Preparation Needed for Selling a Business
So you’ve decided it’s time to sell your business. You may want to
retire, or you simply want to unload the company before the market turns
against you. How do you go about finding someone to actually buy your
business?
Determine Your Business’ Valuation
Before you can sell anything, you have to determine its market price.
If your business is privately held, you can value the company based on
annual revenue and earnings, combined with physical assets – such as
real estate and equipment, and then deducting debt. Patents and existing
partnerships should also figure into this total. If your company is
already publicly traded, then its value has already been determined for
you by its market capitalization, and you won’t be able to sell right
away unless you are in possession of the majority of outstanding shares.
Either way, as a seller you should ask for a healthy premium over its
current valuation, citing future earnings and growth potential. It’s
not unusual for larger companies to pay over 50% of the current “market
value” in an acquisition. If in doubt, hire a business broker or mergers
and acquisitions professional to help you get the best deal for your
company.
Prepare a Selling Memorandum
Before you reach out to any of these prospective buyers, you need to
prepare a selling memorandum, or “business plan in reverse”. This is
intended to clearly outline all the main details that buyers would
request.
These would include, but are not limited to -
- Your company’s history, structure, products and operations
- Your business’s valuation and asking price
- Your industry peers and competitors
- Your employees and leadership structure
- Past financial statements
- Future guidance and projected revenue and income
- Potential problems within the company (this is very important, as any attempt to cover these up could be viewed as fraud)
The selling memorandum is an extremely sensitive piece of
information, and you would be wise to have prospective buyers sign a
non-disclosure agreement before reviewing it.
Financial, Strategic and Inside Buyers
There are three main kinds of buyers on the market – financial, strategic and inside ones.
Financial Buyers
Financial buyers tend to be large investors looking to buy your
business while keeping the management in place, using your company as an
investment to generate income. Financial buyers are not interested in
integrating your company into a larger web of companies, and will
generally pay less for it.
Strategic Buyers
Strategic buyers are competitors who will purchase your company for
vertical or horizontal integration, who want to either shut you down to
eliminate competition, or to take advantage of your patents, products
and distribution channels to further their own empire. These buyers will
pay top dollar for your company, sometimes only to keep your business
out of a competitor’s hands. Dealing with these buyers is dangerous, and
you should be on guard with airtight, carefully drafted non-disclosure
agreements to insure that a business meeting is not simply a guise for a
“buyer” to steal your trade secrets.
Company Insiders
Company insiders could also purchase your company. These could be
executive employees, family or friends, who have a personal stake
invested in the company and would benefit from its continued survival.
While this is a more assuring situation than handing your business over
to a strategic buyer, most company insiders lack the cash to take over
the entire company. After all, if they were working for you to begin
with, it’s unlikely that they could amass the fortune necessary to
overtake the entire company. However, since you know these parties well,
you could work out third-party financing to allow them to buy out the
company in portions, and you could stay on as an advisor. You could also
sell the entire company to all of your employees via an Employee Share
Ownership Plan (ESOP) if you have such a provision in place.
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