The Business Buyers Advantage website understands the many issues that will arise for Business Sellers.  It can be a daunting task and that seems overwhelming if going it alone.   It is also important to understand what educated business buyers will expect from you in business sale transaction.

 

TBBAW can help. The Business Buyer Advantage Website offers a free referral service to business owners who are considering selling their business. We will put you in touch with those professionals whose services you may need in the business sales process.  Please use our Preferred Business Broker section.

 

Additionally you can contact us and ask for a referral through an email to admin@tbbaw.com. We’d be pleased to offer introductions to qualified professionals who can assist you in the process. There is no charge for a referral and you are under no obligation to hire those we refer. It is just our way of helping making the process to sell a business as stress free as possible. It is our belief that an educated business buyer and a prepared business seller will complete a mutually satisfying business sale transaction in a timely fashion.

 

Below you will find some very helpful information pieces that will help you prepare yourself and your business for sale.

 

Ten Mistakes Frequently Made by Business Sellers

By Grover Rutter CPA / ABV, CVA, BVAL

Certified Business Broker

 

            In my over thirty years working  as a Certified Public Accountant and Certified Valuation Analyst, preparing business valuations, advising clients  and working as a Business Broker / Intermediary in Ohio, I am often asked “How do I go about selling my business for the most money?”. The following article should help business owners prepare for a successful sale.

 

1. Business Owners Don’t Understand the Buyers (investor’s) Motive - Buyers pay for the past but buy for the future. In other words, they pay the seller for the work the seller has done in building the business, but they won’t pay for the work the buyer will have to do to get the business to the next level. Buyers want to buy a business that has a future but they pay the seller for the past. Buyers are investors who are looking at the future for return on investment and growth potential

 
2.  The Owners Assume the Best Investor is Local - Most sellers naturally assume that the market for their business is the immediate surrounding area. The world is now your marketplace and the best investor may be anywhere across the country, or around the world. In addition to the individual buyer, thousands of very quiet private investment groups and offshore investors are interested in acquiring profitable, U.S.-based, privately-held companies.  Recent surveys indicate that few companies have a current, accurate business valuation. Half of the time owners are unrealistically high in their asking price, and the other half of the time they are low. Whether you think your business is worth $1 million or $50 million, without a professional opinion for reference, you can't begin to discuss or justify a selling price that makes sense to a buyer. Don’t leave money on the table when pricing your business!

 

3. Owners of the Business Don’t Understand How to Value Their Business - Most owners of closely-held businesses have suppressed profits to reduce taxes. The company's financial statements don't begin to reflect the true value of the business. The actual financial statements need to be restated to eliminate the owner's discretionary and non-recurring personal expenses. Attention also needs to be drawn to "off-balance sheet assets," tangible and intangible. Historical financial statements don't tell the real story.

 

4.  The Owners Don’t Receive Proper Counsel - Talk with business owners who made an ill-fated attempt to sell their own business. Most wish they had used an experienced Business Broker /Intermediary. Without professional help they are prone to taking advice from the wrong people. Buyers are not that hard to find, but when it’s time to make the deal happen, the deal often falls apart without an experienced business intermediary.

 

5.  Business Owners Try to Sell to the Wrong People - One of the biggest mistakes is to think that the best investor for the business is a competitor, customer, supplier, or employee. If the deal doesn't happen, and most don't, then a great deal of confidential information about your company has been disclosed. Suddenly, everybody knows more about the company's profits and operations than they should. Keep your intentions confidential unless you're ready to sell at a rock-bottom price.


7.  The Company Is Not Positioned for Sale -
Organization, growth opportunity, reputation, market conditions, and industry leadership are some of the many intangible qualities buyers appreciate and will pay for. Documenting improvements that could be made by a buyer/investor with new capital helps you to better position the company and increases value. There can be a swing of 50% or more in sale value if the company is solidly positioned for future growth.

 

8.  There is Improper Financial Documentation - Investors are evaluating the purchase of the business based primarily on future growth potential and expected return on investment. Buyers want to see what the profits would have looked like if you had run the business like a public company (no co-mingling of business and personal expenses). Often this means recasting the financial statements away from the tax based accounting that has been done in the past.  Buyers also find it helpful to review your three-to-five-year financial projections, backed by solid market research substantiating the future potential of the business. Simply stated . . . create a presentation to explain the past and sell the future!

 

9.  Business Owners Don’t Plan for After the Sale  - Many business owners have not thought about what their real personal financial needs will be after the sale. After debt repayment do you need a large amount of cash for other investments?  If you're willing to wait for a portion of the proceeds (monthly, quarterly, yearly), the buyer has more flexibility to pay a higher price. If you insist on an "all-cash" deal, savvy investors will discount their offering price by up to 35% or more!  Note, this doesn’t mean a large percentage of the deal has to be seller financed; there are ways to guarantee your payments with no risk!

 

10. Owners Don’t Understand How Taking Tax Deductions Now Affect      Future Sales Price - Business owners tend to “write-off” expenses not associated with business activities to save on income taxes.  Owners have been known to deduct expenses for things such as vacations, motor coaches, boats, airplanes, farms, personal condos, motorcycles, personal residences, hobbies, etc. These are expenses that the new owner won’t incur and may not be required to operate the business. While trying to be “tax savvy” many owners lose sight of the impact such buried expenses may have on their business’s value.

 

Example: an additional $30,000 in deductible expenses may mean up to $12,000 in tax savings.  However, the additional non business expenses (if not properly added back to the profit) may reduce business valuations by from $60,000 to $120,000. Saving $12,000.00 now in taxes may cost you 10 times as much when you sell!

 

Important Note:  When reviewing the records the buyer may agree and understand all of the personal or non business expenses you may have included to reduce your taxes. However, it’s the TAX RETURNS that hold the most weight with the banks and SBA when your buyer needs loans for acquisition and operating cash.  In the couple years leading up to the sale—it is wise to “clean up” the profit and loss statements and pay the taxes.  For additional helpful information www.gruttercpas.com 

 

 
Ground Rules for Successfully Selling Your Business

By Grover Rutter CPA / ABV, CVA, BVAL

Certified Business Broker

 

            Another important question that I am often asked is“How do I go about selling my business for the most money?”. The following article should help business owners prepare for a successful sale.

  

            Sooner or later you are going to exit your business. The question isn’t whether or not you will be ready.  The sixty four thousand dollar question is whether or not your business will be ready. 

 

It is estimated that seven out of ten privately held businesses have no succession plan to transfer the business to the next generation of owners.  What does that mean to you?  It means that if you do not currently have a plan in place to transfer your business to family members, existing partners, management or employees, someday you will think about selling your business.  And, that day might come sooner than you anticipate.

                       

Don’t make the mistake of thinking that just because you are not currently ready to retire that you have plenty of time to prepare your business for sale.  As a business broker, I have been involved in a number of transactions (and potential transactions) where the business owner wanted to sell, or in some instances, was forced to exit the business earlier than expected.  In fact, retirement is NOT the number one reason why businesses sell.  Here is a list of the most common reasons why owners sell (or otherwise discontinue) their businesses:

 

*      Burn-out (this is the number one reason for selling)

*      Health issues

*      Personal diversification

*      Retirement/semi-retirement

*      Death

*      Divorce/partner disputes

*      Business growing too fast         

*      Second generation not up to the task

*      Loss of market share

 

TAKE GOOD CARE

 

            The sad truth is that many business owners do not take good care of their most valuable asset: the business.  They don’t groom someone to continue the business in their absence, and don’t keep the business in salable shape during the time they operate the business.  They get too bogged down in the day to day business operations to worry about--or plan for an event that they perceive won’t occur until sometime in the distant future; selling the business.  Unfortunately, fate sometimes dictates circumstances beyond your control, and tough decisions must be made.  If your business isn’t ready to sell when the time comes, what are your alternatives?

 

Liquidation of business assets—may be a solution, but one that usually returns very little money to the business owner.  If the business had been an operating business, the underlying assets (except for real estate) may be outdated and of little use to anyone.  At auction, the assets will bring only what the attending bidders are willing to pay.  In some instances, underlying assets are sold to liquidators (or scrap) for only pennies on the dollar.  Liquidation of a going business often occurs where the owners have become ill or disabled, or need to retire and have not planned adequately for their exit from the business. 

 

Closing the business—is even less attractive than liquidation. That is because many who find themselves in this situation have a tendency to “put off” liquidating the underlying assets in hope that maybe someone will come along to buy this business.  This almost never happens.

 

BUILD WEALTH NOW BY PLANNING FOR THE SALE OF YOUR BUSINESS

 

            Okay, so you think you have enough to do without throwing more onto the pile. Below you will find a “down and dirty” overview of things that you ought to begin thinking about and planning for right now.  Doing so will provide you with an additional safety net that will help safeguard your valuable business asset. Here are just a few of the benefits of planning now:

 

*      A planned sale allows for your goals and objectives on your timetable

*      You may begin to identify potential buyers

*      You may be able to create an attractive acquisition candidate

*      You can begin to understand why a buyer may want to buy

*      You might learn why  buyers would not want to buy—and be able to fix the problems

*      You may begin to realize the worth of your business now, and learn how to increase the value as part of your retirement planning

 

BUSINESS VALUE HOUSEKEEPING CHECKLIST

 

Record All Sales

            Business owners often invent remarkable ways to beat the tax collector.  But the taxman can be a business owner’s best friend when it comes to selling one’s business.  Income taxes are a great investment in the years immediately preceding an anticipated sale of the business.  Paying income tax proves to the buyer AND the banker that your business operations have been profitable.  Remember, most buyers have to finance the purchase of the business and that means their bank or the SBA is only going to lend money based on your TAX RETURNS.

 

Nobody wants to pay more income tax.  But consider this example:  Ronald Businessowner systematically underreported business income by an average of $20,000 per year.  Assuming a combined tax rate of 40%, Mr. Businessowner saved $8,000 in taxes per year.  But, the underreported income also reduced the company’s earnings base by $20,000 per year.  If, for example, the business could be sold for a multiple of 5x the company’s reported earning base---the company would sell for $100,000 less ($20,000 average earning base not reported times the price multiple of 5) than it is really worth!  Without considering the time value of money, it would take in excess of twelve years of (illegal) tax savings to make up for the loss of $100,000 in business value.  The lesson:  In trying to save money on taxes, business owners often find themselves on the short end of the stick; often in more ways than one.

 

 

Eliminate Co-Mingling of Business and Non Business Assets

 

            A common practice among closely held companies is to co-mingle non business assets and expenses with business assets and expenses.  I have seen businesses owning motor coaches, boats and airplanes; all reported as business assets.  The costs of maintaining and operating the assets were expensed as regular business operating expenses.  It is true that those businesses (not audited by the IRS) are saving a certain amount of income tax, and providing an extra “fringe” benefit for the owners of the company. 

 

            Wise business owners should endeavor to separate non business assets from the business in the three to five years before a planned sale of the company.  Doing so will make it much easier to accurately measure and reflect the true earning power of the business, as it will be unfettered by the capital investment in non business assets and the associated costs. 

 

            Buyers of your business are generally purchasing future income and benefit streams that will be produced by your business.  The leaner and more productive your business is—the more it is worth.  It is never too early to begin segregating non business assets from your business, as it may take some planning and time.

           

Do your own due diligence

 

Some executives of both public and private firms get a physical check-up once a year. Many of these same executives think nothing of having their personal investments reviewed at least once a year, if not more often. Yet, these same prudent executives never consider giving their company an annual physical, unless they are required to by company rules, regulations or some other necessary reason.

 

Anyone interested in purchasing your business will perform “due diligence” procedures on your business before closing on the purchase.  All too often, sellers are surprised at the skeletons purchasers can find in the closet.  These skeletons can reduce the value of your company, and in some cases, kill any chance at closing a sale.  What skeletons are your company’s closets?

           

Why not give your business a periodic physical?  In essence, I am suggesting you would do well to treat your business as if someone else owned it—and you were the potential purchaser.  What problems would you discover that could cause you and your advisors to reduce or withdraw your offer?  Spending the time and money to discover and fix your company’s problems now will pay huge dividends in the form of increased company value—which is exactly what you want when it’s time to sell.

 

Compliance with taxing and regulatory authorities

 

            Mountains of regulation often seem to impede a company’s growth and profitability.  Some regulations might seem rather easy to “slight” or ignore. Take for example one of my recent sellers who swore to me that the business had no regulatory violations of any type.  I reminded the seller that anything “hidden in the closet” would most likely be discovered in a buyer’s due diligence (investigatory) process.  “Nope—no problems of any kind” I was assured.

 

            Well, guess what the buyer’s due diligence turned up?  Seems the seller had a couple of shipping/storage containers sitting behind the building—which the sellers KNEW were in violation of local zoning ordinances.  How did they know?  They had received four previous “reminders” from the trustees about the containers, and the need to remove them.        

 

            “Why didn’t you mention that to me, or disclose that fact on your disclosure statement?” I asked.  “Gee, nothing ever happened and the township never did anything—so we just figured it was no big deal.” Was the seller’s reasoning.

 

            No big deal, except when the purchaser turned up the non compliance issue, it threw a few extra wrinkles into the mix.  In that case, the issue was easily resolved (yet, much to the additional cost and chagrin of the sellers).  But, sometimes known violations are not so easily remedied.  In those instances, a seller runs the risk of blowing a good deal.  What’s the bottom line?  Clean up any tax, industry, OSHA, EPA or zoning issues with which your company does not comply.    

 

Organize and Keep Records Available

 

            One never knows when opportunity might knock. If and when it does knock, will you be ready to strike while the iron is hot?    How many times have you heard someone say something like, “I’d sell anything, including my business for the right price?” Maybe you have even said it yourself. But would you know what paperwork and documents a serious buyer will immediately need in order to pursue the purchase?  When a qualified buyer is ready to begin serious due diligence, they will need a variety of company documents.  Following is a partial list of things a buyer will ask for:

 

  • Three to five years income tax returns
  • Copies of one to three years quarterly payroll reports
  • Three to five years CPA prepared financial statements
  • Current year to date financial statements
  • Detailed depreciation schedules listing each fixed asset owned by your company
  • Corporate Minute Book with updated minutes
  • Recent aged accounts receivable trial balance
  • Recent aged accounts payable trial balance
  • Company organization chart
  • Copy of the Summary of Insurance Coverage (provided by your carrier)
  • Information about Employee Benefits offer by the company
  • Information about Employee Retirement Plans
  • Copies of labor contracts
  • Copies of other contracts to which the company is a party
  • Copies of licenses, registrations f
Contact Us by Telephone: (716) 668-8987, Fax: (716) 608-1540, or Email us at Admin@tbbaw.com