Selling a business

dafcjim

Free Member
Apr 17, 2012
128
4
Good afternoon, I’m looking for some advice regarding the sale of a business.

I own a cake/doughnut business and have received an offer from a potential buyer. They’re interested in rebranding their existing stores under my business name. Their proposal is to initially purchase my current stock and distribute it across their stores. Then, based on how those stores perform over a set period, they would make a final offer within an agreed price range.

I’m understandably cautious, as this arrangement could go wrong if it’s not handled properly. Has anyone been in a similar situation?

I’m also concerned that a few months may not be enough time to determine the true value of the business, as it can take time to establish performance, account for setup costs, and see consistent results.
 

DavidAshdown

Business Member
Business Listing
Jun 14, 2012
1,331
227
Hertfordshire
www.daa.consulting
This is an interesting opportunity, but you’re right to be cautious, arrangements like this can work well, but only if expectations are very clearly set out from the start.

One of the biggest risks in this type of structure is control.

Once your stock and brand are in their hands, they effectively control:
  • how the product is positioned and marketed
  • pricing and promotions
  • store execution and staff engagement
  • customer experience
If the future valuation is based on performance, but you’re not controlling those levers, there’s a potential imbalance. Poor (or even just different) execution on their side could directly affect what your business is ultimately deemed to be worth.

A few other points worth thinking about:
  • What exactly is being measured: revenue, profit, margins? And over what period?
  • Timeframe realism: a few months may not be enough to get a true picture once setup and customer behaviour settle
  • How the final price is calculated within the agreed range: this is often where differences of interpretation creep in
  • What happens if it doesn’t work: can you unwind cleanly, and what happens to your brand in the meantime?
None of this makes it a bad deal, but it does mean it needs to be thought through carefully so both sides are aligned from day one.
 
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Take it one step at a time.

Sell them the products and see how they sell.

If positive, then discuss next steps, which might be more than just selling everything.

What brand/name protection do you have in place?
 
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DavidAshdown

Business Member
Business Listing
Jun 14, 2012
1,331
227
Hertfordshire
www.daa.consulting
I think Paul’s right that taking it step by step makes sense, particularly in terms of testing demand.

The only thing I’d add to that, is that even that first step is worth structuring quite carefully, because at that point:
  • your brand is already in their hands
  • they’re controlling how it’s presented, priced and sold
  • and those results may end up feeding into any future valuation discussion
So it’s less a neutral test and more a live environment that could influence the outcome later.

It might be worth agreeing upfront what a “fair test” looks like (e.g. how products are positioned, minimum standards, reporting, timeframe), so that if it does go well, both sides are looking at the results in the same way.

That way you still get the benefit of a phased approach, but without leaving too much open to interpretation later.



 
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GLAbusiness

Business Member
  • Business Listing
    Sep 20, 2008
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    Glasgow
    www.isense.biz
    My first thought is that a lot depends on how big the agreed price range is.. I you are happy with the bottom end of the range that is one thing. I think the key negotiation is on this range before you start to worry about measuring performance
     
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