Monthly Archives: May 2011

May 26, 2011

10 milestones on your journey to building a sellable company

It was my wife’s birthday yesterday. She’d kill me if I told you how old she turned but suffice it to say, it was a biggie (there is a zero on the end).

In an effort to preempt melancholy, I made my wife her favourite breakfast of all time: an egg McMuffin complete with a happy face made of HP sauce:

Kicking off a milestone birthday right

Finding English Muffins in this part of France is no easy task but I was determined to get this milestone birthday off to a good start. Which got me thinking, about milestones. Why is it that we celebrate birthdays or the start of a new year? On paper, it’s just another day, right? But milestones give us an excuse to hit the pause button and remind us of what we have accomplished, all the things we have to be grateful for and gives us permission to dream a little about the future.

So what are the milestones that you’re celebrating on your journey to building a valuable, sellable company?

If I may, here are a couple I think you should consider commemorating.

1. The day you go “all in”

Most of us start businesses while doing something else. You plan your business, maybe make a couple of sales but, as long as you have a job or a few credits left to get, you’re still on the fence. Then one day you decide to quit everything else and commit 100% to getting your business off the ground. Now that’s a day worth celebrating –  not for what you have accomplished, but for the courage it takes to jump off the fence and the adventure that lies ahead.

2. First time someone (or something) makes a sale

Making a sale as a business owner is a bitter sweet feeling. The sense of triumph is tainted by the realization that your business is dependent on you showing up. But the day that your salesperson walks into your office with a signed contract or someone hits the “buy” button on your website without you having to nudge them is a glorious moment in time.

3. A New home for your company

There is something special about moving into new space. A lot of business owners are creative souls at their core and a new environment to work in usually means you’re growing and investing in the future. Definitely a time to throw a party.

4. The million dollar mark

Hitting a million dollars in revenue is a significant achievement. Of the 27 million businesses in the United States, roughly 3%  do more than a million dollars in sales. You’re in an elite group – celebrate.

5. The first shot over the bow from an acquirer

The first time someone approaches you about buying your business is a special milestone. It’s usually an informal advance, maybe over lunch or at a trade show. I remember the first time I was approached by a big company who wanted to buy my marketing agency. The partner in charge of business development asked me to lunch and, once the plates had been cleared,  asked me if I would ever consider selling my company. I asked him what he was offering and he made a vague reference to “ten times”. I thought ten times was a very generous offer for a service business until he revealed he was referring to ten times net income after tax and that most of it would be made available on a five year earn out. While I passed on the offer, a little part of me was flattered to have been approached.

6. One million dollars of EBITDA

While you don’t need to have a million dollars of pre tax profit to sell your business, it is an important milestone to shoot for because it opens the door to a wider range of buyers. Some strategic acquirers won’t consider a business will less than a million dollars of Earnings Before Interest Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA). Also, financial buyers (e.g. private equity companies) have started to come “down market” and some will now consider businesses with a million dollars in EBITDA. You may not want to sell to a financial buyer, but having another offer at the table creates competition for your business.

7. First management team meeting

Cobbling together a senior team is a slow process but eventually you realize that your business is no longer all in your head and that other people have (and want) a say in things. Sitting down with your management team for the first time is a moment to savour – you’ve built a business capable of attracting senior talent and you have taken a giant step towards being sellable.

8. LOI / term sheet / Expression of Interest

Another big milestone is the first time you get a written offer to buy your business. More than empty chatter over lunch, this is a formal document where someone validates – in writing – that your life’s work has value to someone other than you. There’s still a long road ahead before closing day, but you deserve to celebrate.

9. Closing day

You need to down an entire bottle of your favourite bubbly for surviving the due diligence period which is a little bit like how I imagine a stoning to feel.

10. Your last day

In my last company, I remember the final day like it was yesterday. I had ridden my bike to work so when it was time to go, I put on my biking clothes, said my goodbyes, and road off down the street. The spring air has never felt so fresh, my bike had never felt so light. Freedom is a feeling to behold.

Out of interest, what milestones are you celebrating?

May 12, 2011

How 1 number can double (or cut in half) the value of your business

About a year before I sold my last business, I started working with a friend — let’s call him Rick — to help me prepare my company for sale. Rick had sold his own business and had gone on to lead M&A for a public company.  He had seen the guts of a lot of deals.

Our first few conversations were frustrating because I wanted to focus on how to maximize the multiple someone would pay for my business and Rick always responded in the same way:

“Multiple of what?”

“Multiple of earnings of course” would be my response, annoyed because I knew he was acting dumb.

Over time, I came to appreciate what Rick was talking about. It took me about a year — call me a slow learner — but I finally got it. So in this post, I’ll try to pass on Rick’s wisdom to you.

A multiple of course is M&A parlance for the multiple of your Earnings Before Interest Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA) that you’ll fetch for your business when you go to sell it. Smaller businesses use something called Sellers Discretionary Income (SDI). Like fishing stories, cashed-out entrepreneurs often brag about the multiple they got for their business leading owners to a distorted view of what their business is worth.

Like a golf handicap or a marathon time, it’s tempting to fixate on getting a certain multiple for your business. It’s natural to want an objective measure for the value of your business and your multiple looks clean and simple to calculate.

But just like any other number on a spreadsheet, multiples can be manipulated.

Let’s say you’re having lunch with a potential acquirer and you ask her how much she thinks your business is worth. To answer your question accurately, she would likely do a discounted cash flow analysis.  Instead of making your eyes roll with complex financial equations, she responds by saying  “four times”. That sounds like a straightforward offer but, as the example below illustrates, there is a lot of room for interpretation:

Time

Let’s say you expect your business is going to generate $500,000 of EBITDA for the year ending December 31, 2011. Therefore, you might assume her offer of “four times” would equate to $2,000,000.

However, most buyers would argue that they’re going to peg their offer on your most recent completed financials.  If you only did $300,000 in EBITDA last year, then her “four times” offer now amounts to $1,200,000 – almost half of what you thought.

What’s more, some buyers will take a blended approach and average the last three year’s EBITDA. Assuming you just broke even in 2009, and you can get them to include your current year forecast, your average would be $266,000 and their “four times” offer is half of what you were expecting.

“Normalized expenses” – the market rate effect

Not only can an offer of four times vary on when you calculate EBITDA,  the price you get for your business will also go up or down depending on how you keep your books.  A buyer will want to “normalize” your earnings which means they will want to figure out how your business would perform if you stopped using it as a tax shelter.

For example, you might pay yourself a below market salary to minimize your personal tax bill. An acquirer will argue that, if they buy your business, they will have to install a manager with a market rate salary and will therefore recast your Profit and Loss statement with a fatter salary for the manager and corresponding lower EBITDA.  Therefore, if you’re paying yourself $100,000 a year but it would cost $200,000 a year to replace you, then your “normalized” EBITDA is going to be $400,000, not the $500,000 you told the buyer. Their “four times” offers will go down from $2,000,000 to $1,600,000 (4 x $400,000).

“Normalized expenses” – the piggybank effect

Normalization can work the other way too. Let’s say you’ve been running your business like a personal piggy bank (don’t worry, I won’t tell). Your spouse is on the payroll and the kitchen renovation you did at the house last year found its way on to your list of business expenses as an “office renovation”. You can argue to an acquirer that these costs should be deducted from your expenses when calculating EBITDA. So maybe, once you eliminate the piggy bank effect, you actually make more like $600,000 of EBITDA which means an offer of “four times” should garner more like $2,400,000.

Hard assets

When you’re talking about multiples you also have to take into consideration any hard assets. If your motel is generating $500,000 a year and you get offered “four times”, $2,000,000 may sound like a fair price until you take into consideration the land your motel is sitting on (that you own) is worth $1,000,000.

Working capital

Sometimes buyers will offer you an abnormally large multiple only to take it all away with an overly stingy working capital calculation. Working capital is the money you need to leave in your business at closing. If you’re able to pull out $200,000 in excess cash based on the working capital calculation a buyer proposes in their offer, you’re putting an extra $200,000 in your jeans even though the multiple the buyer is offering has not changed.

Fully loaded

Some buyers casually refer to a multiple they would pay including an earn out. For example, let’s say for a business generating $500,000 in EBITDA an acquirer offers $2,000,000 at closing with another $1,000,000 in consideration available if certain performance targets are met in the future. Most would agree that the acquirer is offering “four times” based on the cash changing hands at closing. But a sly buyer, looking to optically inflate their generosity, may choose to characterize their offer as “six times” basing the multiple on the full price paid if the earn out is achieved. That’s a big if.

Savvy buyers know that we entrepreneurs get fixated on getting a certain multiple for our business and the smart buyers use our obsession to their advantage.

Before you agree to discuss a potential acquisition based on a certain “multiple”,  peel back the layers of the offer to understand the details.

Just curious, how else have you seen multiples manipulated?