What is my Business Worth?

Fair Market Value – The price at which a willing buyer and willing seller would transact without pressure, both fully informed.
Intrinsic Value – The value investors would place on stock.
Fair Value – Legal standards often applied in contexts like divorce.
Investment or Strategic Value – The value specific to certain buyers, which may exceed fair market value.
Asset Approach This method calculates your business’s assets minus liabilities, using techniques like book value or asset accumulation. However, this approach often doesn’t reflect the true value of an ongoing profitable business.
Market Approach Similar to real estate comps, it compares businesses of similar size and industry. We use public company benchmarks or private sale databases to find valuation multiples based on sales and earnings. This method is generally reliable and a strong indicator of value.
Income Approach This considers the present value of future income streams your business can generate. Methods include discounted future earnings and capitalization techniques. This approach relies on projected growth and earnings, but many buyers prefer using historical earnings as a reasonable estimate of future income.
A multiple of earnings compared to similar businesses (gross sales or owner’s benefit times an industry multiple).
Capitalization of net profit (not owner’s benefit) typically between 20% and 50%, or a simple multiple of owner benefit.
For businesses with little or no profit, asset value (goodwill, inventory, equipment, etc.) is the only value, either sold as a whole or liquidated over time.