Article
Frequently Asked Questions - Tips For Selling a Business
Generally it pays to plan ahead and prepare your business for sale. Q2. What should people consider when preparing their business for sale? In particular, start banking all the money, even if it means paying tax, and write up your closing stock and work-in-progress to full value. Next is the question of perceived risk for the buyer. The lower the risk, the higher the price. So the more you can do to instil confidence in the buyer, the better. You can do this with documentation – document your sales, your supply agreements with suppliers and customers, your procedures etc etc. Q3. What are some options for selling your business?
Q4. How do you find the right buyers? A hairdressing salon has no value to a butcher. If you offered it to him for free, he still wouldn’t want it. So you need to search for motivated buyers who think they can add value to the business. They will see less risk in it, and be prepared to pay more. You can do this through “Target Marketing”, where you concentrate your marketing activity on searching for qualified buyers with a strategic interest in buying your business, rather than relying on luck, or paying a fortune to advertise to people who are never going to be buyers. Q5. What are some tips to maximise the sale price for your business? The ultimate limit to the price you can get for your business is the price at which the buyer decides it would be cheaper to start up a new business in competition than to buy your business. If you know why he wants to buy your business, and what he hopes to achieve with it, you can make an estimate of this cost and work out how far you can push him. Q6. What are the alternatives to selling your business? Once you have decided you want to free up your time and/or capital from the business, selling all or part of it is your only option. You could retire and appoint a manager, but that would still require oversight, and leaving your capital at risk. Selling all or part of the business to offspring, Management, or the public (through an IPO), are also options.
|