|
Translate Into YOUR Dialect
** Irena Whitfield's Articles Click here!
How to Sell Your Small Business
If you’re a small business owner, you know just how much of
your blood, sweat, and tears go into making it a success.
Even if you’ve moved into an area you know is lucrative,
making a return on your investment is quite the challenge,
and isn’t for someone who requires a lot of free time, or
even necessarily fixed working hours.
For whatever reason, there comes a time that many small
business owners must sell their businesses. The following
are 10 things that you should consider when it comes time
to turn your business over to a new owner.
1. Know your reason for selling – When a prospective buyer
shows interest in buying your business, one of the first
questions they’ll likely ask is why you’re selling it. Your
answer should be truthful, since hiding the truth will only
cause issues later when the buyer discovers the issue for
themselves. This doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t find the
best possible wording to state why you’re selling. Practice
it on a colleague or friend before trying it on a client,
to see how it sounds.
2. Know the best time to sell – the best time to sell is at
the same time that the profits of the business are on the
increase. This appears as a sign of success and provides
buyers with a greater incentive to buy. It will also be the
time that your business has the highest value. Therefore,
it’s best to sell when your business is coming out of it’s
low time and is on its way to its high time.
3. Know when to get a professional’s help - A buyer will
almost certainly use assistance to help them buy a business
and without the use of professionals, you could end up
being on the wrong side of the deal. There are three main
sources of professional assistance that you should consider
using: accountant, solicitor and business broker.
4. Know the value of your business – if you are using a
business broker or an accountant, they will likely suggest
a value for you, however, it may be that you decide to
value the business alone without the assistance of
professionals although it is highly recommended that you
use at least one of them.
5. Know how to prepare your business for sale – just like
when you’re trying to sell a home, there are different
things that you can do to help make your business look more
attractive for sale. Furthermore, there are some legal
requirements that you’ll need to take care of. Issues
you’ll need to face include: financial statements and
documentation, accounts, finance and taxation, contracts
and trading arrangements, insurance, real property and
assets, intellectual property, environmental, health/safety
issues, employees/pensions documentation, litigation
details of any existing, pending or threatened arbitration
or litigation together with amounts involved, issues of
insolvency.
6. Know how to write a Selling Memorandum…and write it –
your selling memorandum is extremely important to making a
sale, and should include the following: an executive
summary, your company information, your asking price, the
terms of sale, industry information, your products and
services, your customers, personnel, major assets, any
future plans, financial statements, and an appendix. This
will give any prospective buyers an overall view of what
your business is all about, and why they’d want to own it.
7. Know how to find potential buyers – It’s great to be
prepared to sell, but without any buyers, it’s all for
naught. Fortunately, there are many great ways to find
prospective buyers. These include newspapers and magazines,
business brokers, and, of course, the internet.
8. Know how to make the most of the Internet - The Internet
is fast becoming one of the most popular ways to advertise
a business for sale. The main advantage is that it can
reach a wide audience, as it can be accessed by people all
over the world. If it is a local small business then the
Internet may not be a favored source to advertise, but for
the larger small businesses, it is highly recommended.
Use a search engine to find a web site where you can
register your business for sale. To get you started, we
have picked out a few sites:
9. Know the Legal Stuff – Don’t go into the selling process
if you have outstanding problems in the business. Your
business should have tied up any issues before you begin,
but make sure they are tied and not pending.
10. Cross-Marketing – Along the road to success you meet a
lot of people, many of them small business owners just like
you trying to meet a niche need and make ends meet. You can
both be more successful when you join forces and take
advantage of each other.
Knowing what you’re doing makes all the difference in a
successful sale for a business. Take advantage of these
tips, use your resources, and some common sense, and the
right buyer is sure to come.
********************************
When an affliction happens to you,
Get one of the Feature Ads in our Ezine:
If you like our Ezine, please recommend it to a friend by clicking here!
Copyright 2000-2010 ©© theCassiopeia.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide |