In the Men’s Downhill
race at Whistler, for example, the winning time of 1:54:31 was posted by Didier
Défago of Switzerland. The time among medalists was the closest in Olympic
history, and while Mario Scheiber of Austria posted a time of 1:54:52 – just
two tenths of a second slower than Défago – he finished out of the medals in
fourth place.
In ski
racing, one fifth of a second can be lost in the tiniest of miscalculations. And when it comes to selling your business,
markets can be equally cruel. Get everything right, and you can successfully
sell your business for a premium. Misjudge a couple of minor details and a
buyer can walk, leaving you with nothing.
Here is a
list of six little details to get right before you put your business on the
market:
1. Find
your lease. If you rent space, you may be required to notify your landlord if
you intend to sell your company. Read through the fine print and ensure you’re
not scrambling at the last minute to seek permission from your landlord to
sell.
2. Professionalize
your books. Consider having audited financial statements prepared to give a
buyer confidence in your bookkeeping. At a minimum, make sure your books are
accurate and up-to-date.
3. Stop
using your company as an ATM. Many
business owners run trips and other perks through their business, but if you’re
planning to sell, these treats will artificially depress your earnings, which
will reduce the value of your company in the eyes of a buyer by much more than
the value of the perks.
4. Protect
your gross margin. Oftentimes, when leading up to being listed for sale,
companies grow by chasing low-margin business. You tell yourself you need
top-line growth, but when an acquirer sees your growth has come at the expense
of your gross margin, she will question your pricing authority and assume your
journey to the bottom of the commoditization heap has begun.
5. If
you’re lucky enough to have formal contracts with your customers, make sure
your customer contracts include a “survivor clause” stipulating that the
obligations of the contract “survive” the change of ownership of your company.
That way, your customers can’t use the sale of your company to wiggle out of
their commitments to your business. Have a lawyer paper the language to ensure
it has teeth in your jurisdiction.
6. Get
your Sellability Score. Take 13 minutes to answer the Sellability questionnaire
now at www.baltusgroup.advicoach.com/sellability.aspx.
You’ll see how you performed on the eight key drivers of sellability and you can
identify any gaps you need to fill before taking your business to market.
Like
competing in the Olympics, selling a business can be an all-or-nothing affair. Get
it right and you will walk away a winner. Fumble your preparation, and you
could end up out of the medals.
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