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Flex Tax and Consulting Group (FTCG)

business valuation

3 Business Valuation Methods

How to determine what your business is worth

There are many reasons to have an up-to-date business valuation. For example:

  • You may need to sell the business due to retirement, health, divorce, or family reasons.
  • You may need debt or equity financing for expansion or due to cash flow problems. Potential financiers or investors will want to see that the business has sufficient worth.
  • You may be adding shareholders (or one or more shareholders may wish a buyout). In this case, the share value will need to determine.
Notes: Regardless of the reason, how much your business is worth depends on many factors. From the current state of the economy through your business’s balance sheet.

If for example, similar businesses in your area have recently sold. The value of your business will determine in large part by the selling price of the previous sales.

Get It Done Right

Business owners should not do their business valuation. This is too much like asking a mother how talented her child is. Neither the business owner nor the mother has the necessary distance to step back and answer the question objectively.

So to ensure that you set and get the best price when you’re selling a business, get a business valuation done by a professional. For instance, a Chartered Business Valuator (CBV). In the U.S., you can find Business Valuators through the website of the American Society of Appraisers (ASA). While in Canada you can find them through the Canadian Institute of Chartered Business Valuators.

A Business Valuator (or anyone vaulting your business such as an accountant) will use a variety of business valuation methods to determine a fair price for your business.

Three Business Valuation Methods

Asset-Based Approaches

These business valuation methods total up all the investments in the business. Asset-based business valuations can do on a going concern or a liquidation basis.

  • A going concern asset-based approach lists the business’s net balance sheet value of its assets and subtracts the value of its liabilities.
  • A liquidation asset-based approach determines the net cash that would received if all assets sell and liabilities pay off.

Using the asset-based approach to value a sole proprietorship is more difficult. In a corporation, all assets owned by the company and would normally included in the sale of the business. Assets in a sole proprietorship exist in the name of the owner and separating assets from business and personal use can be difficult.

For instance, a sole proprietor in a lawn care business may use various pieces of lawn care equipment for both business and personal use. A potential purchaser of the business would need to sort out which assets the owner intends to sell as part of the business.

Earning Value Approaches

These business valuation methods predicated on the idea. A business’s true value lies in its ability to produce wealth in the future. The most common earning value approach is Capitalizing Past earnings.

With this approach, a valuator determines an expected level of cash flow for the company using a company’s record of past earnings. Normalizing them for unusual revenue or expenses, and multiplies the expected normalized cash flows by a capitalization factor. The capitalization factor is a reflection of what rate of return a reasonable purchaser would expect on the investment. As well as a measure of the risk that the expected earnings will not achieve.

Discounted Future Earnings is another earning value approach to business valuation where instead of an average of past earnings, an average of the trend of predicted future earnings used and divided by the capitalization factor.

Any valuation of a service-oriented sole proprietorship needs to involve an estimate of the percentage of business that might be lost under a change of ownership.

Note that this can be mitigated in many cases, such as when a trusted family member (who may already be familiar with the client list) takes over the business.

Market Value Approaches

Market value approaches to business valuation attempt to establish the value of your business by comparing your business to similar businesses that have recently sold. This method is only going to work well if there are a sufficient number of similar businesses to compare.

Assigning a value to a sole proprietorship based on market value is particularly difficult. By definition, sole proprietorships are individually owned so attempting to find public information on prior sales of like businesses is not an easy task.

Although the Earning Value Approach is the most popular business valuation method, for most businesses, some combination of business valuation methods will be the fairest way to set a selling price.

Non-Competition Clauses Can Affect Valuation

Non-competition clauses frequently included in agreements for the sale of a business, particularly in cases where goodwill forms a significant part of the valuation. No one wants to purchase a business on the assumption that current customers will continue to patronize the business only to have the previous owner immediately join a competitor or open a similar business in the same area.

Non-competition clauses typically contain restrictions such as:

  • Forbidding the seller from opening up a competing business in the same geographical area
  • Attaching a time limit to competing for activity. For example, the buyer may request that the seller not engage in direct competition for five years

Non-competition agreements can be a thorny legal issue and are often the subject of court cases between buyers and sellers after a business is sold. From a legal standpoint, to be enforceable the restrictions placed in a non-competition clause must be clearly define and ‘reasonable’. Non-competition covenants can be nullify by the courts if it determined that enforcement places overly broad. Or unreasonable restrictions on the seller’s ability to continue his/her trade and earn a living. Non-competition clauses should review by the legal representatives of the buyer and seller before the sale of the business.

What About Franchise Businesses?

Franchise agreements generally define how a franchise can sell, and these vary by franchise vendor check your franchise contract. Some contracts stipulate that the franchisors will buy back your franchise directly for a fixed price. Others assist with valuation and locating a buyer, as it is in their best interest to make sure that the business continues uninterrupted.

The Best Choice May Be a Combination

Although the Earning Value Approach is the most popular business valuation method, for most businesses. Some combination of business valuation methods will be the fairest way to set a selling price. The first step is to hire a professional Business Valuator. He or she will be able to advise you on the best method. Or methods to use to set your price so you can successfully sell your business. If you have any question, please don’t be hesitate to contact Flex Tax and Consulting Group 

 

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