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If you don't know how much the business is worth to you, then my advice is to not buy the business.So how do I/how much is it going to cost me to get the idea of the value of a business I may be looking to purchase !![]()
I know, I wrote that article.Ok. Says in that article that 'there is no such thing as an accurate valuation of a business' either!
If you don't know how much the business is worth to you, then my advice is to not buy the business.
For large deals you call in the corporate finance team, the risk assessors (and other professionals) to calculate free cash flow / liquidity, various financial ratios and to quantify areas of risk and the probabiity of those risks materialising. Then you put it all into a computer, together with your cost of capital, deal execution costs, risk mitigation inputs (earn-outs, seller note etc) and other information. The compuer calculates lots of other numbers for you.
Then you ignore all of that and go with whatever figure your gut tells you.
But, sure, you can pay a qualified valuer to come up with a valuation report. It ain't cheap. If you have a four figure sum you're willing to throw at a valuation, send me a DM and I'll introduce you to qualified valuers (as I've stopped doing valuations myself - they take too much time to do properly).
I know, I wrote that article.
Yikes!@Clinton - would it be sufficient for my own accountant to go through the books?
Then those profit figures are even further away from the true state of affairs.The 75 without the owner taking salary...
You shouldn't be put off buying a business, you just need to appreciate that you need the right advice. Buying a business is a big deal, and complicated. If you've never done it before you need to hire the right adviser. That costs money. Pay well, get the best. It would be a mistake to try and do it on your own.
Buying a business is still the best way to expand. Done properly, inorganic growth is the cheapest way to grow a business.
I beg to differ.I actually you can get a decent idea of a company's value using one of the established methods (multiple of EBITDA etc.),
No. Let's put it this way, if you need to ask the price you probably can't afford it. Good advisers cost a lot of money. I know a few and they work for UHNWI, family offices and the like. They are not cost effective if you're looking to invest just a couple of hundred thousand. For smaller businesses you may find a good buyside broker or have a friend who has bought a few businesses and can advise on the deal (together with a good accountant and solicitor), but I can't give you a figure or a "ball park" when it comes to cost.Could you give me a ball park figure?
You got it in one.Ah....so if youre rich then you dont really ask how much services are going to cost you?
There are several good reasons.A business is worth what you can improve on. If your idea is to leave it as it is why bother?
Exactly my point!Sometimes it's to get your hands on their customer list so you can target those customers with your own products.