Thursday, August 31, 2017

Article Summary: Should DCF Valuation Just Go Away? | Axial


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Sellers of start-ups sometimes come to market at 100x revenue.  Mature businesses at double-digit multiples.  These numbers are not realistic.
Buyers are rational. They will use a multitude of valuation methods to determine the value.  Sellers should use these same methods to determine the value of their business.
Discounted cash flow, or DCF, is one popular method. DCF is equal to the sum of your future cash flows discounted to account for the time value of money.

Falling Out of Favor

DCF is seen as a reliable way to measure the true value of all aspects of a business without having to factor in short-term influences, like taxes. Sellers with high-growth companies appreciate this because it shows strong potential future cash flows, aiding in their asking price.
Many finance experts say DCF is not realistic because it’s impossible to estimate future cash flows beyond the first couple of years. 
DCF is losing favor as a valuation tool among buyers for three reasons:

  1. DCF uses one parameter, the discount rate, to manage the value of money over time and uncertainty in cash flows.
  2. DCF over-relies on the company’s terminal value which assumes a company will generate free cash flows forever. Terminal value can comprise 50% to 75% of the value in a DCF analysis. Companies do not last forever.
  3. Finally, the discount rate is a static and doesn’t account for a changing, global world in which interest rates, risk premiums, and risk-free rates are constantly in motion.

What’s Next for DCF?

For sellers, DCF still has life; use it as follows:  

  • DCF is less an analytical device and more a sales tool, backing up a recommendation to buy.
  • Use DCF to show buyers how revenues will grow over time and forecast future earnings.
  • Be specific. Document how future cash flows will put you in a much stronger position vs.simply relying on industry average multiples and past trends.

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall, CBI, CM&AP at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com. To search for Florida Businesses for Sale: CLICK HERE

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Article Review: Micro Private Equity: The Art of Acquiring Small Businesses | Divestopedia

    

Takeaway: Learn about the opportunities present in micro private equity. Deal structuring will be an important skill for young entrepreneurs looking to acquire businesses and those owners seeking an exit.
Micro Private Equity: The Art of Acquiring Small Businesses
Source: flickr/DennisSylvesterHurd
Summary of points discussed:
  • The importance of timing the market when selling a business;
  • The opportunity of finding hidden value in business acquisitions;
  • How young future entrepreneurs can buy a business with little or no capital;
  • The fact that a business is worth zero if there are no interested buyers; and
  • How properly documenting five areas of your business can help increase business value.

About the Guest

Ace Chapman has bought and sold 11 companies using funds raised from high net-worth individuals and institutions.

Listen here:


You can also get this Podcast by:

Read the Full Transcript Here:


At 19, Ace Chapman came across an online stock market simulator. He loved what they were doing, but felt like they were not promoting it.
He started a web development company. He got the CEO of the simulator on the phone. He negotiated his first leveraged buyout as he was a college student with little money. They did half owner financing. With credit cards and a friend he ended up buying the business.

His friend was technically sophisticated. Find the right partner with a different skill set. The friend programmed in what was needed to facilitate good growth and Ace handled marketing.
They took the site down, did a complete rebuild. Sent out invites to other college students. We put in viral aspects where we would give them money to play trade if they spread the word.
They built a database for 500 people because they thought it would be crazy if they many over the course of the school year. In the first hour it’s 50 people and then 100 and 200. It exploded from there.
This was before the internet boomed. After the boom, they had seven-figure offers to sell the business. After the bust, the model changed. They got less than a tenth of what was offered during the boom. Now Ace is quick to sell businesses for a profit.

Cash flow attracts buyers. Assets are not a focus. Ace looks for businesses that aren’t pushing marketing as much as they could.
A recent acquisition had a 10,000-person database of past clients and customers with email, phone numbers and addresses. They never emailed, called, or direct marketed. Ace doubled the month-to-month revenue and ended up selling it six months later by targeting past customers. 
Ace looks for a hidden opportunity or a hidden asset to leverage or a situation where the seller is highly motivated to sell (divorce, death) and is highly flexible about deal structure.
When selling, Ace likes to provide several very attractive deal structures to appeal to different buyers.
Creative deal structure and leveraged buyouts will become necessary as 12 million businesses are coming to market as baby boomers retire. Nobody is training a younger generation to take over those businesses. 
With young folks, there’s preparation and the structure. Many times you can only go to a very select group of buyers. 99% of general buyers don’t have the financing or experience or don’t understand due diligence. Preparation starts with training, then building business credit.
They target businesses a buyer will be very comfortable with. They just did a publishing software business for a client. The seller is an amazing programmer. Operations were exceptional. She built a large business because she built an amazing product. The buyer brought marketing consulting from PriceWaterHouse. She saw what the business was missing. To create a win-win we allowed the seller to keep some equity.

They do not deal with banks. Banks have only done 7% of business lending. In 2008, it went down to 1%. 99% was picked up by everybody else.

They keep a database of alternative lenders and can select lenders based on the buyer's financial situation.

Examples:

  • Gold’s Gym acquisition, they leveraged the equipment. 
  • Carwash deal, they found an SBA program. 
  • Banks are going to seek some SBA-type guarantee that ties up all your business and personal assets in liens. 


They look for different types of financing to get a better deal for the business buyer.
There are a lot of local opportunities to obtain financing for specific programs. For the publishing company, part of the deal is a local loan that the state of Pennsylvania for people bringing jobs to Pittsburgh. 
Every deal is unique and they go after every type of financing that might work. They see what is leined then pick out the best financing and deal structure for the business buyer.
Ace has focused on micro-private equity (owners who are not actively involved) over the last six years. With buying a business under the $5 million dollar, the multiples are incredible. With the private equity model you need to be able to manage the business. You have to work it. Paying off a business in 3 to 4 years, is a powerful wealth building strategy. There’s just no other asset class where you’re buying something at that low a multiple.
Above $5 million, you’re competing with private equity. Below $2 million you’re doing deals max at a two multiple. The micro-private equity concept was born out of past clients who see the opportunity but just don't want to work the business. They work with younger buyer clients and invest in them and their deals.  They not only put up money, but experience, time, mentorship, and strategic planning without the day-to-day responsibilities.


For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com. To search for Florida Businesses for Sale: CLICK HERE

Sunday, August 27, 2017

Article Summary: Ready to Sell Your Business? Prepare Yourself Emotionally First | Divestopedia

 

   
Takeaway: Selling a business is often the biggest decision in an entrepreneur's life, and it isn't easy. That's why emotional preparation is key.
Ready to Sell Your Business? Prepare Yourself Emotionally First
Source: zimmytws/iStock

  • The emotional aspect of selling your business can be far more difficult than anticipated.  
  • No longer being the go-to person can be a hit to your ego. 
  • Preparing yourself to let go. 
  • Here are emotional hurdles business owners face when they sell:

Losing Control


  • Post-sale, the seller's role becomes shareholder and senior manager. 
  • Focus is transitioning day-to-day operations to a new management team while maintaining a familiar face for customers and employees. 
  • The seller has cashed out and reduced their responsibility -- they no longer have control.
  • The seller and the business are no longer one and the same.
  • Family, friends and the community will view the seller differently.
  • Seller's are not often prepared for these change.

Dealing with Employees


  • The buyer may want to realize synergies or cost savings that impact employees.
  • In smaller, private companies some roles may be filled by family members. 
  • Changes may include changing accountants, lawyers, insurance brokers and other providers. 
  • Sometimes these are personal relationships as well. 
  • It’s important to anticipate changes and discuss them with employees and other partners before the sale happens.

The Day of the Transaction


  • Seller's stress levels tend to go up, not down, after they sell. 
  • The seller will realize they no longer own what they worked their whole life for. 
  • They now have partners or shareholders to be accountable to. 
  • Those who stay in the business post-sale often work harder to not let their partners down. 
  • This is great for the buyer, but can be counter-productive for the seller and even emotionally debilitating.
  • Setting and adhering to your expectations post sale can relieve stress.

Preparing to Sell Your Business


  • Prepare!
  • Involve advisors including lawyers, accountants, business brokers, etc.
  • Find someone who has gone through the process and talk to them. 
  • Having an experienced person to call for support is invaluable until you come to terms with the process.
Article LINK

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall, CBI, CM&AP at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com. To search for Florida Businesses for Sale: CLICK HERE

Friday, August 25, 2017

Article Summary: 5 Lessons We Can All Learn From Tom Brady | Entreprenuer

With football season upon us, I've thrifted this article to summarize just the key points.  To read the entire article, click the link at the bottom of the summary -- Eric Gall.

Tom Brady: Not just an athlete; also a great leader and determined worker.
5 Lessons We Can All Learn From Tom Brady

Here are five lessons entrepreneurs can learn from the greatest to ever play the game. 

1. Keep focused on your goal (even when extreme distractions are present).


  • Brady kept focused in spite of Deflategate and his mother being sick for the prior 18 months.
  • He never lost focus.
  • His burning desire to crush his goals, allowed him to block out distractions. 

2. Always take the high road.


  • Brady could have stuck it to Roger Goodell during the trophy presentation or post-game interviews. 
  • He didn’t. 
  • He let his on-field performance do the talking.
  • Brady has been a class act and a great role model for kids. 

3. Don’t panic in difficult situations.


  • Trailing Atlanta 28 to 3 in the third quarter, Brady never panicked. 
  • He remained calm.
  • His confidence and leadership trickled down to every player on the team.
  • In business keeping calm and focused gives you a chance to figure out a solution.

4. Have complete confidence in your abilities.


  • Critics have been vocal about Brady's age. 
  • At 39, Brady is much older than the league average (26.6 in 2015). 
  • Brady's confidence in his abilities allow him to lead.
  • In business, when your team believes in you, it elevates their self-belief. Without confidence, you have nothing.

5. Never give up.


  • Against great odds, Brady never gave up.
  • The outcome was ring number five and MVP of the greatest Super Bowl game ever played.
  • Entrepreneurs need similar resiliency. 
  • Most fail often before they experience success. 
  • Simply never giving up can often lead to a successful outcome. 
For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com.

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Article Summary: 10 Essentials of A Marketing Plan | SBA

I've run into a number of business owners whose valuations are shy of what they need to sell lately.   They need to grow in order to obtain the price they want for their business.  A marketing plan is the first step.  I've summarized the key points below. If you would like to read the entire article, click the link at the bottom of the summary - Eric Gall.

By Tim Berry, Guest Blogger
Published: February 23, 2016Updated: February 23, 2016

Technology has changed marketing a lot.
  • We can fast forward and block ads. 
  • Social media has amplified word of mouth. 
  • There are far more metrics and analytics available. 
Has the marketing plan adapted?
  • The fundamentals still apply. 
  • Marketing is still letting people know, like, and trust your business. 
  • You still need to define target markets, know market segments, reach the right people with the right message. Price is the most important message, and the lowest price is not necessarily the best price.
Marketing mix and tactics are changing rapidly:
  • Goodbye yellow pages; hello Facebook. 
  • Goodbye public relations; hello social media. 
  • Goodbye advertising; hello content marketing.
So what should your marketing plan look like?
  1. Target Market. Experts recommend describing an ideal target customer in detail. Don't try to please everybody. Instead, please specific buyer types who have the right needs, habits, locations, etc.
  2. Messaging. A summary of the main tag lines, key selling points, value proposition and so forth. 
  3. Media. Media is social media and content marketing now. Explore going beyond content marketing, to distributed marketing, and real engagement. Go beyond "post and pray.' Where will potential customers see your message? How can the right people find your message? Do you track what they say about it?
  4. Pricing. Pricing must match product or service, market, or messaging. Don't assume lowest price wins. Pricing is your most important marketing message. Would you buy day-old sushi because it's cheap? If you discount excellence, it becomes less credible in the eyes of your potential customers. 
  5. Channels. Do you sell direct (web/mobile), use distributors for retail, or go direct to retail?
  6. Promotion. Promotion may simply be consistent presence in social media platforms. It may also be email marketing, advertising, affiliate sites, public relations, price promotion, and events.
  7. Tasks and major milestones. A plan requires tasks and milestones. Track progress against the plan. 
  8. Important metrics. Numbers such as sales, web/sore traffic, leads, presentations, seminars, conversions, tweets, posts, likes, follows, or whatever help you monitor and adjust your plan.
  9. Review schedule. Keep your plan short.  Frequently review results and revise the plan.
  10. Budgets. The plan needs to include budgets for expenses, and the expected sales that result from each activity.

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com.

Monday, August 21, 2017

Article Summary: 3 Ways to Value the Sale of Your Business | Manta

I have thrifted the article to its key points. To read the entire article, click the link at the end of the summary - Eric Gall.

By Chance Butler, Pacific Landfall - July 28, 2017

3 Ways to Value the Sale of Your Business

How much is your business worth? There are three ways to estimate its value on the open market:

Some industries have standard models for determining value, e.g, accounting practices one times annual revenue.  Most industries do not and must rely on other approaches.
  1. Income Approach - The business is viewed as an investment. Focus is on future cash flows and growth. Method used is called the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) approach looking at 5 to 10 years of income. 
  2. Market Approach - Your business is compared to the sales price of other businesses based on multiples of Discretionary Earnings (DE) and Revenue. 
  3. Asset Approach - If your business isn't generating enough DE to support a working owner and provide a solid return on investment, the business is worth no more than the value of your company’s assets. 
Understanding the methods and value of your business can help identify the best time for you to sell. 

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall, CBI, CM&AP at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com. To search for Florida Businesses for Sale: CLICK HERE

Friday, August 18, 2017

Article Summary: How Your Company Is Valued Depends on the Buyer | Divestopedia

By 

How Your Company Is Valued Depends on the Buyer
Source: Violka08/iStock
Takeaway: Different types of acquirers use different valuation methods. 


  • There a several different types of buyers.
  • Each type will value businesses differently.
  • Business valuation is incredibly complex.
  • Business is not an exact science; they are based on many subjective decisions.
  • Business valuations can vary from appraiser to appraiser.

Basic Valuation Approaches

There are three fundamental approaches to valuing a business:
Market Approach

  • Works best in real estate due to few parameters.
  • Businesses have many number of moving parts.
  • Comparative sales have to be used with other valuation methods. 
  • Often not enough data to compare apples to apples. 

Income Approach

  • Most common for valuing private small businesses. 
  • Based on company revenues and earnings. 
  • Method #1 is Multiple of Discretionary Earnings (SDE) Method, where SDE is defined as the net operating income plus adjustments plus the owner’s salary. 
  • The multiple is the inverse of the capitalization rate (cap rate). 
  • Method #2 is discounted cash flows is based on reasonable projections (usually 5 years), and uses a discount rate (usually the cap rate plus rate of growth) to calculate the present value of the future cash flows.
Asset Approach

  • Asset approach is used when fair market value of assets represents most or all of the business value. 
  • The net tangible assets of the business comprise : the machinery, equipment, furniture and fixtures, etc. 
  • Used when the business is no longer a going concern, or losing money for a few years.

Valuation Method Depends on Buyer Type

Let’s look at the most likely valuation methods used by each buyer type:
Strategic Buyer

  • Typically large private or public companies. 
  • Strategic buyers are interested in the future synergies and not as concerned about past performance. 
  • The likely valuation method will be the discounted cash flow approach.
Sophisticated Financial Buyer

  • Typically small investment groups, private equity groups (PEGs) and small companies interested in growth by acquisition. 
  • Interest in both past performance and future opportunities for growth. 
  • The likely valuation methods will be multiples of earnings and discounted cash flow.

Lifestyle Buyer  

  • Looking to supply income, equity, and debt service from future cash flows. 
  • Will buy the future, but only pay for the past. 
  • The valuation method is multiple of seller discretionary earnings. 
  • For larger companies they may use the multiple of EBITDA.
Industry Buyer

  • Industry buyers are in your niche, you know them, and consider your company inferior. Typically bottom feeders trolling to buy on the cheap. 
  • Valuation method will be the asset approach. 
  • If this particular buyer is interested in buying your company (total assets plus goodwill), then seek professional help to even the playing field.

Article LINK


For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall, CBI, CM&AP at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com. To search for Florida Businesses for Sale: CLICK HERE

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Article Summary: Cash Flow a Major Concern for Small Business Owners, New Poll Reveals | Manta

I've pared down this article to its key points.  If you would like to read the entire article, click on the link at the bottom of my summary. Eric Gall

By Brian Lindamood, Manta Content Director - September 16, 2016

Among small business owners who worry about cash flow, three-quarters have missed a sales or business opportunity

Cash Flow a Major Concern for Small Business Owners, New Poll RevealsSurvey Key Takeaways:

  • 60% of small business owners worry about inconsistent cash flow. 
  • 75% said they missed a sale or business opportunity by not having cash to support the growth.


Top Concerns:

  • 48% report seasonal fluctuations as the top cause of cash shortages.
  • 29% report slow-paying customers.
  • 15% report cash to invest in inventory/supplies before getting paid for a job.
Top Solutions:

  • 41% used personal loans; 11% used personal credit cards.
  • 24% used invoice financing 
  • 18% used short-term business loans. 
  • 9% used a business line of credit.
Recommendations:
Keep personal and business finances separate; build your business credit
Invoice financing can speed up receipts.
Lines of credit can bridge short-term needs.

091616_trends_cash-flow-a-major-concern-for-small-business-owners-chart1





091616_trends_cash-flow-a-major-concern-for-small-business-owners-chart2


091616_trends_cash-flow-a-major-concern-for-small-business-owners-chart3
Article LINK

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com.

Monday, August 14, 2017

Simple Cash Flow Spreadsheet Anybody Can Use | SBA

As they say in the business world, "cash flow is king."  The article below describes a simple little spreadsheet for small business owners to calculate their cash flow.  Eric Gall

By Tim Berry, Guest Blogger
Published: March 22, 2016Updated: March 28, 2016


If there's just one formal business skill every business owner should have, it's understanding and forecasting cash flow. It's not intuitive because it's not the same as profits; but it's vital. We spend cash, not profits.
Here's my recommendation for a relatively simple way to lay out cash flow in a spreadsheet, so you can see it. It doesn't take a CPA or an MBA to do it ... just knowing your own business.

Do Your Numbers

Simple Cash Flow Projections

Making Your Estimates

  1. In lines 3 and 4, you forecast the revenue from sales. Yours might be just cash sales, a single line. If you have sales on account, you know it. If you're not sure (maybe you're looking at a startup so you don't have the experience yet), assume you do have sales on account if you sell to other businesses; and probably not if you sell to consumers. Line 4 is your prediction for when the business customers will pay invoices.
  2. The "Start" column reflects the starting balances and starting funding for a startup. With an ongoing business, you might have that balance labeled "Dec" for the ending month of the previous year. In this example, the startup owner borrows $55,000 and gets $25,000 as new investment.
  3. Lines 5 and 6 are important because new money from loans and investments doesn't show up in your profits, but it's there.
  4. That whole block of rows 3-6 is a simplification. You know your business. Where else does money come in? Maybe you're selling assets too? Stay flexible. Take this simple example as just that, an example. Make yours specific to your business.  
  5. Rows 9-10 are also simplified. Use as many rows as you want to estimate operating expenses, focusing mainly on fixed costs, rent, utilities, and payroll.  
  6. Row 11 is there to make the point that cash flow counts what you spend for inventory and other direct costs of sales, when you spend it – not when it shows up in profit and loss. When a bookstore spends $10,000 in November to buy books to sell, those books might not show up in profits (as cost of goods sold) until December, January, or beyond ... but that money leaves your bank in November. So you put it into your cash flow in November. If you don't sell products, and don't deal with inventory, then you might have a row for direct costs such as hosting, or customer
  7. Row 12 is there because most businesses pay a lot of expenses at the end of the month, or 30-45 days after received. For example, the ad you place might come through as an invoice that you'll pay later. Row 12 is for all those things you pay later. And, just in case you're keeping track, these are expenses, including tax and interest. The projected interest on that $55,000 loan is included there.
  8. Rows 13 and 14 show two items that are often forgotten in cash flow planning. Principal payments on debts, and buying new assets, don't show up in profit and loss. But they cost money that goes out of your bank account.

Simple Calculations

As you can see in the illustration, row 7 sums the money coming in, row 15 sums the money going out, row 16 shows the cash flow for the month, and row 17 shows the projected cash balance. You can see from the illustration how the cash flow is the change in the cash balance, and the cash balance is the equivalent of checking account balance; it's how much money you have.

The Key is Using it Right

First, tailor your cash plan to match the actual details of your business. This is a very simple example. Be flexible about adjusting it so it matches your business, and your bookkeeping,
Second, using it correctly requires keeping it up to date. Review it every month. Calculate the differences between what you expected and what actually happened, and make adjustments.
You never guess right. And this is all guessing. What matters is watching carefully and updating so you can react to changes in time.
Like all business planning, the value is in the decision. The business value of cash planning is the decisions it causes.


For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com.

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Article Summary: Even With Valuations High, PE Sees Strong Exit Environment | Axial

I've pared down the article to the key points.  If you want to read the entire article click the link at the bottom of the summary -- Eric Gall

By , Axial | 
Axial surveyed their PE members for their pulse on the current deal environment. Forty-five middle market investors shared their thoughts.
The Exit Environment

  • 71% say the exit environment was positive in 2016. 
  • 42% said they are waiting until 2017 before selling.
  • Buyers are more likely to be strategic investors (40%) vs. PEGs (33%).
  • In hot industries like healthcare, corporate buyers may justify higher prices due to expected synergies
  • 2/3rds expecting to sell to strategic buyers expect to do more deals with private companies vs. publicly traded corporations. 
  • 20% believe their next buyer will be a fundless or independent sponsor, who have become increasingly active in the middle market. 
Deal Dynamics

  • 69% will deploy more or the same amount of capital into add-on and platform investments.
  • Many middle market investors are moving down market looking to smaller add-on companies.
  • Co-investments is increasing between PE, family offices, or other PE shops to partner on a deal.  31% will complete more co-investment deals.  
  • Generalist investors with a broad industry/sector mandate are more likely to complete co-investments this year (38%) compared to specialists (20%).


Article LINK

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com or my personal website at www.BuySellFLbiz.com.

Article Summary: Planning to leave the business | Forest City Summit

Principle Financial advisor Bill Feller believes it is never to early to plan your business exit.
He cited a number of instances in his small Iowa town where a business owner died or was disabled and the business failed as a result of no plan.
A plan is required whether an owner wants to retire or must leave the business due to an unexpected event.
The first two steps are to know the value of the business and identify who you want to sell to.  Per Feller, failure to plan resulted in the following local business failures:

  • It is critical to find a competent operator who can run the business as well as you.  A business owner sold his small restaurant to a son-in-law. The son-in-law wasn't the operator the father-in-law was. The former owner had to return after 2 years to take back the business.
  • Employees may not have the finances to buy the business. Seller financing may help an employee initiate purchase and eventually obtain a bank loan to pay the balance.
  • The business needs to be as successful as possible.  If the owner wants to sell in roughly five years or less, the business needs to show a profit in the business tax records.
Exit strategies require time and effort from the business owner, but are important to ensure continued success after the owner exits.
Article LINK

For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com or my personal website at www.BuySellFLbiz.com.

Wednesday, August 9, 2017

Article Summary: M&A Trends for Sellers in 2017 | Axial

By , Axial | 

I've summarized key points and added commentary in red text.  If you want to read the original article, click the link at the end of the summary - Eric Gall

Comments from two investment bankers from December 2016 on M&A in 2017:
Shea's advice:

  • Think long before executing. 
  • Have your financial house in order.
  • Understand the key metrics of your business.

3 M&A Insights


1. Search funds have proliferated the lower middle market.
Search funds are individuals or small groups looking to buy and operate a small company. Search funds are viable options for businesses not fitting the objectives of strategic buyers or private equity funds.  Search funds tend to be conservative regarding valuations.  I have seen this as well and I am executing searches for quite a few of them.
2. Private equity is going upstream.  
Private equity has become too well funded to be interested in add-ons under $2M EBITDA.  Smaller companies need to sell turn to strategic buyers, search funds, or independents.  True as well as you just can't obtain interest under $2M EBITDA.
3. It’s still a seller’s market.
There is still a lot of money in private equity and the lower-middle-market.  There is a short supply of quality companies.  You always want to be selling on an uptrend. 
In this video, Shea discusses tips for preparing for a transaction: 

3 Industry Trends

1. The precision machinery industry is hot.
Aerospace drives a huge number of inquiries from private equity and strategics. Large manufacturers (Boeing, GE) are gearing up for big projects in the next 20 years. Buyers are looking for highly skilled labor and capacity.  Aerospace has done very well for me over the past few years.
2. Infrastructure, energy, and defense companies might want to wait and see on M&A.
The new presidential administration will focus on infrastructure, energy, and defense. Older business owners should initiate a deal process now as the market heats up.
3. Buyers continue to reward recurring revenue in IT services businesses.
Buyers pay very high premiums for recurring revenue models in IT services (vs. project model companies).  Very high demand for subscription software/SAS companies.
In this video, Dee discusses the importance of educating oneself as a seller: 


For additional information regarding Florida business sales, acquisitions and valuations, please contact Eric J. Gall at Eric@EdisonAvenue.com or 239.738.6227. Also, visit our Edison Avenue website at www.EdisonAvenue.com.