- Original Poster
- #1
There was a recent thread about buying businesses (that I won't link to) but it got me thinking I could help the community if I put together some advice. So here goes.
First, yes, making an acquisition is the quickest way to grow your business. Much better than all that hard slog growing organically by increasing sales. But if it you think no special knowledge is required to buy a business, and that anybody with a bit of common sense and business experience can do it themselves, leave this thread, go somewhere else! Please. Maybe try the genius thread.
For everyone else, how do you get the smart? Three ways:
1. Hire me. It'll cost you a lot of money as I ain't cheap, and being the greedy git that I am I charge by the hour. So you might want to consider the alternatives first.
OR
2. Go do a ton of research yourself. Spend a few quid buying some books. The two best selling authors of material on buying businesses are Richard C Parker and Ted Leverette. Richard and I used to collaborate on buying businesses many, many years ago. Both of them wrote me very flattering reviews in LinkedIn but it's not me, it's they who are the real experts. Richard started a private equity company and is on a different trajectory now, but Ted's still in the game. Note that neither of them cover the British context but 90% of what they cover is relevant to you. You'll get mega smart reading their stuff.
OR
3. Watch David C Barnett's videos on Youtube. Free. Really decent bloke (though being Canadian he knows nothing about UK specific regulatory, tax and other considerations). But he gives savvy and practical advice and he really knows what he's talking about. I've spoken with him several times and collaborated with him on stuff.
There are lots of courses around for wannabe buyers. Many will claim to teach you how to buy an established and profitable business without using any of your own money. Yeah, get rich without investing anything! And they'll charge you £5K to £10K. Good luck to you if you fall for that pitch. But if you really want a course, and some hand holding, you could save yourself a ton of money and buy David C Barnett's course instead - £200 or so - and you'll learn the stuff that actually does work.
What do you need to learn? The below is what you'll need for a simple deal. If you're trying to raise finance elsewhere , there'll be a lot more steps. So, for example, if you're raising part of the price by borrowing against his Accounts Receivables you'll need to get his book, his aged debtor breakdown etc. You'll need debtors' names so the finance company can credit check them. You'll need all sorts.
But let's keep it simple and assume you've got some cash to invest. The steps:
1. Deal Sourcing
Finding the right deals is far more difficult than you think. Businesses already on the market at various portals are often rubbish businesses and their owners have completely unrealistic price aspirations (often because they've had a business broker value their business).
2. Initial Assessment
Before you dig deep into a business you need to be able to assess whether it's worth the time and effort. You need an early filtering system. The skill required is being able to quickly dump businesses that are likely to be dogs. I can decide with 10 seconds of seeing a company's accounts that they're not worth investigating. Sometimes I don't even need to get that far - simply from the text of the covering email I form an opinion that the vendor is a plonker - it's usually because he has no idea what really impresses buyers. So we'll be talking at cross purposes. I'd rather let him go waste somebody else's time.
3. More Detailed Assessment
Here you collect enough material to put together an offer package (Yes, it's a package, not a price). You collect accounts, you have a list of questions you ask. What exactly you ask is going to vary widely depending on the business and the circumstances of the sale.
4. Valuation & Deal Structuring
You need to be able to work out what's a decent price for the business, how much of the price should be paid in the future, how much should be dependent on performance, what's a decent security to offer for the deferred portion of the price, what conditions you need to impose, what concessions you need to extract (on working capital to be left, what the net asset position needs to be on day of completion, who's going to be liable for corporation tax and other liabilities that have accrued up to the day of the sale, all sorts of other stuff).
5. Negotiating
Now that you know where your various red lines are, you go into the negotiation. You give some, you take some, you reach a deal that everyone is happy with. This is tricky as there's always a gap between what the vendor wants and what the buyer is willing to offer. It takes some savvy and finesse to find a compromise package or to "bridge the valuation gap" as they say in our industry. You then draw up a Heads of Terms and get it signed.
6. Due Diligence
This is where you start tearing everything apart. You need a good accountant to dissect their numbers and find where the bodies are hidden. You need a good lawyer to look over their contracts - contracts with employees, suppliers, whatever (and even their T&Cs) - and to examine a ton of other stuff so he can advise you and he can start working on the clauses he needs to insert in the Share Purchase Agreement to protect your interests and minimise your risk. And you need to know the industry well to do some operational DD yourself.
That's all there is to it and bingo, you're now the owner of a nice business.
Good luck!
First, yes, making an acquisition is the quickest way to grow your business. Much better than all that hard slog growing organically by increasing sales. But if it you think no special knowledge is required to buy a business, and that anybody with a bit of common sense and business experience can do it themselves, leave this thread, go somewhere else! Please. Maybe try the genius thread.
For everyone else, how do you get the smart? Three ways:
1. Hire me. It'll cost you a lot of money as I ain't cheap, and being the greedy git that I am I charge by the hour. So you might want to consider the alternatives first.
OR
2. Go do a ton of research yourself. Spend a few quid buying some books. The two best selling authors of material on buying businesses are Richard C Parker and Ted Leverette. Richard and I used to collaborate on buying businesses many, many years ago. Both of them wrote me very flattering reviews in LinkedIn but it's not me, it's they who are the real experts. Richard started a private equity company and is on a different trajectory now, but Ted's still in the game. Note that neither of them cover the British context but 90% of what they cover is relevant to you. You'll get mega smart reading their stuff.
OR
3. Watch David C Barnett's videos on Youtube. Free. Really decent bloke (though being Canadian he knows nothing about UK specific regulatory, tax and other considerations). But he gives savvy and practical advice and he really knows what he's talking about. I've spoken with him several times and collaborated with him on stuff.
There are lots of courses around for wannabe buyers. Many will claim to teach you how to buy an established and profitable business without using any of your own money. Yeah, get rich without investing anything! And they'll charge you £5K to £10K. Good luck to you if you fall for that pitch. But if you really want a course, and some hand holding, you could save yourself a ton of money and buy David C Barnett's course instead - £200 or so - and you'll learn the stuff that actually does work.
What do you need to learn? The below is what you'll need for a simple deal. If you're trying to raise finance elsewhere , there'll be a lot more steps. So, for example, if you're raising part of the price by borrowing against his Accounts Receivables you'll need to get his book, his aged debtor breakdown etc. You'll need debtors' names so the finance company can credit check them. You'll need all sorts.
But let's keep it simple and assume you've got some cash to invest. The steps:
1. Deal Sourcing
Finding the right deals is far more difficult than you think. Businesses already on the market at various portals are often rubbish businesses and their owners have completely unrealistic price aspirations (often because they've had a business broker value their business).
2. Initial Assessment
Before you dig deep into a business you need to be able to assess whether it's worth the time and effort. You need an early filtering system. The skill required is being able to quickly dump businesses that are likely to be dogs. I can decide with 10 seconds of seeing a company's accounts that they're not worth investigating. Sometimes I don't even need to get that far - simply from the text of the covering email I form an opinion that the vendor is a plonker - it's usually because he has no idea what really impresses buyers. So we'll be talking at cross purposes. I'd rather let him go waste somebody else's time.
3. More Detailed Assessment
Here you collect enough material to put together an offer package (Yes, it's a package, not a price). You collect accounts, you have a list of questions you ask. What exactly you ask is going to vary widely depending on the business and the circumstances of the sale.
4. Valuation & Deal Structuring
You need to be able to work out what's a decent price for the business, how much of the price should be paid in the future, how much should be dependent on performance, what's a decent security to offer for the deferred portion of the price, what conditions you need to impose, what concessions you need to extract (on working capital to be left, what the net asset position needs to be on day of completion, who's going to be liable for corporation tax and other liabilities that have accrued up to the day of the sale, all sorts of other stuff).
5. Negotiating
Now that you know where your various red lines are, you go into the negotiation. You give some, you take some, you reach a deal that everyone is happy with. This is tricky as there's always a gap between what the vendor wants and what the buyer is willing to offer. It takes some savvy and finesse to find a compromise package or to "bridge the valuation gap" as they say in our industry. You then draw up a Heads of Terms and get it signed.
6. Due Diligence
This is where you start tearing everything apart. You need a good accountant to dissect their numbers and find where the bodies are hidden. You need a good lawyer to look over their contracts - contracts with employees, suppliers, whatever (and even their T&Cs) - and to examine a ton of other stuff so he can advise you and he can start working on the clauses he needs to insert in the Share Purchase Agreement to protect your interests and minimise your risk. And you need to know the industry well to do some operational DD yourself.
That's all there is to it and bingo, you're now the owner of a nice business.
Good luck!
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