7 Key Considerations in Selling a Low-Margin Business
When marketed to the right type of buyer, a low-margin business that is consistently profitable and offers a broad customer base should bring top...
5 min read
The multiple that a buyer applies to your revenues is directly related to their confidence that the purchase of your company will generate the expected return.
While many factors can influence a company’s market value, in most business sales the purchase price is largely based on some multiple of the subject company’s adjusted earning capacity or, less often, net revenues.
Granted, “some multiple” sounds a little vague. What multiple, you immediately ask, and what can I do to boost it?
Those are good questions, and we recommend that, as you and your M&A professional prepare your business for sale, you focus not on the ultimate selling price, but on how you can maximize that elusive multiple.
For many buyers (especially private equity groups, which are the buyers in 70% of our deals) the value multiple is a function of risk – i.e., the greater their confidence that the acquisition will generate the expected return, the higher the multiple they may be willing to apply to your revenues and other variables.
Following are 15 factors that, to varying degrees, are within your control and, by the time your business is ready to sell, can help raise your best-fit buyer’s confidence in its future success under their ownership.
Top management should have non-compete and/or confidentiality agreements, and solid benefit plans should be in place for all employees. If a key person is nearing retirement age or otherwise perceived as being a short-term asset, recruit and groom a successor who can step in when needed. It is also beneficial to create a board of directors that has at least two outside members.
Professionalization of management and strategic oversight can remove the stigma of the “one-man band” and communicate to potential buyers that your company has viability, value and desirability apart from your involvement.
If you are overly reliant on a one or two suppliers or customers, try to diversify your supplier and customer accounts. Be intentional about expanding to new markets, introducing new products, and finding new customers that align with your company’s core business.
You don’t have to manufacture Kleenex, Band-Aids or Coca-Cola to have a strong brand identity. While the value of becoming a household name probably wouldn’t justify the cost to your company, you should pursue positive name recognition within your industry. Through targeted advertising, trade association involvement, giving back to the community, and other strategies, your company’s name can become recognized as a leader in your industry vertical, enhancing its perceived market value to potential buyers.
Get Started
The best time to plant an orange tree is ten years ago. If that’s not an option, plant it today.
Preparing to sell a business for top dollar – i.e., at the highest achievable multiple of earnings – is a process that might take two years or more. The sooner you begin implementing the major steps described above, the sooner your business will be ready to present to a buyer who will recognize its future value and reward you for your efforts.
We can help you with that. Over our long history, IBG Business’s 1,200-plus deals have an 86% closing rate – more than three times the national average for our profession. To start the process of preparing your business for a successful sale, contact an IBG Business M&A professional near you.
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