Looking Good: A Record Breaking 2017 – BizBuySell’s Third Quarter 2017 Insight Report

The small business market is booming, record setting booming, with this year on pace to see the highest number of small businesses bought and sold in the last decade.

 

 

Closed transactions are up 24% from the same time last year and small businesses are performing well, which may be a contributing factor to the increased numbers of sales and the higher sales prices. Median revenue of sold businesses is up 11.2 percent from the third quarter of last year, and the number of active listings is up 6.7% over last year. This increase of options means better choices for buyers looking to enter the world of business ownership.

 

 

Not only are businesses selling for higher prices, they’re selling faster too. The median time to closing fell 14.6% from last year – an average of only 146 days. This might mean that the confidence of buyers in the small business market and the motivation of sellers to sell while the market is good are coming together over the negotiating table.

 

 

The hottest industry sector? Service. Restaurants, in particular, saw a 22.2% increase in median revenue for those businesses that sold in the third quarter. The number of service industry transactions was also up – 26% when compared to last year.

 

What could be driving these impressive market gains? The economy is doing well in general, so small businesses are seeing good numbers. This coupled with the possibility of fewer regulations and a decrease in taxes could be giving the market a push.

 

What does this mean for you? Sell while the selling is good. The factors contributing to this booming small business market – like the possibility of tax reforms and the raging economy – may falter and affect what you can get for your business if you wait to list. A boom is always followed by a bust, so get the biggest return on your business investment by riding the wave at the top – not the bottom.

 

Want to know what businesses like yours are currently selling for? Contact us today.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Don’t Hate Investor Visas: How Misinformation Hurts The Small Business Community

Investor Visas have been in the news, and it isn’t pretty.

 

They’ve been described in numerous ways, the least flattering of which is as a way for the corrupt and evil to write a check and waltz across our borders. Nothing could be further from the truth. This aspect of our immigration system might soon be facing a major rewrite – one that could effectively end the path for foreign entrepreneurs looking to come to the United States.

 

I own a small business and none of my employees are immigrants. Why should I care?

 

If you are a small business owner who doesn’t feel like they have a dog in the immigration race, it might be tempting to just tune all of the noise out. It might also be tempting to believe all of the media hype concerning our Visa system and the apparent ease with which a foreign national with terrible intentions can just buy their way into the country. Sticking your head in the sand or taking at face value everything that streams across a news feed are both enormous mistakes when it comes to the future of your business and the future of the U.S. small business economy.

 

 

 

The truth about investor Visas? They are a continuation of our proud national heritage. With very few exceptions, everyone who is a United States citizen can look back into their own lineage and find an immigrant who came to this country and worked hard to build a better life for their family. They created the main street businesses that kept communities strong, drove the industrial revolution and brought the prosperity that made us into a world power. In more recent generations immigrant entrepreneurs have been innovators, creating the tech-based businesses we all know and use. Cutting off the ability for the next generation of foreign born entrepreneurs to come to the United States will kill the vital legacy that made us great in the first place. Eliminating foreign born entrepreneurs also removes from the pool a large number of future business buyers – buyers today’s business owners will need when the time comes to sell.  

 

What about immigrants who just buy their way into the country? How do we know they aren’t “bad actors”?

 

Investor Visas used by foreign entrepreneurs come with an enormous amount of vetting and red tape. There are applications that require an immigration attorney’s help, one-on-one interviews at American consulates, seemingly limitless disqualifiers that can end the process for a foreign investor before it even begins. In most cases you have to have a large amount of capital to invest and your status within the United States could remain in perpetual limbo as you must reapply for some investor Visas every few years. In some cases you also have to prove that you are creating specific numbers of jobs for U.S. citizens. This wouldn’t be an easy or sensible road for any “bad actors” to take, especially considering that a tourist/business visitor Visa (of which this country issued 1,106,723 in 2016) is so much easier to obtain.

 

Investor Visas are a good thing. They bring us the people we want and need – driven entrepreneurs and innovators. Small business owners who want the small business economy to continue to thrive should encourage, not resent, the investor Visa process.

 

Have questions about the process by which foreign-born entrepreneurs can buy a business in the United States? Want to know if your business would be open to this pool of buyers? Contact us today.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Selling A Seasonal Business? How To Make Your Books Look Good

If you live in a seasonal area, then you understand the flow of money in your business community.

 

For instance, the many beach communities of southwest Florida are completely dead in the summer when the heat soars – but come October when the weather up north starts to turn cold – it feels like the population multiplies by a factor of five. Restaurants that had four tables total on a July Saturday night now have a two hour wait on a December Tuesday.

 

 

Businesses in seasonal communities understand the ebb and flow throughout the year – working incredibly hard during the peak months in order to survive the bleak off-season.

 

When the time comes to sell a business like this, it can be challenging to show a potential buyer who isn’t from a seasonal community how well your business is doing when it looks like you teeter on the brink of bankruptcy for half of the year. How do you communicate your seasonal books without scaring buyers away, especially buyers from an area very different from yours?

 

For starters, you need to have legible books they can look at. A huge box of crumpled receipts shoved under your desk is not going to communicate your seasonal business success. Putting your books in order will help immensely in showing your business in the best light possible. Decent financial records will also help you demonstrate that while your business does terribly in the off-season, the other half of the year more than makes up for the slow times. The ability to show this seasonal fluctuation year-over-year, and the ability to show the business continued to grow year-over-year amid those seasonal fluctuations will put a buyer’s mind at ease.

 

Another valuable tool for properly communicating seasonal fluctuations is an experienced business broker who knows seasonal businesses. They will be instrumental in getting buyers from a non-seasonal area to understand your business and the numbers you generate throughout the year.

 

The important message here is you can absolutely show the strength of your seasonal business, you just need good books and some experienced help.

 

Are you the owner of a seasonal business who needs help making their books look good to an out-of-town buyer? Do you want to know how to impress upon buyers the actual health of your business when they’re looking at it in the slow season? Ask us! Leave any questions or comments here and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Selling Your Business? How To Survive The Low-Ball Offer

If you are trying to sell your business, you may already realize what a stressful process this can be. You have to assemble all of your records, answer a constant stream of questions, deal with new requests from prospective buyers – all while trying to maintain your business in good working order.

 

You’ve worked hard at your business – invested time, money and energy. To you, the value is more than money. The business is an extension of your life.

 

The problem is, to any buyer walking through the door your business is just one of many, and the numbers on the bottom line mean more than anything else.

 

What happens when these vastly different views of a business collide? In some instances the result is a low-ball offer, where a buyer makes an offer so low a seller won’t even consider it, and oftentimes makes a seller unwilling to even negotiate with that buyer.

 

The low-ball offer is just a reality of having your business on the market, so if you are trying to sell your business, you’d better be ready to get one – and also be ready to keep your composure if it happens.

 

Many sellers see a low offer as a personal offense, but you have to remember that the only person who sees your business the way you do – is you.

 

You really shouldn’t be insulted by low-ball offers. Be happy you got an offer at all. The reality of the business market is your final selling price will be somewhere between your initial listing price and the first offer from a buyer. If you listed your business at the absolute rock-bottom price you are willing to take, that is a mistake, as is demanding that you get a full-asking price or there’s no deal. You need to be realistic and you also need to have thick skin.

 

 

Any offer, even a ridiculously low one, can be a starting point for negotiations.

 

Low-ball offers are typically from two kinds of buyers. The first are tire-kickers who low-ball sellers just to see if they can get a business for a steal. Most of the time this type of buyer never actually buys a business, they just shop around indefinitely. You will know if a low-ball offer is from this kind of buyer if the number is obscenely low, if the reason for the low offer is from way out in left field or if they have no explanation for the low offer at all.

 

The second type of buyer who makes a very low offer is a buyer who is looking for a deal. They low-balled you on the value of your business because they feel that you need to prove your asking price, but they want to get the deal rolling. For this type of buyer it is important to remember that your listing price is a jumping off point, not a non-negotiable price tag.

 

No matter what kind of offer comes in, consider it a step in the right direction. You will quickly be able to figure out if a buyer is serious or is just shopping around.

 

Are you a seller who wants to know how to handle a low-ball offer? Do you have questions about what makes an offer reasonable or how to begin negotiations? Ask us! Please leave us a comment or question here.

 

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

http://www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Is It Worth It To Wait? Deciding The Best Time To Sell

Should I wait?

 

If you own your own business and have thought about selling in the near future, you are probably watching the markets fluctuate with apprehension – especially if you are a business owner who survived the downturn of 2008. Business is booming right now, and your business is probably doing better than it has in years – but business was booming in 2007 too.

 

It can be excruciatingly difficult to pull the trigger and sell your business when there’s no real way to know if you’re leaving a bunch of money on the table because you’ve sold too soon. The healthy state of the economy is driving up the sale prices of businesses every quarter, but we all know we’re closing in on the top of that upward trend.

 

What to do? Sell now while the selling is good. Business owners that didn’t go under after the 2008 slide had to take what they could get from the tiny pool of buyers who still had capital to buy a business. Many scrambled to find buyers in their industry when there were no buyers to be had. If you leave some money on the table because you sold six months or a year before the market reached it’s peak you can comfort yourself by knowing that you didn’t have to sell after the tide turned and prices slid.

 

Taxes and regulations for business and industry are likely going to change, but only the future knows how those changes will affect small businesses. The economy is booming, and has been for quite a while. Housing prices are at bubble-like levels again, and many investment groups have slowed their rate of investing. A downturn is in the tea leaves – so if your tentative plan is to sell in the next five years – sell now.

 

Are you a business owner who is on the fence about selling? Would you like to know what businesses like yours are currently selling for? Ask us! Please feel free to leave any questions or comments here and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

www.InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

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Your Kids, Your Family Business And The Future

Owning a small business is often a family affair, where children grow up working in the family business and sometimes take over the reins when mom and dad decide to retire.

 

 

While this idyllic business model might seem smart and straightforward, some aspects of your children’s role in your business can be detrimental to the financial return you get on that business if you ever decide to sell.

 

Here are three things to consider when you think about your kids and the future of your business:

 

Making Your Kids Work For Free

Having your children as staff members who only earn tips might save you on your payroll today, but it can dramatically affect the value of your business. Any potential payroll for any underpaid or unpaid staff will need to be adjusted and will affect the amount a buyer is willing to offer. This also goes for family business situations where family members earn way more than fair market value for the job they do. The solution? Pay family members a fair market wage for the work that they do today so you can keep future buyers from taking that amount off the top.

 

Only Trusting Your Kids To Do The Job Right

It can be difficult to find good employees, so some small business owners make their children responsible for almost everything. Leaning so heavily on your children can make your life easier today, but if your children have no intention of taking over the business when you retire their massive role in the business can cause major issues with a new owner.  If you sell, your kids probably won’t continue on as employees because their loyalty is to you, not to the business itself. This will leave a massive void in the business that a potential buyer will see as a massive issue. How can you solve this problem? Keeping your entire staff, or at least some key players, cross-trained in everything that makes the business run will help with the transition to a new owner.

 

Using Your Children As Your Only Retirement Plan

More often than they should, family businesses that get handed down to children falter or fail completely. Why? The drive and passion you have for your business is yours alone. As we said before, in many cases children are loyal to their parents, not to the business itself. If your kids don’t want your business but do want to continue the entrepreneurial legacy of your family, a good path can be to sell your business and then use that money to invest in a business that your kids are actually passionate about.

 

Do you own a family business where one (or all three) of these considerations might become an issue down the road? Do you have questions about how payroll adjustments are calculated in negotiations? Protect the future return on your business investment and contact us today.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@infinitybusinessbrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

https://infinitybusinessbrokers.com

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Stay On The Fence – Why Sellers Should Keep Politics Out Of Their Business

If you are considering selling your business, you need to do everything you can to make sure you are putting your business in the best light. Fix broken equipment, put your financial records in order, revamp your web presence, expand your marketing – it’s a long list. A first impression with potential buyers can make or break a deal, so here’s an addition to the list you may not have considered:

You need to keep your political opinions to yourself.

 

 

It can be very tempting in this highly charged and politically divisive climate to wear your political views on your sleeve, but if you own a business and are considering selling any time in the near future – you just can’t. 

 

Wait, don’t business leaders take a political stand all the time? Why can’t I?

 

Sure, some big companies take a political stance on issues they consider important (think Starbucks and hiring refugees, for example), but what these companies have that you don’t is an enormous customer base and media exposure enough to bring on new patrons who believe in their political ideology.

 

As a small business you can’t afford to potentially alienate half of your client base or to potentially offend half of the buyers who come in the door. Even if a buyer agrees with your political opinions, how does putting your opinions ahead of the best interest of the business look to someone who is about to write you a very big check? If you’ve been willing to drive off half of your revenue, what other risks have you taken that could potentially affect the next owner and their ability to remain profitable?

 

Keep personal political opinions to yourself and only share them with your non-business circle. If you share something political on social media, make sure it cannot be accessed by anyone who is a potential client or customer. Keep political statements off of your billboards, out of your ads and off your website. Lastly, don’t bring up your political affiliation or political beliefs in meetings with potential buyers. 

 

The welfare of your business should be your first priority, no matter how angry politics makes you. Put your neutral business-self in front and leave the politics at home.

 

Do you have questions about what buyers consider when they look at potential businesses to buy? Feel free to leave any questions or comments here and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@infinitybusinessbrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

https://infinitybusinessbrokers.com

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Don’t Be That Guy – Why Confidentiality Is Important To Business Buyers Too

New buyers hate confidentiality.

 

We tell new buyers why confidentiality is important, but they are still frustrated by having to sign non-disclosure forms, having to wait to find out the physical location of a business and by having to visit businesses by appointment and then only after hours. We get it, it is tedious, but it is also extremely important.

 

Invariably we come across a buyer who deals with their frustration by breaking all the rules – by waltzing into a business during business hours and demanding the employees produce the owner so they can talk about the listing price, by telling their neighbors and friends what businesses they have toured – and confidentiality is suddenly out the window.

 

When you first enter the business marketplace as a buyer, the process by which you gain access to information about the businesses that are on the market might seem ridiculous at first, but those protections benefit you too.

 

When a business goes up for sale, confidentiality needs to stay in place.

 

What do we mean by that? We mean that the only people who should know that the business is for sale are the seller, the business brokers and attorneys involved and vetted buyers who have signed the appropriate non-disclosure documents. No one else should have access to that information.

 

“Why? I’m trying to make a major decision here, I need access to the business to see if I want to buy it or not.”

 

Yes, you do need access to information, and you absolutely will gain that accessbut it needs to be done carefully to maintain confidentiality.

 

What can happen if confidentiality is breached? Clients go to a competitor, employees quit and take their regular customers with them, vendors cancel contracts and the community assumes that the business is for sale because they are moments away from having to close the doors. If you are trying to buy a business, you don’t want to take the reins in the middle of this confidentiality crisis. You want the business to be in good shape and in good standing with the community the day you take over as owner.

 

An important note here – the impacts of a confidentiality breach aren’t for the business and the seller alone. If you caused the breach, you can be sure that the legal repercussions included in your non-disclosure agreements will absolutely be enforced.

 

How can a buyer ensure the health of the business they are trying to buy? Be patient, and keep the information you learn about businesses currently for sale to yourself. Don’t be “that guy” who causes severe upheaval in someone else’s business. If everyone plays by the rules, businesses stay protected and buyers end up with businesses in great shape.

 

Are you a buyer who is frustrated by confidentiality? Do you have questions about why confidentiality is so important? Please feel free to leave a comment or question here, and we would be happy to assist you with your business buying questions.

 

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@infinitybusinessbrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

https://infinitybusinessbrokers.com

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They’re Watching – 3 Ways Business Sellers Can Make A Good Impression

If you are in the market to sell your business, you might feel that your business speaks for itself.

 

 

The financials, the location – they will tell buyers all they need to know if they are considering taking your place as the owner.

 

Guess what? Buyers are also taking a long hard look at you. Your actions will speak volumes about the way you run your business and what they can expect from you throughout the sale process. Here are three things you should try to do – to not only gain the trust of a potential buyer, but to put your business in the best possible light:

 

Be honest.

About everything. Sure, every business has a skeleton or two in the closet, but trying to hide or gloss-over these issues when in negotiations with a buyer will make you look like a liar in the end. During the due diligence process, buyers get a chance to dig into your business, so anything you try to keep from them will eventually come out. If you are honest about any issues right out of the gate, most buyers will be willing to deal with those issues. If you try to keep a buyer in the dark, the inevitable unveiling of any issues will probably kill your deal.

 

Don’t be a disorganized mess, even if you really are.

If organization isn’t really your thing, then you need to give yourself an organizational make-over before you get in front of buyers. Your business broker will be able to help you figure out what needs a good once-over, like your records. You want buyers to be able to read and understand your books, as your financial records are what a buyer uses to determine what they are willing to pay for your business. A big box of jumbled sales slips is not going to impress anyone.

 

Follow through.

If you tell your buyer you will meet them, show up and don’t cancel last minute. We see deals fall apart because sellers mentally check-out long before the closing table and start blowing off meetings and phone calls with potential buyers. If you are this cavalier with a buyer, then how cavalier have you been in your relationships with the community or vendors – relationships that a new owner is going to rely on? Show that you are a man (or woman) of your word, and you will be speaking volumes about the value of the reptation of your business.

 

Are you thinking about selling your business, but your records are a disorganized mess? Do you have more questions about what buyers are watching for? Please feel free to leave us a comment or question here, and we will be happy to help.

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@infinitybusinessbrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

https://infinitybusinessbrokers.com

 

 

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Make More Money When You Sell Your Business: 2 Surprising Ways To Improve Your Bottom Line

 

Anyone who owns a business wants to make more money than they already do, but adding to your bottom line becomes crucial when you are considering putting your business on the market – now or in the future. A growing business will always be more appealing to a buyer than a business that isn’t, and surprisingly simple changes can help boost your numbers in this critical time.

 

It might seem obvious that one of the easiest ways you can boost your numbers is by cutting costs, but some costs happen so routinely that they may not even occur to you as an owner. For instance, what do you pay for your merchant services? These subscription-type services are something your business needs, but if you take a closer look you might find you are paying far too much. Services like these often contain hidden and unnecessary fees – and if you signed a contract for service you could be hit with a hefty cancellation fee if you find something better and want to switch. Do a bit of research to see if all of your recurring expenses are giving you the most for your money.

 

A second surprising way you can improve your bottom line is by keeping your inventory in check. How much inventory do you have on hand? What inventory control mechanisms do you have in place? Many small businesses don’t think they need inventory management, they just order new inventory when something runs low. Neglecting your inventory can have disastrous effects on your bottom line, however, because excess inventory eats up your cash. Excess inventory, especially inventory that probably won’t sell, can even decrease the amount of money you are able to get for your business. Keeping proper tabs on what you’re buying will keep you from ending up in a situation where you are sitting on a pile of inventory that won’t ever sell – and business buyers won’t want.

 

Cutting costs by minimizing unnecessary expenses and streamlining your inventory process can all add value to your business in the critical time before you sell. Even if selling is on the distant horizon, these types of changes will at least help your bottom line – so why not?

 

Have you thought about selling in the near future and have questions about the process? Would you like to know more about boosting your bottom line in the run up to a business sale? Contact us today and we would be happy to help.

 

 

 

Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@infinitybusinessbrokers.com
12995 South Cleveland Avenue, Suite 249
Fort Myers, FL 33907

https://infinitybusinessbrokers.com

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Michael Monnot

941.518.7138
Mike@InfinityBusinessBrokers.com

9040 Town Center Parkway
Lakewood Ranch, FL 34202




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