Posts Tagged ‘Northern California Business Valuations’
Successfully sell your business quickly
Do you want to sell your business and sell t quickly? According to the California Association of Business Brokers it is taking about 8 months to sell a business. That is the good news. The bad news is that only about 25% of businesses actually sell. If you want to sell your business and do it quickly consider the following suggestions.
- Have a reasonable listing price.
- Be prepared to negotiate.
- Have a folder of information readily available for a qualified buyer.
- Run the business as usual.
- Make sure the business presents well; give it a “spit and polish.”
- Get the business financial statements such as Profit and Loss up to date and keep them up-to-date.
- Put together a current list of Fixtures, Furniture, and Equipment (FF&E).
- Count all inventory so you know the value before you list the business for sale. This helps the buyer understand the final purchase price and reduces one of the many areas of negotiating a deal.
Motivation to sell a business
If your motivation is to sell your business quickly, be careful how you handle each buyer inquiry. If you disclose too much information too quickly it may result in a lower offer from the buyer. Additionally, the buyer may sense your urgency, also contributing to a lower offer or in some cases, frightening the buyer away as they may have a concern you are trying to hide something.
According to the California Association of Business Brokers, it takes about 7 1/2 months to sell a business; if it sells. Once you receive a written offer from the buyer and start the negotiation process, it will take anywhere from 6 to 8 weeks to close escrow if the sale includes inventory. It may take longer if a special license is necessary such as selling alcohol, selling firearms, a contractor’s license or some other specialty.
Selling a business comes with complexities
There are many complexities to sell a business. You have to deal with landlords, keep things confidential from customers and suppliers, franchisors, lenders, creditors, family, friends, attorneys, accountants and more. Using the services of a qualified business broker can protect you and your business and achieve your goal of successfully selling your business in the shortest time possible for the highest purchase price.
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Use a transition plan when selling your business
Have you thought of using a transition plan when selling your business? The process to sell a business is not quick and easy. At the moment it is taking about 8 months to sell a business, if it sells. This means the business is available for about 6 months. The buyer and seller then complete negotiations on the purchase price including the terms of the deal. The next main step is to start the due diligence and if both buyer and seller are still in agreement, escrow opens and then hopefully about 3 to 4 weeks later, escrow closes and the business moves from the seller to the buyer.
Even if the business closes escrow, almost without exception the buyer wants the seller to continue in an active role in the business in some capacity for a period of time. The buyer wants time to meet and get to know the employees, set up arrangements with suppliers, put basic items in place like bank accounts, and a myriad of other items. At the end of the day, however, it all needs to make sense for both the seller and the buyer and the best way to do that is to build a transition plan.
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How is your life plan?
Owning, running, buying or selling a business is a major step for all entrepreneurs. It comes with obvious financial risk which everyone understands and is one of the key focus and responsibilities all business owners. It also prevents many would-be-entrepreneurs from starting their journey to own and operate their own business. However, an element not all business owners understand or acknowledge is that the business ownership comes with many emotional risks that play just as an important role as the money itself.
Emotional risks constantly challenge all business owners. The obvious one is success or failure. For most entrepreneurs, once they come to terms with the financial risk, they must come to terms with the fact there is a possibility the business will fail. The fear of failure links with the real concern about what to say to family and friends.
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How do I prepare my business for sale?
If you are thinking of selling your small business, one of your first questions to answer is more than likely; where do I start?
One of your first starting points is to be clear exactly what you are selling. This may seem obvious but many sellers think they will deal with it when they get an offer. So let’s break this down and look a little more closely at it.
In simple terms, the two most important things to a buyer when looking to buy a business are current cash flow and potential. From the buyer’s perspective, the cash flow is the fuel that feeds the business to pay the suppliers, employees, landlord, tax man, lenders and to keep the business going. In addition, they need cash flow to feed their family, pay the mortgage, pay any loans and have something left over after all their work and capital investment in the business with a little in reserve in case something unexpected happens.
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5 tips for a buyer to qualify for an SBA loan
Obtaining finance to buy a business is particularly challenging. One of the advantages of buying a business in the United States that very few other countries have to assist with this process is the Small Business Administration or the SBA as it is commonly called. If you have retirement money in a 401(k) plan, this money can be used to move into a corporation and fund the purchase or down payment to buy a business. This option can be combined with an SBA loan. Both of these processes are very formal and deliberate and therefore take time, but if applying for an SBA loan is part of your business acquisition plan, consider the following 5 tips.
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SBA 7(A) Loan Guarantee Program recent changes – August 2010
The Small Business Administration’s 7(A) Loan Guarantee Program has recently gone through some modifications and changes. These changes include an increase in credit availability for owners of companies with purchase prices between $400,000 and $4,000,000.
The SBA 7(A) program helps small entrepreneurs start or expand their businesses with loans through bank and non-bank lending institutions. Previously the loans only allowed a maximum of $250,000 in intangibles (including goodwill) to be financed. However, under the revised rules, it is now possible to finance any amount of goodwill (even up to this program’s lending limit of $2,000,000), as long as at least 25 percent equity exists in borrower down payment and/or seller stand-by financing.
There is more good news, in that the SBA has temporarily increased its guarantee from 75 percent to 90 percent of the total loan amount, and currently waives the guarantee fee (2.6 percent of the loan amount) charged to borrowers.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Transition Plan?
The process to sell a business is not a quick and easy matter. At the moment it is taking about 8 months to sell a business, if it sells. This means the business sits on the market for about 6 months before finally getting an offer from a buyer. Once the negotiations finish, due diligence commences and closes and escrow opens and closes we arrive at the 8 month period. And this applies if the business sells. Depending on which statistics you read, approximately 75% of businesses never sell.
As the entrepreneur looking to sell and transition out of being a business owner, it’s not a quick process. It can even drag on if the buyer wants the seller to continue in an active role in the business in some capacity. At the end of the day, however, it all needs to make sense to the entrepreneur and the best way to do that is to build a transition plan.
What should be included in the transition plan? A transition plan can overlap with an Exit Plan. An exit plan is essentially a process to exit business ownership. A transition plan is a strategy to manage the protection and eventual transfer of assets or stock in a proactive, tax efficient manner. Essentially an entrepreneur can have 5 types of assets. These are Personal Property, Real Estate, Business Interests, Insurance Plans and Employee Benefits.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Exit Plan?
A business should be a constant ball of energy moving in different directions as the economy changes, new tools and innovations come to the market, the stress and strain from competitors and the ever changing demands of customers. This is what gets an entrepreneur out of bed every morning; the chance to do something different, learn something new, to see the rewards of hard work, to plant new ideas and watch them grow or to help someone do something they thought they may not be able to do.
If the entrepreneur loses the hunger to learn, be the vision and leader of the business, it’s time for a change. Because a business is so dynamic, it requires leadership. If this doesn’t happen it will shrivel and die. Capital, time and energy must keep moving otherwise it will fade away.
If the entrepreneur leading the business recognizes it’s good business to plan for a change of ownership and therefore handle the matter in a proactive way, the chances of success are so much greater and so are the chances of getting the highest price possible. There is a very simple reason for this. The buyer of a business looks at and includes many things in their decision making process. However, there are basically two ingredients, the cash flow the business generates and its potential to generate more cash flow in the future. If either one is missing, the buyer will require a discount on the purchase price of the business. If both are missing, it will be a business extremely difficult to sell.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Disaster Recovery Plan?
Most business owners have or understand the value in business insurance. It protects the business in case an insured event happens and rather than the business owner wasting time and losing business by addressing the problem, the insurance company takes care of things. Business insurance makes good business sense.
A good form of insurance but one only the business owner can handle is creating a Disaster Recovery Plan. It doesn’t sound very attractive and it doesn’t sound like a good use of time but let’s consider the following.
If your business was hit by a severe storm, hurricane, truck or car that was out of control, flood, tornado, lightning or hail, earthquake, disease or pests, unusually high temperatures that caused damage to the building your business is in or some other unpredictable occurrence, how would this affect your business? What about a building fire, hazardous materials incident, sabotage, a loss of key staff or power disruption? Perhaps ask the same question in a different way. If something occurred to damage the business and you were out of action for a week or so, could your business survive?
The point of all this is to put a Disaster Recovery Plan together.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Performance Plan?
An area that a lot of businesses don’t spend a lot of time measuring but is very easy, cost effective and critical to do is the key performance areas of the business. These key performance areas or metrics can show whether the business has all the parts working together and in a healthy manner or is in need of a tune up or radical surgery. There are a number of key areas to a Performance Plan so let’s break them down.
The first area to look at is the financial statements of the business. The first and most readily used is the Profit and Loss Statement as it shows the income and expenses of the business with hopefully the income greater than the expenses. Just as important, however, is the Balance Sheet as this document shows the wealth of the business. With an up to date profit and loss statement and balance sheet, a trained business appraiser can then calculate what the owner of the business could expect to get if they decided to sell it on the market.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Technology Plan?
Email, websites, online bill paying, Amazon.com, FaceBook, Twitter, WI-FI, online banking; how did we survive prior to the internet? The virtual world is all around us and guess what; it’s only going to get more immersed in our everyday life as we look to watching TV and movies on our computer and connect our appliances to computer networks at home.
How does this affect our business? There is no question that data including audio and video are exploding online and helping sell more goods and services. Hand held devices such as iPhone’s and Blackberry’s are growing in popularity, devices that track the GPS to give us driving directions are here to stay. We therefore, if we own and operate a business, need to ensure we use technology how it was designed and this is as a tool to help us be more productive.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Productivity Plan?
So you’ve made your New Year’s resolutions which included building a business plan. This includes setting your personal and business goals. You also did a budget to make sure you can afford to do what you’ve planned. You are therefore all rested and dressed up and ready to go. Bring it on you say. My question is therefore, you know WHAT you want to do but HOW are you going to do it?
Chances are you have a list of projects and tasks you want and need to do. It probably doesn’t include answering phones, sending and receiving emails, reading articles and newsletters, attending conferences, staying on top of compliance items that affect your industry but numerous day to day activities that lead most entrepreneurs at the end of the day to say “Where did the day go?” And that’s the point of a Productivity Plan.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Management Plan?
Buying or selling a business is a complex matter. There is no question about it. The complexities start from the moment a buyer and seller start interacting but there is natural conflict in place. For a start, the buyer doesn’t have any history of the operation of the business and so has to rely entirely on the representations of the seller. Conversely, the seller has lived and breathed the business, knows its upsides and downs including its strengths and weaknesses. My Golden Rule when assisting with a business transaction is for each party to put their feet in the shoes of the other party. In other words, the seller should see things from the buyer’s perspective and the buyer should see things from the seller’s perspective.
A key way this would help a business transition from a seller to a buyer would be if the seller used a Management Plan. What you may ask is a Management Plan? From my perspective, a Management Plan is where all the critical areas of a business are summarized so if the owner of the business wins the lottery and never wants to work another day in their life in the business and not come to work tomorrow, the business will survive and grow.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Communication Plan?
The life blood of what we do as human beings and the glue that keeps us all together as a society be at a local, regional, national or indeed international level is the ability to communicate with one another. Many times that communication breaks down and many times this leads to unintended consequences. All entrepreneurs are familiar with a Business Plan and a Sales and Marketing Plan but not everyone has heard of a Communication Plan.
So what is a Communication Plan?
A Communication Plan is an attempt to standard the message that goes out from the business to its customers. It complements and dovetails with a Business Plan and Sales and Marketing Plan. In some instances there can be an overlap. It includes all written, spoke and electronic communications.
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Buying or selling your business in the New Year, how is your Sales and Marketing plan?
The sales and marketing plan is a document that most entrepreneurs don’t have time to get around to putting together. I’m not sure why that is as it’s just as important as the business plan and indeed complements it.
The business plan outlines the vision, strategic direction and business and financial goals of the business. The sales and marketing plan breaks down the business plan to show how you are going to get there and the tactics to be used to attract the customers it needs.
The sales and marketing plan can be as complex and as detailed as you wish to make it. It can include a list of tactics you could deploy, it can list and detail only specific tactics you plan to use or a combination of both. It’s important, though, that you understand how each idea is to be used but you have some idea of the expected results each tactic should bring to the business. There is an old adage in business management: If you cannot measure it you cannot manage it. There is also a famous quote that says “I’m convinced that 50% of my marketing is effective, I just can’t tell which 50%.”
There is also another saying that says “I can’t afford to advertise.” If you cannot afford to advertise then you probably cannot afford to be in business.
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