Risk & Business Magazine McFarlan Rowlands Fall 2016 | Page 29

MAKING YOUR COMPANY SELLABLE “The big thing to remember when selling your business is that if it’s not valuable to you, it won’t likely be valuable to someone else either, especially if the entrepreneur can’t step out upon sale”. factors that determine whether--and for how much--a private company can be sold. Do it right and you get to walk away a rich person. Don’t ignore any of these key factors. 1. FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE Tech deals like Zappos and Whatsapp cloud the mind from conventional thinking about business. Those deals are the exception, not the rule. Warrillow points out most companies are valued on how much they sell and, even more importantly, how much profit they make. Warrillow also explains that smaller companies are discounted for higher risk. So maybe bigger is better. 2. GROWTH POTENTIAL Warrillow gives great insight on how your rate of growth can impact value. Investors are trying to buy something that has the ability to scale. Otherwise there is little upside to them to pay a high price or even be interested. Warrillow outlines several creative ways to grow and expand. 3. OVERDEPENDENCE Having a giant client is great for fast growth, but when they are more than 15 percent of your business, that can be a red flag for a purchaser. There is a risk of attrition when a company is sold, and if the big player leaves they may take all the profit with them. No need to drop the big customer, just get more of them. 4. CASH FLOW If a buyer has to invest more than the purchase price to make the company achieve maximum value, they are going to discount the sale. Warrillow says the highest value companies are those that can finance their own growth internally. Hoard that cash and grow steadily. Focus on cash management and efficiency to get top dollar. 5. RECURRING REVENUE John Warrillow has been a recurring revenue evangelist ever since he first took the stage. Customers who have to renew save on cost of acquisition and stick around longer. Companies with recurring revenue and low attrition provide bankable models that attract buyers with deep pockets looking for long term, low risk ventures. If you currently eat what you kill, find a way to make your product or service renewable and addictive. 6. UNIQUE VALUE PROPOSITION A commodity business will bring low value due to low margins. Only competitive advantage can warrant premium pricing and create barriers to entry. If your competitors can’t match your differentiation without investing time, money and effort, buyers will pay more to have your edge. 7. CUSTOMER SATISFACTION Any business with unhappy customers will be in decline in short order. Warrillow is an advocate of using Fred Reichheld’s Net Promoter Score to demonstrate you