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Valuing Your Business: Look in the Mirror
When business owners asks that familiar question “What is my
business worth?”—they might find the best answer in the mirror.
Of course, there are also the financials to be considered, but
numbers will not tell the whole story. Nor will goodwill. The
true value of a business can be best determined by looking at
the person at the helm—themselves.
As the owner of a business, ask some hard questions of yourself.
How do you measure up when it comes to attitude, management
strategy, customer-service smarts, and community relations? Take
the following litmus test and see if you make the grade.
1. Do You “Think Positive”?
Are you so focused on the bottom line that you forget to look at
the clouds from time to time? Owning a business is the
acknowledged American dream, yet many business owners allow
themselves to get bogged down by the harshest sort of reality.
They neglect to keep the dream alive, to think positively about
the business today and tomorrow. In our technological world,
it’s easy to forget the importance of having the right attitude.
If business owners aren’t positive, how can they expect
customers and employees—and at some point, prospective buyers—to
be? The owner who sees only the downside of the business will
probably not see it turn upward again. Of course, there are
always the real-life factors: banks that won’t lend, customers
who stop buying, services that become obsolete. However, if
these problems didn’t exist, the negative-thinkers would find a
whole new set.
If you feel you could do with some positive polish—begin with
just that. Spiffing up the place of business with fresh paint,
newly cleaned carpeting, well-stocked shelves, a cheerful potted
palm or ficus—just to name a few improvements—will speak volumes
about the state of the business. Less visible, but equally key,
is a positive plan for the future of the business. Business
owners should be prepared to spend what it takes to generate new
business, and should take the time to explore new possibilities
for long-range success. If the company currently has no mission
statement or business plan, creating one will be evidence of the
owner’s enthusiasm for the future and for the ongoing success of
the operation.
2.
Are You a Macro or a Micro Manager?
In today’s workplace, with a manager hovering at
every corner, it is difficult to keep an eye on the big picture
of the business. When an owner is managing every manager, and
shuffling paperwork at his desk all day, he is estranged from
the big outside world of the business. Owners should
occasionally take time off to work the floor, drive the delivery
truck, and sell the product. Owners who put themselves in the
trenches are in touch with the business, and this first-hand
understanding will be evident to anyone who assesses its value.
Part of being a macro, big-picture manager is preparing for
contingencies. The value of a business increases dramatically
when the owner demonstrates appropriate delegation of duties and
provides a backup managerial plan. If the owner is the business,
and personal disaster should strike -- the answer to “What is
the business worth?” is not a felicitous one.
3. Do You Smile When You Say “Customer Service”?
Do you avoid treating a customer like a number? If not,
follow the lead of successful mail-order operations, such as
L.L. Bean, who ask for the proper pronunciation of a customer’s
name and who do not automatically address him or her by their
first name. Basic up-front courtesies are important, but they do
not supplant other customer service virtues such as patience and
willingness to problem-solve. Whether products and services are
sold by phone or on the floor, employees should be up to speed
on what they’re selling. Nothing sparks a sale better than a
salesperson with hands-on knowledge and expertise. This works
for companies as large as L.L. Bean (whose employees seem to
have Ph.D.s in every item in their catalog) or as small as a
neighborhood bistro, where the waitperson can explain every
nuance of sauce or vintage of wine. Every hour spent training
employees in the product pays huge dividends for the business’s
long-term success.
4.
Are You “Out There” with Community Relations?
Business owners need to keep their company’s
image “out there” and visible to the public. Advertising can
build image at the same time it attracts business. A display ad
within the yellow pages listings, a monthly newsletter (hard
copy or on-line), the offering of free seminars, for example,
are ways to position the business as more than just the sum of
its products. An example of a business owner with multi-faceted
image-making skills is a caterer in Asheville, N.C. She dishes
up the city’s best lunches and dinners-to-go—or to eat with
obvious relish at the small tables she sets out on the sidewalk.
She sends out a monthly newsletter with recipes and manages to
snag appearances on radio programs to talk about her commitment
to buying local food. When Garrison Keillor’s “Prairie Home
Companion” (a production of Public Radio International) came to
town, she volunteered to cater for the cast and crew, and they
ended the program by having her stand for huge ovation. Her
small store-front operation had a line the next day that wound
around the block.
For the less adventurous, or conspicuous, there are plenty of
conservative ways to promote the business and its owner. Taking
an active role in the Chamber of Commerce or in trade or service
associations, and sponsorship of worthy local events is great
public relations. In addition to the more traditional public
donations—providing kids’ sports team uniforms, taking out ads
in yearbooks—employees can join hands for walkathons, or
volunteer to work the phones for public TV or radio fundraisers.
Being a good community partner is good for the business and for
the workers. It’s also great for that reflection in the mirror
that takes us back to where this discussion began.
The Listing Agreement
When it comes time to sell, and you are discussing the process
with your business broker, the term “Listing Agreement” will
surface. Very simply, a Listing Agreement is a written agreement
in which a seller authorizes an individual or company to sell
their business. It is basically an employment agreement. The
agreement may employ a broker to represent the seller in the
sale of the business, which means the broker is the agent of the
seller. Some states provide for a Transaction Agreement, which
means that the broker doesn’t represent anyone, nor is he or she
an agent of either the seller or the buyer. Regardless of the
terminology, the purpose is the same. The seller wants to sell
the business, and the business broker is supposed to sell it.
The agreement essentially should cover the following areas:
• The employment
• What is being sold
• The selling price
• A specified time period
• What the seller agrees to do
• What the business broker/ intermediary agrees to do
• What the broker’s fee is and when it is to be paid
• Safety provisions protecting the parties
• Any miscellaneous provisions
All agreements should be read carefully. However, a seller must
sell the business and pay a brokerage fee only if a buyer is
procured who is ready, willing, and able to buy the business at
exactly the price and terms stated in the listing agreement.
Professional business brokers almost always expect a seller to
agree to an exclusive listing. This means that the business
broker you chose to work with will be the only one handling the
sale of the business. If the business sells during the listing
term, the business broker is entitled to the fee outlined in the
agreement. Most agreements also provide that if any prospective
buyer who was introduced to the business by the broker during
the term, buys the business for a period of time (usually a
year) after the listing period, the broker is still entitled to
the fee.
The reason for exclusivity is that business broker professionals
spend a lot of time, effort, and money in attempting to sell a
business. The bulk of the business brokerage firm’s income is
earned only when – and if – the business sells. Professionals
avoid working with a seller who is not serious about selling or
who doesn’t have confidence in the business intermediary they
have chosen to sell it. Sellers should expect the brokerage firm
they have selected to do everything necessary to sell their
business at the highest possible price.
I hope you enjoyed this newsletter. If I can assist you in any way in a decision to buy a business or sell your business, please call or email me directly
Louis R Sauer
President
