What is my Business Worth?
At H3K, we have expert business valuation specialists ready to help you determine the value of your business. We can meet with you to discuss your business’s worth or provide detailed valuation reports upon engagement. Evaluating a business needs keen eyes. Sometimes existing owners downplay very important and valuable parts of the business, and sometimes they put too much value in other parts of the business. We help you not only get a balanced view, but also point out several important valuable parts of your business that may increase your business value significantly.
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There are many reasons to understand what your business is worth. Contact us and ask for our valuation team. Below is an informative article on business valuation that may be of help.
How Much Is a Business Worth?
Valuation is the top question sellers ask when considering a sale, and also a key concern for buyers before purchasing. Unfortunately, there’s no simple answer—often, there are multiple answers. Why? Business valuation is more of an art than a science. It depends on the appraiser’s judgment, skill, and chosen methodology. There are different standards of value for businesses, such as:
Fair Market Value Explained
For our discussion, fair market value refers to what a buyer would pay for your company in an open market. Keep in mind this is a simplification of complex valuation practices. Some specialists provide detailed valuation reports used for IRS inquiries, legal cases, or complicated financing, which can cost between $10,000 and $30,000. For small business sales, a full valuation is usually unnecessary; our streamlined methods typically suffice to set your listing price and estimate your sale value.
Common Valuation Approaches
There are three widely accepted approaches to business valuation:
Understanding Multiples of Earnings
What does this all mean? Simply put, your business’s value is often a multiple of past earnings, assuming the buyer believes those earnings will continue after purchase.
What Earnings Do We Multiply?
Common metrics include net income, EBITDA, or owner’s benefit. For small businesses (under $1 million in earnings), the owner’s benefit is used, which includes net income plus depreciation, interest, owner’s salary, and benefits—essentially all income available to a single owner if the business were debt-free. Larger businesses use EBITDA, which normalizes executive salary and benefits.
What Are Typical Multiples?
Multiples for the owner’s benefit typically range from under 1 to about 3. For larger companies with EBITDA near or above $1 million, multiples can range from 4 to 6. These numbers aren’t fixed and depend on factors like business size, quality of financial records, growth prospects, and profitability. Poor financials and negative outlooks yield lower multiples, while strong books and bright futures earn higher multiples.
Important Note: The Buyer Decides Value
Ultimately, the buyer determines the sale price, not valuation experts, bankers, CPAs, lawyers, or advisors. Each buyer values a business differently, so the exact worth is subjective.
Summary: What Is Your Business Worth?
How to Narrow Down Your Business Value?
Call a valuation specialist. Call H3K!
Many factors affect your business’s value, including location, size, competition, growth trends, quality of records, ease of transfer, timing, sale terms, leverage, and your business advisor.
Remember, this is a simplified overview of a complex subject. For a formal valuation, consult H3K, a valuation professional, or an expert familiar with business sales. Now that you understand how businesses are valued, you can focus on increasing your profits and maximizing your sale price.
If you have any questions throughout the process, please don’t hesitate to ask. With H3K’s expert guidance, buying and owning your own business can be a rewarding and successful experience.