| Digg it UP |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Business > Management > Are You Ready to Sell Your Business |
|
Digg it UP - Are You Ready to Sell Your Business
You Can Create Your Own Job If... er performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong.Tired of working for someone else and believe you've got what it takes to create your own job?Maybe you can become your own boss by starting your own business.You can create your own job if:=> One: You believe in your products and servicesYou must believe in your products and services enough to be able to sell them consistently.You must be passionate, but at the same time develop acceptance. Passionate enough to put your heart and soul into your work, and into your marketing, and at the same time, accept that it will take time to develop your niche, and that until your business is established, you may be making less money th In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the marke You Are the First Enabler of the Learning Organization Make Sure You Understand Your Motivation for SellingThere is an inherent relation between learning and change. Think about how you changed when you grew up; during those years where you absorbed most new knowledge and experience is where you changed most. And then there comes a time where we tend to learn less. After we have finished school or graduated the urgency to learn more diminishes. We have reached a stadium – a status – where we are proud of what we know. We have become someone.What we learn from than on is "marginal;" the new knowledge and experience doesn't change the form of the old existing knowledge (base). We learn in a linear way adding more knowledge to the existing stock. We are able t Are you thinking about selling your business? This simple one-question quiz will help you to better understand your motivations behind this thought. A better understanding of your underlying motivations will help you make the right decision. Select the answer closest to your actual reason for thinking about selling your business. A. "I'm selling my business because of the money I will make on the sale". B. "I'm just tired and it's not fun anymore." C. "I have too many irons in the fire and can't keep up". D. "I'm ready to retire from owning my business". A. "I'm selling my business because of the money I will make on the sale". This is rarely a good answer if it is the primary answer. Most small businesses sell for 1 to 3 times yearly cash flow after adding back all owner salary, benefits, fringes, interest and amortization/ depreciation. Larger mid-sized businesses generally sell for to 3 to 7 times cash flow after deducting for the cost of executive management. While this sum can be significant, it is usually only a few times what you will make this year. Continuing on with the business will usually make you more money in the long run. On the other hand if you have an offer in hand from a public company at 20 times earnings, take it. B. "I'm just tired and it's not fun anymore." This question requires careful digging into the reasons for the thought. If you are really ready to get out of the business, then it is a good reason. If the real reason is that you are just tired under the current conditions and as soon as things improve you will get excited again, think long and hard. Often during the sales process your broker, intermediary, or other advisor will provide coaching to improve obvious defects in the business to make it more salable. Sometimes measurable improvements occur for the business. Suddenly the owner doesn't really want to sell now that things are moving again. This is a bad situation for everyone. If what you need is coaching to get out of a rut, hire a coach; don't sell your business. But, if you are really mentally done, sell the business before you completely run it into the ground. C. "I have too many irons in the fire and can't keep up". This is a valid reason to sell a business. It is a somewhat common occurrence for multi-location operators who either buy one too many sites or just end up with one or two sites that are too far away to manage. Often the constant attention you must diverte to an under-performing site will lower earnings of the whole chain. Just remember when pricing the underperforming site for sale that if your not selling much in terms of profits or revenues your not going to get much in terms of price. An old adage that applies here is that the first loss is the cheapest loss. In this instance be prepared to take your loss and move on. Another variation is the entrepreneur who has a new venture that is overtaking the older established business. Time constraints, management abilities, and variations in potential down stream financial returns may make it desirable to sell the older business. This can free up resources allowing better overall financial returns. D. "I'm ready to retire from owning my business". This is the king of reasons to sell. Just make sure its true. Selling a business often means walking away from it completely. Retiring sellers often want to think that they will be invited guests indefinitely. Usually once the nuances of the business are understood the new owner will want to take the reins and run the business his way. At settlement you will sign an enforceable non-compete that legally and ethically obligates you to leave your old client base behind. Another frequent issue is that the retiring owner has run the business "just to meet my needs" the last several years. In those instances the lower performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong. In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the market 10 Ways To Get Research Free And Smart 3 to 7 times cash flow after deducting for the cost of executive management. While this sum can be significant, it is usually only a few times what you will make this year.When faced with the challenge of trying to find out information on companies, industries and sectors with no starting point (and often through stealth), there can be a tendency to believe that this ‘new’ knowledge does not come free. Yes, sometimes the answer is to buy a pre-written report, or pay to subscribe to certain data sources; however, these rarely give you the full picture and can you justify spending what can be big money on a report that you can’t ‘try before you buy’? I find it satisfying to get this information free and often employ some of the methods outlined below, which unearth some gems that no report will give you. < Continuing on with the business will usually make you more money in the long run. On the other hand if you have an offer in hand from a public company at 20 times earnings, take it. B. "I'm just tired and it's not fun anymore." This question requires careful digging into the reasons for the thought. If you are really ready to get out of the business, then it is a good reason. If the real reason is that you are just tired under the current conditions and as soon as things improve you will get excited again, think long and hard. Often during the sales process your broker, intermediary, or other advisor will provide coaching to improve obvious defects in the business to make it more salable. Sometimes measurable improvements occur for the business. Suddenly the owner doesn't really want to sell now that things are moving again. This is a bad situation for everyone. If what you need is coaching to get out of a rut, hire a coach; don't sell your business. But, if you are really mentally done, sell the business before you completely run it into the ground. C. "I have too many irons in the fire and can't keep up". This is a valid reason to sell a business. It is a somewhat common occurrence for multi-location operators who either buy one too many sites or just end up with one or two sites that are too far away to manage. Often the constant attention you must diverte to an under-performing site will lower earnings of the whole chain. Just remember when pricing the underperforming site for sale that if your not selling much in terms of profits or revenues your not going to get much in terms of price. An old adage that applies here is that the first loss is the cheapest loss. In this instance be prepared to take your loss and move on. Another variation is the entrepreneur who has a new venture that is overtaking the older established business. Time constraints, management abilities, and variations in potential down stream financial returns may make it desirable to sell the older business. This can free up resources allowing better overall financial returns. D. "I'm ready to retire from owning my business". This is the king of reasons to sell. Just make sure its true. Selling a business often means walking away from it completely. Retiring sellers often want to think that they will be invited guests indefinitely. Usually once the nuances of the business are understood the new owner will want to take the reins and run the business his way. At settlement you will sign an enforceable non-compete that legally and ethically obligates you to leave your old client base behind. Another frequent issue is that the retiring owner has run the business "just to meet my needs" the last several years. In those instances the lower performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong. In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the marke Free Ebay Secrets - Success is to Sell - Successful is to Sell More ow that things are moving again.No doubt the reason you are doing a search for Free Ebay Secrets is because you have taken the first steps in running your own business and what is more you want it to be a success. Well you have taken the right route - because below are a few free tips on Ebay selling secrets. Success is to sell - Successful is to sell more.What you must not do is let you yourself hold you back in gaining the success you deserve. Selling is not a complicated mission, so take some free Ebay secrets then start as you mean to go on in running your very own business venture.Why pay out for help and guidance when easily to hand is free information on selling. Sale s This is a bad situation for everyone. If what you need is coaching to get out of a rut, hire a coach; don't sell your business. But, if you are really mentally done, sell the business before you completely run it into the ground. C. "I have too many irons in the fire and can't keep up". This is a valid reason to sell a business. It is a somewhat common occurrence for multi-location operators who either buy one too many sites or just end up with one or two sites that are too far away to manage. Often the constant attention you must diverte to an under-performing site will lower earnings of the whole chain. Just remember when pricing the underperforming site for sale that if your not selling much in terms of profits or revenues your not going to get much in terms of price. An old adage that applies here is that the first loss is the cheapest loss. In this instance be prepared to take your loss and move on. Another variation is the entrepreneur who has a new venture that is overtaking the older established business. Time constraints, management abilities, and variations in potential down stream financial returns may make it desirable to sell the older business. This can free up resources allowing better overall financial returns. D. "I'm ready to retire from owning my business". This is the king of reasons to sell. Just make sure its true. Selling a business often means walking away from it completely. Retiring sellers often want to think that they will be invited guests indefinitely. Usually once the nuances of the business are understood the new owner will want to take the reins and run the business his way. At settlement you will sign an enforceable non-compete that legally and ethically obligates you to leave your old client base behind. Another frequent issue is that the retiring owner has run the business "just to meet my needs" the last several years. In those instances the lower performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong. In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the marke From Management to Leadership the entrepreneur who has a new venture that is overtaking the older established business. Time constraints, management abilities, and variations in potential down stream financial returns may make it desirable to sell the older business. This can free up resources allowing better overall financial returns.We are all leaders; in our families, churches, temples, lodges, clubs, businesses and fraternal organizations.Have you ever heard of a Cult Manager? Yet where have we ever seen more loyalty, commitment and blind obedience? No such thing as a Religious Manager. There’s a huge difference between management and leadership. “Semantics”, you say. When I went to Hotel School I was taught how to be a Hotel Manager. I found that I had to become a Leader in order to gain the loyalty and commitment of my staff.When I first arrived to work as a manager in a hotel in Rhodesia, now Zimbabwe, the staff did the usual hotel staff things to test me. The cashier D. "I'm ready to retire from owning my business". This is the king of reasons to sell. Just make sure its true. Selling a business often means walking away from it completely. Retiring sellers often want to think that they will be invited guests indefinitely. Usually once the nuances of the business are understood the new owner will want to take the reins and run the business his way. At settlement you will sign an enforceable non-compete that legally and ethically obligates you to leave your old client base behind. Another frequent issue is that the retiring owner has run the business "just to meet my needs" the last several years. In those instances the lower performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong. In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the marke How Using Woven Polypropylene Bags To Store Stove Corn Can Heat Up Your Savings er performance is what the business sale price is going to be based on. If you as a retiring owner want the full price based on what the business could really do - generate those results yourself and sell the business when the numbers are strong.There is no question that in recent years energy costs have skyrocketed. And the price of burning fossil fuels is more than just financial: environmentalists the world over continually warn about the dangers of using non-renewable energy sources that pollute the environment when burned, global warming being just one of the major topics frequently discussed.With the cold winter months looming ahead, energy consumers have been looking for new ways to heat their homes that are easily renewed, will not pollute the environment, and will save them money. Enter stove corn, a new source of heat energy that involves burning shelled corn in specially-designed fu In general buyers are the least suspicious about dealing with retiring sellers. If the retiring owner has run the business well up to the end they can often get a small premium on their price. The Bottom Line There are thousands of variants to these four reasons to sell your business. Each variation comes down to the same underlying thought process-are you selling because of short term issues you will overcome or are you selling because it is time for you to get out? No one can answer this question for you but your future success and happiness may depend upon getting you it right. If business is slow in your industry but you are hanging on, and you like the business as much as another career, then don't sell. Get the marketing, accounting, coaching or other help to get out of your rut and make it to the good times. If you are completely burnt out, it really is time to retire, or you have much better things on the horizon then sell the business while it is still performing well in order to maximize your sales price.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Why Everyone That Provides A Service Should Sell A Product 7 Steps Any Solopreneur Can Use to Build a Winning Brand Little Known Pitfalls of Traditional Publishing Industry
|