Factors That Damage the Value of Your Company
Factors That Damage the Value and Salability of a Company

Factors That Damage the Value of Your Company


The following describes issues that may decrease the value of a company to a potential buyer. Be aware, and attempt to address before entering the adventure of selling a business.

Always think like a buyer...and view your company like one.


from:?Rex Rossi and?howtosellmybusiness.com:?A Chicago Business Broker and?M&A information website?dedicated to helping lower middle market and "Main Street" privately held companies, and their owners, improve the value of and achieve -?the successful selling of their businesses.


Selling My Business Successfully

Just like there are value drivers that can increase multiples and propel/drive a company's sale price higher, in the eyes of a potential buyer, (see?"Value Drivers" - That Make Your Business More Valuable and More Salable") there are also alternative factors that damage value and hinder a potential sale of your company.


When considering an exit strategy for your company the following negative factors below need to be considered and addressed, where you can, in order to raise the company's value and ease the concerns of a possible buyer. If you can not, prepare your business and yourself - to a disappointing market reception, or possibily even "closing shop"!


Is your business unsalable? Most are! Yours might be too.

Today, what most business owners don't realize is that?80% of all the businesses listed for sale are not sold or are currently unsalable. That's right,?4 out of 5 businesses?listed for sale?- by owner directly, or listed on all the internet sites by brokers -?do not sell!?Below are usually the reasons why. How does your company compare?


Factors That Damage the Value and Salability of a Company


1.?Year to Year Lower or Inconsistent Top Line Revenue and Company Cash Flow (Adjusted EBITDA)

Year after year of lower earnings and/or erratic up and down cash flows, (Sellers Discreationary Income) will change the picture of a business dramatically, especially to a financing institution. Regardless of the reasons a seller might have, this type of situation often causes potential participants to pause and wait to see how the business performs over time. Particularly for a financing facility.

A buyer wants and needs to see two things: A predictable and a Sustainable Cash Flow.

Financial inconsistencies certainly cause a buyer to adjust his/her offering price, reflecting future risk, and a banker to reconsider participation. This needs to be addressed immediately with a go-forward plan.?This is where an Exit Planner and/or Business Broker can be very helpful.


2.?Operating in an Evaporating Industry or Declining Customer Base

Do we really use fax machines anymore? Is your business a Timex watch in a digital age? When an industry or a business enters its sunset phase – and customers begin to seek new alternatives or other preferences – you then have a problem. A serious, if not fatal problem. The buyer will see this immediately. Your course of action will be to adjust the business model - to move in other directions - or your business will evaporate over time.

In other words, you may be going out of business right now, but just don't know it yet, or have chosen not to recognize it.


3.?Too Heavily Dependent On an Owner as Operator - Little to No Company Infrastructure

The more the business is a "one man show", the much more difficult it is to sell and the lower the price the business will command. Business infrastructure and staff are key, critical assets and very important to the value of a business. If the business revolves around one person (the current owner or a key person), the question will always be - how will the business perform going forward with a new owner? This increases risk and negatively affects value. Acquisitions for a business with a single owner/operator may sometimes be resolved with earn-outs which helps mitigate risk to a buyer, but this is a course of action you as a seller would prefer, if possible, to avoid.

Note, be prepared if you incorporate an "earn-out" into the 'Agreement to Purchase', many don't work out well. The seller should be satisfied, or only depend upon what cash at closing he/she can obtain. Any additional payouts, over time, should be considered good fortune.

Sadly for an owner, that's the way it sometimes works in the real world. A personal financial "note" from the buyer is a possible remedy, but even then the outcome is challenging. Remember, your business already comes and is being sold with many future risks. You've just added your divestiture to that list.


4.?Low Barriers to Entry

The easier it is to enter a business, the less of a business you have and the less your business is worth... if anything.

Why acquire someone else’s mistakes and pay for them when you can start fresh yourself?

For example, opening a shoe store is very easy, it’s just getting suppliers and acquiring inventory. Becoming a carpentry or plumbing business maybe just the tools, a truck and internet advertising from happening. Again, if it’s that easy to start, there is probably very little of a business to sell.


5.?Large Revenue Concentration From Only a Few Customers

Regardless the size of the cash flow, if there are only 1, 2, or 3 customers who account for over 70% or more of the revenue, the risk associated with a management change/ownership change is that much greater. Even successful businesses with significant cash flows are viewed apprehensively and discounted by potential buyers when a substantial amount of the revenue stream comes from only one or two sources. Even more so for the buyer if one or two of those existing customers are “big box” companies. The question will always be... Is the business transferable and sustainable through time? Client diversification is critical in building value to a potential buyer for today and tomorrow.


6.?Low Repeat Customer Purchases

If few, or any of your customers repeat the purchase of the business's product or service – that is perceived as a company negative and weakness.?In other words, if your product/service becomes/is only a one-time customer purchase - you probably have a business viability problem.

In this circumstance, to sustain the business going forward, there must continually be a substantial need for your product or service, by a significant number of potential customers in your market reach, to successfully survive through time. A "buyer's" perceived risk of this type of customer ("one and done"), and hence owning this type of business, is much greater -?and it will be factored into a buyer's valuation.?


7.?Business Model Based on Lowest Pricing

Basing a business model on being the cheapest or lest expense is very difficult, if not impossible to maintain. Someone will sooner or later find a better, cheaper way. Now what do you do? What would a company's buyer do? The risk of sustaining the business model over time increases considerably and a buyer's price will reflect that uncertainty. Candidly, you do not have much of a business to sell.


8. Businesses Offering Commodity Products

The risk is someone else can always open another business next door, or in a better location, or with a much better marketing and merchandising model (see Amazon). It’s like owning and operating a retail golf equipment store in a strip mall which will have a Dick's Sporting Goods opening across the street. The future will not be bright for you or a buyer. Again, not much, if anything to sell.


9. Unrealistic Seller and Market Expectations

Remember, the value of your company is what a buyer (the market) is willing to pay and not the seller’s subjective view. The buyer is valuing your business by how much he/she (not you) can make from its operation, not just tomorrow, but in the years ahead.

If there is one significant obstacle from the beginning of the transaction lifecycle - it is the owner thinking his business is worth much more than the market is willing to pay.

Yes, "if pigs had wings"...just be realistic.

No alt text provided for this image

All to often, it is one or more of the above factors that causes a business to never sell. If the above factors can be addressed and the course of the business right sized there is the possibility that an asset - the business -?may be of value and salable.

Prepare your company for an eventual transition starting today -
so tomorrow the business may become a more valuable and more salable asset.

Otherwise, prepare yourself and your business to close (like all the others of the 80%) with nothing to show for it - but memories and some nightmares from a life's work.


If you would like help or more information on how to market and successfully sell your business - visit:?

www.howtosellmybusiness.com

Or please contact directly:

Rex Rossi

[email protected] | 708.421.3500 (direct) - 847.465.8000

[email protected]



Founder and Executive Director -?howtosellmybusiness.com?

Senior Business Broker and Exit Planning Consultant: Premier Business Group, LTD.




Preeminent M & A Specialist to Privately Held Companies: Manufacturing, Distribution, and Service businesses in the Chicagoland and Midwest markets.



Copyright 2024 R.M. Rossi | howtosellmybusiness.com | All Rights Reserved

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Rex Rossi的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了