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Making Sure the Price is Right

If you value your business, do not underestimate its significance

By Patrick Hanraty, Daedalus Financial Group

What is your business really worth? It's hard not to wonder. And if you don't know, you're flying blind.

A company's value is a crucial aspect of everyday business dealings. It helps you define your overall decisions, including how much you can borrow, whether you need an estate plan, and what to do when events sneak up on you.

In modern days, valuing a company is less of a guessing game and more of a science.

CASH RULES THE PRIVATE WORLD

First of all, forget about the Dow averages and concentrate on its current and expected free cash flow earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization, minus any capital spending necessary to bring the business up to par.

If you are selling your business any potential buyers will take present cash flow and project out five years, then set a price on those earnings that guarantees a decent return.

The price will vary according to the likelihood that earnings will grow, based on clues such as whether your revenue growth and margins have been consistent. Companies with clean balance sheets are less likely to face any price cuts than cyclical, debt-ridden prospects.

Certain intangibles also affect the value of a business. An industrial manufacturer with five solid customers is likely to fetch a lower price than a similar-size competitor with 50 outlets because its revenue source is less diversified.

A company that's big enough to go public might begin to trade at stock-like multiples of earnings or sales. And if you're selling to a “strategic” buyer - someone who'll use your company to expand his territory orproduct line - you might command a hefty premium.

SORTING THIS ALL OUT REQUIRES OUTSIDE HELP

Good choices are business brokers, certified valuation analysts (CPAs with more specialized training), or mergers-and-acquisition specialists.

However, be aware that each group has potential conflicts of interest - brokers, for instance, work on commission and thus might want to entice you to sell with a high estimation of price (bait-and-switch).

Before you sign with anyone, make sure they have some idea of what you do. Also, ask to review prior work to get a feel for terms, and get references from prior customers.

The valuation firm will be checking you out, too. It may start with a quick once-over of your company and its industry, comparing profitability, margins and growth before it decides if the listing fits its skills. If not, you may have to find another party.

After that, get ready to give your corporate laundry a thorough airing.Expect to produce several years' worth of financial statements and explain them in excruciating detail.

One caveat: The cold number-crunching of a valuation may not match what you'll get from a real bidder with fire in his eyes. Different buyers have different priorities. That's Business 101: An object's true worth is not what you want it to be, but what a customer is willing to pay.

Patrick Hanraty is the President of Daedalus Financial Group, a subsidiary of DVIRC, a full-service consulting firm in Philadelphia, PA. Patrick can be reached at phanraty@DVIRC.org.