We recently facilitated a business sale for a long-term client in south-west Victoria.
The client operated an industrial services and utilities business that had been operating for over 20 years.
The business had about 20 staff, a turnover of around $5 million and earnings before interest, tax and depreciation in the order of $650,000 per annum.
The client had engaged us several years earlier to conduct a valuation on the business, in preparation for a potential exit in the future.
They weren’t at retirement age, but had developed other business interests and were considering transitioning to a different industry to pursue them.
At the time we valued the business at $2.4 million.
About 12 months later the client came back and asked us to officiate a sale process.
We confirmed the value at that stage in a range between $1.9m and $2.4m.
We then commenced a detailed marketing program and identified a number of parties interested in the opportunity.
In the ensuing months there were at least four parties who showed considerable interest in the business.
However only two of those made offers for the business and their offers ranged from $1.3m to $1.6m – substantially below what we believed was the fair market price for the business.
Despite various negotiations, we weren’t able to get those parties up to the price range we anticipated the market should be paying.
The reasons they gave for offering in this price range included:
There were other factors encountered, including the inability of some interested parties to raise finance beyond the base value of the business’ plant and equipment. As a result they were unable to bid up strongly to cover the full going concern value of the enterprise.
Twelve months passed.
Eighteen months passed.
There was still interest in the business, but it was very hard to see a deal being done that met our initial expectations of market value.
As a result we spoke to our client and said:
“We have a couple of options.
“We appraised the business at $1.9m–$2.4m and we still believe that, technically, it is reasonable value for the business given its performance.
“However the market is telling us otherwise.
“Do we meet the market and try to repackage the pricing and other offerings, or do we sit and wait for the market to catch up to our expectations?”
This sort of choice is difficult and ultimately comes down to the vendor’s motivations in terms of timing.
You can set a price for a business that might be regarded as overpriced today, but with time the market can catch up. In other cases, time may be against you and the market never catches up!
Our vendor was quite open to the market feedback we had extracted from the interested parties.
As a result we repackaged the business offering and relaunched the sale process.
Key factors of this new, repackaged offering were:
Long story short, the business is now sold and the deal offered above was the end deal that delivered the sale.
On face value, the price received was very different to the starting number.
However the vendor was happy to achieve a sale at an acceptable price in the shorter term, rather than wait for a possible sale at a higher price, down the track.
The vendor was able to move on and take up some of the new opportunities they were focused on.
There are a number of lessons from this experience:
1. Engage a proactive advisor: As a vendor, make sure you have an advisor who is actively seeking feedback on how the market is considering your business sale opportunity.
2. Be open to feedback: You don’t always have to change as a result, but make sure you at least listen and be open to market feedback.
3. Be flexible: Take advantage of opportunities to align your offering with what the market is expecting and interested in.
A little flexibility in your offering is often the difference between doing a deal and not achieving a sale.
This is particularly the case where your business is operating in a tough market environment, or the timing is problematic from a broader economic perspective.
4. Make sure your advisor is flexible, too: As advisors, we also considered market feedback to help calibrate our views on the value of the business with the market’s view.
I’ve often said timing is the difference between doing a good deal and not doing a deal at all; sometimes the market moves faster than our technical view on what a business is worth.
5. Understand that selling a business is a dynamic process: When selling a business, you don’t just get your valuation, list the business for sale at that price, and away it goes.
Selling is a dynamic process, which is why we encourage vendors – as part of their sale preparation and planning activities – to think about their negotiation framework.
You need to work with your advisor upfront to understand what your negotiation framework might be, in the event of market feedback that requires you to be flexible in your approach to a sale.