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How to Value a
Business
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| Valuing a
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Accurately valuing a small
business is often the most
challenging part of the process for
prospective business buyers.
However, it doesn’t have to be an
overwhelming or difficult undertaking.
Above all, you should realize that
valuation is an art, not a science. As a
buyer, always keep in mind that the
“Asking Price” is NOT the purchase
price. Quite often it does not even
remotely represent what the business
is truly worth.
Naturally, a buyer’s valuation is
usually quite different from what the
seller believes their business is
worth. Sellers are emotionally attached
to their businesses. They usually factor
their years of hard work into their
calculation. Unfortunately, this has no
business whatsoever being in the
equation.
The challenge for you, the buyer, is to
formulate a valuation that is accurate,
and will prove to provide you with an
acceptable return on your investment.
There are several ways to calculate the
value of a business:
Asset Valuations: Calculates the value
of all of the assets of a business
and arrives at the appropriate
price.
Liquidation Value: Determines the value
of the company’s assets if it were
forced to sell all of them in a short
period of time (usually less than 12
months).
Income Capitalization: Future income is
calculated based upon historical data
and a variety of assumptions.
Income Multiple: The net income
(profit/owner's benefit/seller's cash
flow) of a business is subject to
a certain multiple to arrive at a
selling price.
Rules Of Thumb: The selling price of
other “like” businesses is used as a
multiple of cash flow or a percentage of
revenue.
Let's look at eack to determine what's
best for your purchase:
Asset based valuations do not work for
small business purchases. Assets
are used to generate revenue and nothing
more. If a business is "asset
rich" but doesn't make much money, how
valuable is the business
altogether? Conversely, if a business
has limited assets, such as
computers and office equipment, but
makes a ton of money, isn't it worth
more?
Income Capitalization is generally
applicable to large businesses and most
often uses a factor that is far too
arbitrary.
The “Rule of Thumb” method is too
general. It's hard to find any two
businesses that are exactly the same.
Valuation must be done based upon what
you, as the buyer, can reasonably expect
to generate in your pocket, so long as
the business’ future is
representative of the past historical
financial data.
The multiple method is clearly the way
to go. You have probably heard of
businesses selling at “x times
earnings”. However, this can be quite
subjective. When buying a small
business, every buyer wants to know
how much money he or she can expect to
make from the business.
Therefore, the most effective number to
use as the basis of your calculation is
what is known as the total “Owner
Benefits”.
The Owner Benefits amount is the total
dollars that you can expect to extract
or have available from the business
based upon what the business
has generated in the past. The beauty is
that unlike other methods (i.e. Income
Cap), it does not attempt to predict the
future. Nobody can do that. Owner
Benefit is not cash flow! It is,
however, sometimes referred to as
Seller's Discretionary Cash Flow (SDCF).
The theory behind the Owner Benefit
number is to take the business’
profits plus the owner’s salary and
benefits and then to add back the
non-cash expenses. History has shown
that this methodology, while not
bulletproof, is the most effective way
to establish the valuation basis of a
small business. Then, a multiple,
based upon a variety of factors, is
applied to this number and a valuation
is established.
The Owner Benefit formula to use is:
Pre-Tax Profit + Owner’s Salary +
Additional Owner Perks + Interest +
Depreciation LESS Allowance for Capital
Expenditures Why Add Back Depreciation?
Depreciation is an expense that allows a
business to deduct a certain
amount of money each year from an asset
so that its purchase value is reduced by
its overall useful life. As an example:
if the business buys a $25,000
truck and its useful life is estimated
at 5 years, then each year the company
can deduct $5000 off its income to
lessen its tax burden. However, as you
can see, it is not an actual cash
transaction. No money is physically
leaving the business or changing
hands. Therefore, this amount is added
back.
Why Add Back Interest?
Each business owner will have
separate philosophies for borrowing for
the business and how to best use
borrowed funds, if necessary at all.
Furthermore, in nearly all cases, the
seller will pay off the business’
loans from their proceeds at selling;
therefore, you will have use of these
additional funds.
A Note About Add-Backs (Capital
Expenditure Allowance)
After completing any-add backs, it is
critical that you take into
consideration the future capital
requirements of the business as
well as debt-service expenses. As such,
in capital intensive businesses where
equipment needs replacing on a regular
basis, you must deduct appropriate
amounts from the Owner Benefit number in
order to determine both the true value
of the business as well as its
ability fund future expenditures. Under
this formula, you will arrive at a "net"
Owner Benefit number or true Free Cash
Flow figure.
What Multiple?
Typically, small businesses will sell in
a one-to three-times multiple of this
figure. Now, this is a wide range, so
how do you determine what to apply? The
best mechanism I have found is that a
one-time multiple is for those
businesses where the seller is “the
business”. In other words: "as out the
door goes the seller, so too can go the
customers". Consulting businesses,
professional practices, and one-man
businesses come to mind.
Businesses that have a strong track
record, repeat clients, historical
pattern of growth, more than 3 years in
business, perhaps some
proprietary item, or an exclusive
territory, a growing industry, etc.,
will sell in the 3-times ratio. The
others fall somewhere in-between.
So now the big question: what
number/multiple do you apply to the
Owner’s Benefit number? The answer is
simple: nearly all small businesses will
sell in the 1-to-3 times Owner Benefit
window. Of course this is a very wide
range.
The Rules To Apply To Establish A
Multiple:
You also want to calculate the Return On
Investment (ROI) that you can expect to
achieve when buying a business.
Let’s say that you have $100,000 for a
down payment. If you go to Las Vegas and
let it rip on “17 black” well you should
be entitled to enormous odds. Wouldn’t
you agree? On the other hand, if you
invest it in commercial real estate,
which is a solid, stable investment,
then 10% return on your money seems
about right, doesn’t it?
Buying a business is clearly
riskier than real estate but definitely
not as risky as the Las Vegas option, so
you should expect something in-between.
I’ve always felt that 25% return on your
investment should be the minimum and you
can, if negotiated well, get as high as
35% -50% ROI.
If You’re New At This, Here’s What To
Do:
• If you don’t know how to read an
income statement, then learn. It’s
important for this process. It’s simple,
and can be done quickly.
• Work with your accountant, if
necessary, to determine the true Owner
Benefits of the business. Be
careful about the add-backs. Make
certain that any benefits being added
back are not necessary expenses needed
to run the business.
• You can only add back something that
has been expensed.
• Calculate a multiple in the 1-3-times
window based upon the business’
strengths and weaknesses.
• Determine your investment level and an
acceptable ROI.
• Understand that value is personal.
• If the business is right for
you, it is all right to pay a slight
premium, but not too drastically
overpay.
• Consider applying other valuation
formulas simply as a test to your
figure.
Professional Valuations: Do You Need
One?
For most small businesses, hiring a
professional to perform a valuation is
not necessary. First of all, it is
expensive, and more often than not, it
simply does not reflect reality. I read
a valuation recently on a local company
handling specialized telecom components
in a very restricted marketplace doing
$700,000 a year in sales and netting
$100,000. The valuation started off:
“The company is focused upon the B2B
telephony segment which is a $42 billion
industry in North America.” I threw out
the entire report after reading that one
sentence. Why? How on earth can you
possibly compare a $42 billion dollar
industry and a $700,000 local
distributor of telephone systems? Don’t
waste time or money getting a
professional valuation done. Let the
seller do that if they so choose. If you
want to look at a variety of scenarios,
there are some very good, inexpensive
software packages available that will do
the same thing at a fraction of the
cost.
The Key Points • Remember that
valuations are not scientifically based;
they’re subjective.
• Use a variety of methods.
• Owner Benefits is the number on which
to base your multiple • Uncover how the
seller established the asking price •
Valuation is a personal formula - What’s
the business worth to YOU?
• Consider the potential return on your
cash investment The Final Word: Never,
ever buy a business just because
the price is right - first and foremost
be certain that the business
itself is right for you!
Copyright 2001 – 2007 by Diomo
Corporation Richard Parker. All rights
reserved.
NOTE: The articles that appear on this
website are the sole and exclusive
copyrighted property of Diomo
Corporation and or Richard Parker and
may not be reproduced in any format
whatsoever without the express written
consent of Diomo Corporation and Richard
Parker.
To learn more about this
author, visit
Richard Parker's Website.
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