business owners from selling or to suggest that more planning would have changed the outcome. It’s to normalize something that almost nobody talks about openly.

The emotional transition after a business sale is real, it is significant, and it can take far longer than anyone expects. Even when everything goes right. Even when the financial outcome is everything you hoped for. Even when you have a supportive partner, a full calendar, and a plan for what comes next.

Separating your identity as a business owner from your identity as an individual is some of the hardest work there is. And for many owners, that work doesn’t truly begin until after the sale closes.

Starting the Conversation Early

None of this means the transition is impossible or that it isn’t worth it. William’s client got there. It just took three years instead of three months.

What it does mean is that the earlier you start working through the mental and emotional side of an exit, the better positioned you will be when the day actually comes. Not because it will make letting go easy. But because you will have already started asking the right questions about who you are outside of the business you built.

If you are a business owner who knows a sale is somewhere on the horizon, this episode is your reminder that the financial plan is only part of the picture. The other part is just as important, and it deserves just as much attention.

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The Identity Crisis Nobody Warns You About When You Sell Your Business | Portus Perspectives

 [00:00:00] 

I was up in Baltimore last week up in the Maryland area and met with a, a long time client, really a client that I’ve worked with since, since 2007 as business owner client, and she sold her business back in 2023. And so here we are as. You know, like April, may 20, 26. So three years later, and in the meeting with her, she talked about how she finally feels like she’s starting to understand what life is like as a non-business owner, uh, which has, it’s a crazy concept, right?

It’s 36 months, uh, give or take, since she sold her business. And it really made me start to think it’s like, well, wait a second. Did we not, do we not do things right? And I was like, no. I mean, we started having conversations [00:01:00] about selling the business in 2012. Uh, we actually brought in one of our key man, uh, key employees in, in late 2012 and started having conversations with him at that point in time about a buyout.

Um, we had conversations with m and a advisors in 2016, 2018 and 2019. Um, we had more conversations in 2022 and then finally against all the business in 2023, and I was like, well, maybe we didn’t prepare. And then, so we started, I started mentally going back through all the different things that we’d done.

We’d run retirement projection after retirement projection. Um, we’d highlighted hobbies, things that she enjoyed doing, things that she wanted to do, um, things that she never had the opportunity to do. We gave her homework assignments and everything else, and I was like, no, miss. I, I mean, I’m sure there’s always something that we left on the table, right?

A discussion that we didn’t have that maybe we could have had that would’ve, um, triggered a, a different response or a different emotion. But the more I thought about it, the more I thought like, no, it’s just, [00:02:00] it had consumed her life, right? Like the business was who she was. It was, it was her identity. And she rode ups and downs, rode ups in the, the housing market, the construction market.

Um, she rode the, she definitely rode, I mean, I was there. She rode up and down the housing market of 2000 and, you know, really 2004 to 2012 and the impacts that it had. Um, and, and then climbing back through that, watching a number of her friends and competitors go out of business and, and, um, and so again, it had become such a key component of who she was that that separation, um, despite everything she’s done over the course of the last couple years, um, travel, um, stuff with kids and grandkids and um, and giving and advanced planning, all the different things we’ve done, it still took her, um, or has taken her three years to get to a point where she sat down and said, I finally feel like I’m not [00:03:00] connected to the business anymore.

So as you think about that, as you are a business owner who. Is considering selling your business or knows that maybe one day you will sell your business. Just know that you’re not alone in that transition period, right? It takes a long time to separate that, or it can take, and it’s certainly not always the case.

It can take a long time to separate that identity. A business owner from individual. And that there are thousands of other folks that are going through the same set of issues that you’re going through on a mental basis. So the earlier you can do it or the earlier you can start running through those mental hurdles, understanding what you know, lives, post work, like all of those different exercises that you can do help.

Um, but they don’t make it easy to just part ways on day one. And in some ways it doesn’t make it easy to part days, month 36 later. But anyways, it was a really good highlight for me [00:04:00] in recognizing how long it can take somebody to disconnect from something they spent so long creating.

ORIGINAL MEDIA SOURCE(S):

William Bissett: The Identity Crisis Nobody Warns You About When You Sell Your Business | Portus Perspectives

Originally Recorded: May 3, 2026

Portus Perspectives: Episode 13