The Sounds of the Baskerville

119. Not Every Job is a Nail

16 min · 27 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 119. Not Every Job is a Nail

Descripción

In this episode of The Sounds of the Baskerville, Chris Baskerville and James Flaherty go head-to-head on one of the most important decisions a distressed business can face. Both tools exist to restructure and preserve viable companies, but they are not interchangeable, and choosing the wrong one could cost you dearly.  Chris breaks down the key differences: who stays in control, what the eligibility thresholds really mean, why unpaid super can be a dealbreaker, and why voluntary administration offers flexibility that SBR simply can't. He also explains the compelling maths behind SBR, how a director contributing $200,000 can wipe out $1 million in debt, and when that equation no longer makes sense.

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121 episodios

episode 121. The Nightclub and The Engineer artwork

121. The Nightclub and The Engineer

In this episode of The Sounds of the Baskerville, Chris Baskerville and James Flaherty bring the SBR vs Voluntary Administration debate to life with real war stories from the coalface. First up: a nightclub owner who poured his personal injury compensation into a business, only to find himself trapped in the wrong restructuring tool and how switching to VA changed everything. Then Chris flips the script with a COVID-era engineering firm that was the textbook case for SBR: a fundamentally sound business, a hockey stick recovery in sight, and a director who just needed one clean break from legacy debt. The lesson? Neither tool is universally better. The right answer depends on who you owe, what assets you hold, and how early you ask for help. And the earlier you call, the more options you have.

10 de jun de 202617 min
episode 120. The Creditor Matrix artwork

120. The Creditor Matrix

In this second instalment of The Sounds of the Baskerville's deep dive into restructuring, Chris Baskerville and James Flaherty get into the mechanics of the decision, what Chris calls the Creditor Matrix. Because the right path isn't just about cost or control. It's about who you owe money to, how much power they hold, and whether they like you.  Chris unpacks why the ATO dominates nearly 80% of all SBR creditor pools and what happens when it doesn't. He explains why voluntary administration is the only real option for businesses with complex assets, related party creditors who want a vote, or directors who need to buy time. He also tackles licensing and why a construction company entering VA may never trade again. The matrix isn't complicated. But getting it wrong is.

3 de jun de 202618 min
episode 118. Drugs, Diamonds & Divorce artwork

118. Drugs, Diamonds & Divorce

In this episode of The Sounds of the Baskerville, Chris Baskerville and Pierce Carstensen are back — and this time the gloves are off. Pierce delivers two jaw-dropping war stories that bring the family law and insolvency crossover to vivid life: a diamond merchant framed on death row, and a debtor who tried to hide everything behind a conveniently timed divorce. But beneath the remarkable storytelling lies a serious message for creditors, directors, and insolvency practitioners. Pierce reveals why the family court can actually be a more powerful forum to recover assets than the state courts — and why failing to intervene in family law proceedings could mean walking away empty-handed. If Episode 117 was the theory, Episode 118 is where it gets real.

28 de abr de 202624 min
episode 117. When Business and Marriage Both Fall Apart artwork

117. When Business and Marriage Both Fall Apart

In this episode of The Sounds of the Baskerville, Chris Baskerville is joined by James Flaherty and family law specialist Pierce Carstensen for a fascinating deep-dive into one of the most overlooked intersections in the insolvency world — where family law and insolvency law meet head-on. Pierce reveals why insolvency practitioners routinely leave money on the table when a family law element enters the picture, and why that needs to change. From spouses quietly transferring assets to defeat creditors, to the Family Law Act's little-known power to tear apart those very agreements, to the complex dance between trustees in bankruptcy and the family court — this episode pulls back the curtain on a space that most practitioners avoid but can't afford to.

22 de abr de 202625 min