Look for signs of Jessica Hadler of ABG in your mailbox! Jessica recently participated in a photo shoot as a featured business owner for American Express’s national advertising campaign for Small Business. Shot over two days in Atlanta, Jessica and a colleague had the opportunity to meet three other featured owners participating in the campaign which was designed to cross-promote select small businesses in America and their larger travel partners, Hertz Car Rental and AirTran Airlines. The campaign will be featured in direct mail, online and AmEx’s email campaign to hundreds of thousands of card members.
Category Archives: Business Articles
SBA LENDING TO BOOM
SBA lending to boom in 4Q, thanks to reinstated breaks
Orlando Business Journal – by Kent Hoover Washington Bureau Chief
Original article can be viewed here.
Expect a boom in Small Business Administration lending in the fourth quarter, thanks to passage of legislation that increased the government guarantee on SBA loans and waived fees for borrowers.
The Small Business Jobs Act (HR 5297) increases the government guarantee on the SBA’s flagship 7(a) loans to 90 percent through Dec. 31. The bill also temporarily waives fees on both 7(a) loans and 504 loans, which primarily finance real estate. Combined, these breaks will make SBA loans less risky for lenders and more affordable for borrowers.
These breaks originally were funded by the economic stimulus bill, but they expired at the end of May. Since then, SBA lending has fallen sharply.
However, the chance that Congress would revive these breaks led many lenders and borrowers to hold off taking out SBA loans. This pent-up demand will explode now that Congress has reinstated these breaks, said Tony Wilkinson, president and CEO of the National Association of Government Guaranteed Lenders.
About $500 million in 7(a) and 504 loan applications are on a waiting list set up by the SBA for borrowers who wanted to wait to see if the higher loan guarantee and fee waivers were reinstated. Wilkinson said lenders also have been holding onto another $1.5 billion in SBA loan applications, in anticipation that the breaks would be renewed.
These loans now will go forward, thanks to passage of the Small Business Jobs Act. The bill was signed into law on Sept. 27 by President Barack Obama, who made the bill a top legislative priority.
Many SBA lenders also will take advantage of another piece of the legislation. The bill creates a $30 billion lending fund community banks can tap to make loans to small businesses. Many community banks will use this money to increase their SBA lending, Wilkinson predicted.
The legislation is “going to be a shot in the arm for the fourth quarter,” said David Bartram, who heads the SBA division for San Diego-based Seacoast Commerce Bank.
Bartram’s bank plans to tap as much capital as it can get from the new $30 billion lending fund. If the bank gets $1.8 million in capital from this Treasury Department-run fund, it can leverage that into $18 million in small business loans, he said.
With a 90 percent SBA guarantee, the bank can leverage that $18 million into $180 million in new SBA loans, because the bank sells the guaranteed portion of its SBA loans on the secondary market.
Hundreds of other small and medium-size banks also see opportunities to make more small business loans, but “are pulling in their horns now to preserve their capital,” said Paul Merski, senior vice president and chief economist at the Independent Community Bankers of America.
These banks can’t raise capital on their own because private capital markets are still largely frozen, he said. The new Small Business Lending Fund will provide these banks with the capital they need, he said.
Under the program, the Treasury Department will charge a 5 percent dividend rate for the capital. This dividend rate would decrease if a bank increases its small business lending and rise if a bank doesn’t use the capital to boost loans to small businesses.
Critics fear this incentive to lend will lead banks to make bad loans.
“This could lead to banks making risky loans to avoid paying higher interest rates,” said Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, who supported much of the legislation but voted against it because of the Small Business Lending Fund.
However, Merski said bank underwriting standards won’t change as a result of the program. Only banks that already see demand from creditworthy small businesses are going to tap this fund, he said.
The program could become available to community banks as early as the fourth quarter of this year, Merski predicted.
Small Business Jobs Act
• Waives fees on 7(a) and 504 loans through Dec. 31.
• Permanently raises size limits of SBA loans, including an increase from $2 million to $5 million on 7(a) loans.
• Provides up to $30 billion in cheap capital to community banks to make small business loans.
• Funds $1.5 billion in grants to support state-run credit programs for small businesses.
• Provides $12 billion in targeted tax cuts for small businesses, including incentives for investment in new equipment.
Source: HR 5297
khoover@bizjournals.com
Business Value Beyond the Financials
Business Value Beyond the Financials
Whether your business is currently on the market or you are evaluating your exit strategy for five or ten years down the line, being educated about the steps needed to enhance your company’s overall value is key to maximizing your proceeds at the closing table.
Though these facts may seem obvious to many, the truth is that most business owners lose perspective when looking at their own company. Time to take stock and discover additional ways to enchance value.
Fact No. 1
Many owners (and their brokers or advisors) take steps necessary to get their financial documentation in order.
Fact No. 2
Most owners (and often brokers or advisors) ignore all the other really important stuff that buyers consider when determining interest in and offering price for a business.
Some thoughts to consider when evaluating your business
Are your profit margins over-inflated because you work too much?
Some owners think value is solely down to profit margins, but we have to analyze the hours an owner works to reach those figures.
Buyers do not like to spend their life savings on a business that requires them to reduce their quality of life (working ridiculous hours).
Example: An owner may have a hard time selling if the company’s success is dependant on him or her working 80+ hours a week. He or she may make $180K net a year, but they have absolutely no life outside of the business.
A key to preparing for sale may be bringing on new assistant management or part-time personnel to reduce the owner’s workload. The owner will be reducing his current annual net, but this move could equal tens of thousands of Dollars, if not more at the closing table.
Summary: A buyer will be much happier working 40 hours a week and netting only $100K annually.
Adding Value by Strengthening Your Transition Plan
Buyers want to know what will happen after close. Are your employees going to leave, what about customer lists and contracts? What do you have to offer a buyer that competing businesses for sale don’t?
Examples to consider: Key members of staff. A key employee can agree to stay on for at least the first year of new management.
Flexibility. A buyer will be more encouraged to purchase a business if the owner offers some flexibility after the initial training period – agreeing to stay longer or act as a consultant at little or no cost for a predetermined amount of time may show an investor that the seller is confident in the business’s long-term success.
Operations Revisited
Before considering going to market, it’s time for a seller to have a good look at his business plan. Don’t have one, or haven’t looked back since drafting it 20 years ago? Time to dig in and have a look at your business. The plan helps bring to light strengths and weaknesses that need to be addressed prior to going to market.
“I think it´s a shame that people associate business plans with starting a business, more than with running a business. Every business needs planning, ongoing and existing businesses as much as start-up businesses” – Tim Berry for Dun & Bradstreet
A seller may also create added value by spending some time and money creating a complete operations manual (or revamping the one from 15 years ago). This can be of great importance for a buyer with executive experience who may be transitioning from a different industry.
Occupancy Costs – An obvious point in this market that has surprisingly been ignored by many
Customarily, most owners do not inform their landlords about their intent to sell until a buyer’s in place.
However, considering the current economy, business owners should be reviewing their current lease to see what new terms they can possibly negotiate with their landlord to reduce occupancy costs – prior to going to market.
An owner who has not tried to reduce this expense in this market can unknowingly kill a potential deal if a competing business for sale has better terms already in place. Buyers know this is a tenant’s market and often will completely pass up a good business opportunity if they feel that there will be drama with a landlord after due diligence and prior to close.
Spring Cleaning – From Retail to Office to Home-based Businesses
Sometimes it doesn’t matter if business has strong repeat clientele and cashflow is high – buyers will pass up a dump and WILL find a cleaner facility in this market that has comparable income to owner. Same goes for how owners organize and file their financials. Do you know how to use Quickbooks? Is it time for a bookkeeper? And is your accountant accurately itemizing your expenses? If you have to scramble to get information, it’s time for help.
Business Value Beyond the Financials
Whether your business is currently on the market or you are evaluating your exit strategy for five or ten years down the line, being educated about the steps needed to enhance your company’s overall value is key to maximizing your proceeds at the closing table.
Though these facts may seem obvious to many, the truth is that most business owners lose perspective when looking at their own company. Time to take stock and discover additional ways to enchance value.
- Fact No. 1 Many owners (and their brokers or advisors) take steps necessary to get their financial documentation in order.
- Fact No. 2 Most owners (and their brokers or advisors) ignore all the other really important stuff that buyers consider when determining interest in and offering price for a business.
The truth is that most business owners lose perspective when looking at their own company.
Some thoughts to consider when evaluating your business
Are your profit margins over-inflated because you work too much?
Some owners think value is solely down to profit margins, but we have to analyze the hours an owner works to reach those figures.
Buyers do not like to spend their life savings on a business that requires them to reduce their quality of life (working ridiculous hours).
Example: An owner may have a hard time selling if the company’s success is dependant on him or her working 80+ hours a week. He or she may make $180K net a year, but they have absolutely no life outside of the business.
A key to preparing for sale may be bringing on new assistant management or part-time personnel to reduce the owner’s workload. The owner will be reducing his current annual net, but this move could equal tens of thousands of Dollars, if not more at the closing table.
Summary: A buyer will be much happier working 40 hours a week and netting only $100K annually.
Adding Value by Strengthening Your Transition Plan
Buyers want to know what will happen after close. Are your employees going to leave, what about customer lists and contracts? What do you have to offer a buyer that competing businesses for sale don’t?
Examples to consider: Key members of staff. A key employee can agree to stay on for at least the first year of new management.
Flexibility. A buyer will be more encouraged to purchase a business if the owner offers some flexibility after the initial training period – agreeing to stay longer or act as a consultant at little or no cost for a predetermined amount of time may show an investor that the seller is confident in the business’s long-term success.
Operations Revisited
Before considering going to market, it’s time for a seller to have a good look at his business plan. Don’t have one, or haven’t looked back since drafting it 20 years ago? Time to dig in and have a look at your business. The plan helps bring to light strengths and weaknesses that need to be addressed prior to going to market.
“I think it´s a shame that people associate business plans with starting a business, more than with running a business. Every business needs planning, ongoing and existing businesses as much as start-up businesses” – Tim Berry for Dun & Bradstreet
A seller may also create added value by spending some time and money creating a complete operations manual (or revamping the one from 15 years ago). This can be of great importance for a buyer with executive experience who may be transitioning from a different industry.
Occupancy Costs – An obvious point in this market that has surprisingly been ignored by many
Customarily, most owners do not inform their landlords about their intent to sell until a buyer’s in place.
However, considering the current economy, business owners should be reviewing their current lease to see what new terms they can possibly negotiate with their landlord to reduce occupancy costs – prior to going to market.
An owner who has not tried to reduce this expense in this market can unknowingly kill a potential deal if a competing business for sale has better terms already in place. Buyers know this is a tenant’s market and often will completely pass up a good business opportunity if they feel that there will be drama with a landlord after due diligence and prior to close.
Spring Cleaning – From Retail to Office to Home-based Businesses
Sometimes it doesn’t matter if business has strong repeat clientele and cashflow is high – buyers will pass up a dump and WILL find a cleaner facility in this market that has comparable income to owner. Same goes for how owners organize and file their financials. Do you know how to use Quickbooks? Is it time for a bookkeeper? And is your accountant accurately itemizing your expenses? If you have to scramble to get information, it’s time for help.
Get Involved in Nominating Your Community’s Leaders
It’s that time of year again – the Orlando Business Journal is accepting nominations for several awards, including the Best Places to Work, Women Who Mean Business and 40 under 40.
Have you placed your nomination yet? Do you have an employee that shines? Promote your company by supporting your best talent. Details at orlando.bizjournals.com
Promote your company by supporting your best talent.
BEST PLACES TO WORK
Calling all nominations!
Orlando Business Journal will recognize companies and nonprofits deemed by their employees to be the Best Places to Work in our community.
Only organizations with 10 or more employees in Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties are eligible to participate.
Human resource officers or other representatives of the company or nonprofit should complete and submit this online form by May 14 or go to our Web site at http://orlando.bizjournals.com/orlando/nomination/2391.
Employees of the nominated companies then will be asked to complete and submit an online employee survey. There will be four weeks allowed for the surveys to be completed.
Winners will be announced at an awards breakfast on July 30, and featured in the July 30 issue Orlando Business Journal.
Only online nominations will be accepted. Submissions must be received by 5 p.m. on May 14, 2010.
For more information, contact Managing Editor Susan Lundine at slundine@bizjournals.com or (407) 241-2892. Deadline: May 14, 2010
FORTY UNDER 40
Help Orlando Business Journal recognize those leaders in Central Florida who are under 40 years old.
Those people who are recognized for this award will be the men and women throughout the region who have already played a key role in shaping our community. They are not those with potential. They are people who have proven their potential by taking leadership roles in Orange, Seminole, Osceola and Lake counties.
We will recognize 40 of these individuals and name a man and woman of the year.
Last year, Richard McCree Jr., with McCree General Contractors and Architects, was recognized as the Man of the Year and Megan Costa DeVault, with Akerman Senterfitt, was named Woman of the Year.
We will recognize this group of leaders at an awards reception the evening of June 10.
Being recognized as a Forty under 40 honoree in the past does not prevent one from being named again.
All fields are mandatory for submission! Only online nominations will be accepted. The number of nominations has no bearing, so no ballot stuffing, please.
Nomination deadline Friday, March 19, 2010 at 5 p.m. For more information, contact Managing Editor Susan Lundine at slundine@bizjournals.com or (407)241-2892.
National Poll on Seller Financing
Just in….from BestBusinessesforSaleONLY.com
RESULTS OF NATIONAL POLL
Of the sellers of small or midsize businesses you meet or represent, how many of those sellers offer seller financing to business buyers?
NORTH PALM BEACH, FL. February 4, 2010
Of the sellers of small or midsize businesses you meet or represent, how many of those sellers offer seller financing to business buyers?
- None 12%
- 1% – 10% 11%
- 11% – 25% 11%
- 26% – 50% 33%
- 51% – 75% 11%
- 75% or more 22%
The demographics of the target audience and respondents to the poll are what make the results particularly important. The location of the respondents varied, with all regions of the country being represented. This poll was conducted online and via email, targeting owners of small and midsize businesses and the people that serve or evaluate these businesses, such as business brokers, buyers, sellers, professional advisors, dealmakers and sources of financing.
The poll began January 19, 2010 and continues beyond the date of this preliminary report.
Survey: ‘Buy Local’ helped small firms’ holiday sales
A new survey concludes that Buy Local campaigns may be raising awareness among shoppers and making a difference for small businesses.
Independent retailers in cities with active Buy Local or Think Local First campaigns reported stronger holiday sales than those in cities without such campaigns, according to a survey of more than 1,800 independent businesses by the Institiute for Local Self-Reliance.
The study, conducted in partnership with business organizations such as the American Independent Business Alliance, found that retailers in cities with such campaigns reported an increase of 3 percent in holiday sales, compared wih an increase of 1 percent in cities without active initiatives.
That’s good news for Orlando small businesses. The city launched a Buy Local campaign last April, in an effort to keep residents’ dollars inside city limits.
For more information on the local campaign, visit buylocalorlando.net.
Credit, earnings hurt sales
Limited access to credit and lower earnings made it difficult for business owners to sell their companies last year, according to a report by BizBuySell.com, a Web site that lists businesses for sale by brokers and owners.
Orlando business-for-sale transactions in 2009 were down 13 percent compared with 2008. During the year, BizBuySell.com reported 144 sales in the area, with a median sale price of $122,000, or about 86 percent of the median asking price. Buyers paid on average 0.61 times the business’ annual revenue and 1.87 times its cash flow.
BizBuySell’s fourth-quarter report showed the median asking price of businesses for sale in the Orlando area at year’s end was $176,000, based on 772 listings. That was down from a median of $200,000 at the end of the fourth quarter of 2008.
Score’s Top Tips for 2010
The business-counseling group Score has some advice on how to be successful in 2010.
Among its tips:
- Build your customer base with new products, multiple price points and packages.
- Consult experts and get feedback from trustworthy advisers, including free Score mentors.
- Add a Web site with e-commerce capability and secure all variations of your company’s domain name.
- Use events such as demonstrations, trunk shows and classes to attract customers.
- Track cash flow and collect receivables within 30 days.
- Have a business plan ready for potential lenders.
- Consider forming a limited liability company (LLC) to protect your personal assets and property.
Accepting nominations Ernst & Young its now accepting applications for its annual Entrepreneur of the Year 2010 Awards program, which honors entrepreneurs who have demonstrated excellence in such areas as innovation, financial performance and personal commitment to their businesses and communities.
The first level of the nationwide program honors regional entrepreneurs in June but leads up to a national ceremony in November. The deadline to apply is March 19. Self-nominations are encouraged. There is no fee. Information is available at ey.com/us/eoy.
Just starting up?
Learn to write a successful business plan at a seminar this week organized by the University of Central Florida’s Small Business Development Center. “The Ultimate Business Plan: A Hands-on Workshop” is scheduled for Thursday from 6 to 9 p.m. From identifying your target market to financial projections, the seminar will guide entrepreneurs through key sections of a business plan. By following step-by-step instructions, businesses will leave with a plan on paper. Visit http://www.bus.ucf.edu/sbdc to register.
Briefly… Disney Entrepreneur Center sponsor Banco Popular renewed its funding commitment for another three years. The Orlando-based company has been a sponsor since the center opened in 2003.
Sara K. Clarke can be reached at skclarke@orlandosentinel.com or 407-420-5664.
Hear it Hear First: BizBuySell Acquires BizQuest LLC
LoopNet Acquires BizQuest, LLC, a Leading Online Business-For-Sale Marketplace
Together with BizBuySell, the acquisition of BizQuest complements and solidifies LoopNet’s leadership in the online business-for-sale marketplace sector.
San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) January 26, 2010 — LoopNet, Inc. (http://www.loopnet.com/) (NASDAQ: LOOP), which operates the largest online commercial real estate marketplace and the largest business for sale marketplace, BizBuySell (http://www.bizbuysell.com), announced today that it has acquired the assets of privately-held BizQuest, LLC to complement its leading position in the online business-for-sale marketplace sector.
Founded in 1994 and headquartered in Pasadena, California, BizQuest.com is a leader in aggregating sellers, buyers and brokers in the small business-for-sale market. BizQuest currently offers over 35,000 businesses for sale, an industry-leading franchise directory, as well as other tools and services for aspiring small business buyers and sellers.
“Together, BizBuySell and BizQuest will offer our customers unparalleled exposure to help facilitate faster transactions and more competitive bids on their businesses for sale,” said Mike Handelsman, LoopNet’s Group General Manager for the small business market. “We will also begin to address one of the most significant pain points for our broker customers, entering listings on multiple websites. Soon broker customers of both sites will be able to enter and manage a business listing on BizBuySell and have it automatically and seamlessly display on BizQuest as well.”
BizQuest, which will operate as a division of LoopNet, likewise anticipates the acquisition will serve to benefit its existing clientele.
“LoopNet’s acquisition of BizQuest and the ability to coordinate with and leverage the coverage of BizBuySell will allow us to offer even greater exposure and value to our customers,” said Dylan Garland, CEO of BizQuest, LLC. “We expect this will be a major milestone for the business-for-sale industry as the seamless integration and time-saving capabilities resulting from the acquisition will benefit sellers and business brokers alike.”
LoopNet does not currently expect the acquisition of BizQuest to have a material impact on its 2010 financial results.
BizQuest, available at www.BizQuest.com, covers all business-for-sale categories, including restaurant, retail, service, manufacturing and other small business sectors. BizQuest has more than 35,000 businesses for sale and, with over 300 franchise and business opportunities at www.FindAFranchise.com, one of the largest franchise directories available online.
BizBuySell, available at www.BizBuySell.com, also covers all business-for-sale categories, including restaurant, retail, service, manufacturing and other small business sectors. It has more than 45,000 businesses for sale, and more than 325 franchise and business opportunities in its franchise directory.
About LoopNet:
LoopNet, Inc., a leading information services provider to the commercial real estate industry, delivers a comprehensive suite of products and services to meet the national and local needs of commercial real estate firms, organizations and professionals. LoopNet members can list, search, market and research commercial real estate properties over the Internet – reducing their marketing costs, expanding their reach, accelerating the pace of transactions and enhancing their insights on the market.
LoopNet operates the largest and most heavily trafficked commercial real estate listing service online with more than 3.9 million registered members and 945,000 average monthly unique visitors. The LoopNet online marketplace contains more than $480 billion of property available for sale and 6.3 billion square feet of property available for lease. LoopNet’s market-leading LoopLink product powers the web sites of more than 1,000 commercial real estate organizations and seamlessly integrates their web sites with LoopNet’s listing service at www.LoopNet.com.
LoopNet customers include virtually all of the top commercial real estate firms and organizations in the U.S., including CB Richard Ellis, Century 21 Commercial, Coldwell Banker Commercial, Colliers International, The CORE Network, CORFAC International, Cushman & Wakefield, First Industrial Realty Trust, Grubb & Ellis, Jones Lang LaSalle, Lee & Associates, Lincoln Property Company, Marcus & Millichap, NAI Global, ONCOR International, ProLogis, Prudential CRES, RE/MAX, Retail Brokers Network, SIOR, Sperry Van Ness, and TCN Worldwide.
LoopNet also owns and operates BizBuySell, the largest and most heavily trafficked online exchange for businesses for sale in North America, with more business listings, users and search activity than any other web site. BizBuySell features over 45,000 businesses for sale listings, more than 650,000 average monthly visits, and has the largest database of sale comparables for recently sold businesses.
Forward-Looking Statements
This release contains forward-looking statements regarding LoopNet’s anticipated synergies from our acquisition of BizQuest, LLC’s assets, including our ability to provide greater value and exposure to aspiring small business buyers and sellers, our efforts to differentiate our online commercial marketplace, the impact of the acquisition on our 2010 financial results, our customers, the integration of the acquired business, our listing partners, the continuing adoption of the Internet to market and search for commercial real estate, and the advantages of our online marketplace and the value we provide to our members. These statements are based on current information and expectations that are inherently subject to change and involve a number of risks and uncertainties. Actual events or results might differ materially from those in any forward-looking statement due to various factors, including, but not limited to, our ability to successfully integrate the technologies, operations and personnel of the acquired business in a timely manner; our ability to obtain the expected strategic and financial benefits from the acquisition; on-going volatility in the commercial real estate market and business for sale market; our ability to introduce new or upgraded products or services and customer acceptance of such services; economic events or trends in the credit market or in general; our ability to continue to attract new registered members, convert them into Premium Members and retain such Premium Members; our ability to receive timely and accurate sales data from our partners; our ability to manage our growth; our ability to obtain or retain listings from commercial real estate brokers, agents and property owners; and competition from current or future companies. Additional information concerning factors that could cause actual events or results to differ materially from those in any forward-looking statement is contained in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Copies of filings made by us with the SEC are available on the SEC’s website or at http://investor.LoopNet.com/sec.cfm. LoopNet does not intend to update the forward-looking statements included in this press release that are based on information available to us as of the date of this release.
Florida M&A Activity Poised to Rise
Here’s a brief article from the Orlando Business Journal. Our office can attest that the most activity we’re seeing is from larger multi-state or national companies who are looking to branch into the Orlando or general Florida market. The challenge has been surviving due diligence after all other terms have been agreed to.
Companies and private equity groups are looking to get bargains in this economy, so business owners need to pay particular care to their financials and general business organization. There are interested buyers out there, but be prepared for a new level of scrutiny. Be armed not only with year-to-date financials, but be prepared to present realistic projections of revenue for 2010.
Our office can attest that the most activity we’re seeing is from larger multi-state or national companies who are looking to branch into the Orlando or general Florida market.
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December 8th, 2009
Florida dealmakers said merger and acquisition activity is all but dead this year, but an Association for Corporate Growth/Thompson Reuters poll found 71 percent expect the market to pick up in 2010.
Ninety-five percent of dealmakers polled characterized the current M&A market as fair or poor, but 71 percent said they expect activity to increase next year.
The dealmakers said it remains a buyers’ market for strategic investors. They identified the hottest areas for mergers: Health care and life sciences (22 percent), financial services (19 percent) and business services (19 percent).
The survey is conducted twice each year. The most recent poll, undertaken in October and November, was completed by 921 association members and Thompson Reuters customers, including 38 in Florida.
A Buyer’s Market – What is Your Business Worth Now?
Here are some good points from Inc’s Ryan McCarthy about business value in today’s current economic climate.
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A Buyer’s Market: What Is Your Business Worth Now?
As part of Inc.’s 2009 guide to business valuations, we look at why now is a great time to buy a business
By Ryan McCarthy | Jun 1, 2009
Inspiring profiles and best practices for savvy business owners.
You might expect Dennis Barnedt to be feeling somewhat down in the dumps these days, given that the economic slump is entering its second year. Indeed, whenever Barnedt, founder and CEO of Access Information Management, a records-storage company in Pleasanton, California, meets with peers in the industry, it’s nothing but complaints about skittish lenders and the resulting lack of funds for expansion or even operations. “The majority of entrepreneurs I come across have either had their borrowing capacity limited — or eliminated altogether,” Barnedt says. He estimates that business valuations in his industry have dropped some 30 percent over the past 12 months alone.
But instead of getting depressed, Barnedt is doing something else: He is going shopping. Since August, Access has acquired two smaller competitors. And thanks to the combination of uncertain credit markets and falling prices, the company, which was founded as a roll-up in 2004, plans to add as many as eight more businesses over the next 12 months. “This has been a great opportunity for us,” Barnedt says.
If you have been desperately searching for a hint of a silver lining in the current economic thunderstorm, here it is: It’s a buyer’s market for businesses. The median sale price for a private company fell 27 percent in 2008, to $400,000 from $551,000, according to data compiled for Inc. by Business Valuation Resources, a Portland, Oregon, provider of information about private-company transactions and the publisher of Pratt’s Stats. For the sixth year, Inc. has partnered with BVR to produce our guide to valuing your business. The graphics, tables, and work sheet on the pages that follow — which are based on 2,168 transactions from January 1, 2007, to March 31, 2009, in 122 industries — can help you get a sense of what has happened to your business’s worth in this economy.
If you have been desperately searching for a hint of a silver lining in the current economic thunderstorm, here it is: It’s a buyer’s market for businesses.
Valuations, of course, are based on revenue and profits — which, not surprisingly, also were down significantly last year: Median net sales for companies acquired in 2008 fell to $804,000, compared with $1.03 million in the previous year, according to BVR. In some industries, the decline was even more precipitous. Financial services, insurance, and real estate firms saw median net sales plummet 61 percent, to $1.2 million from $3.1 million in 2008. Service companies experienced a drop of 23 percent, to $634,000 from $825,000.
That decline appears to have spooked buyers and sellers alike. The mergers and acquisitions market nearly ground to a halt in the third and fourth quarters of 2008, according to BVR. And it remains anemic: In the first quarter of 2009, the number of midmarket transactions was 25 percent lower than in the like period a year ago, according to Dealogic, the financial data tracking firm.
So the market is not exactly frothy. But given that valuations are down sharply and that the shortage of credit is forcing otherwise stable companies to consider selling or taking on a partner, some businesses are signing deals that wouldn’t have been possible in better times. Perhaps the most prominent example is Oracle‘s recent acquisition of Sun Microsystems for $9.50 a share, 40 percent below Sun’s peak value 12 months earlier. True, few entrepreneurs are as flush as Oracle’s Larry Ellison. But similarly steep discounts, according to our data, can be found in nearly all industries.
WHAT IT’S LIKE OUT THERE
“The biggest hindrance to selling a company right now is that the credit markets have almost completely shut down the process,” says Andrew Cagnetta, president of Transworld Business Brokers in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. “Buyers and sellers have had to go back to the basics.” For most brokers and buyers, that means setting aside amorphous notions of synergy and focusing on the bottom line. “The No. 1 question I get from people today is, ‘How much money does it make? How much money can I put in my pocket today?’ ” says Jerry Tsai, a broker at Murphy Business & Financial in Sacramento.
It also means taking extra steps to manage risk. Julie Gordon White, principal of BlueKey Business Brokerage M&A in Point Richmond, California, is warning all her clients to take a harder-than-usual look at customer risk. Gordon White, who advises buyers and sellers of companies with revenue of less than $20 million, tends to be wary of any business in which the five largest customers contribute more than 25 percent of sales. “These days, you have to look at the customer concentration,” she says. “What are you going to do when one of those customers goes away?”
In previous years, Gordon White says, she would broker deals in which the seller would finance 10 percent to 20 percent of a deal, with the rest of the transaction in cash or incentives. Today, she says, that number has gone as high as 50 percent. “It’s almost as if sellers today are taking the place of banks,” says Gordon White.
Still, plenty of people are inclined to roll the dice. Over the past 18 months, for example, Steve Lipscomb, founder and CEO of the World Poker Tour, has seen the value of some companies fall as much as 50 percent to 75 percent. No surprise, then, that Lipscomb is eyeing the market carefully. WPT Enterprises, the publicly traded parent of the poker tour, lost $14 million in 2008. But the company is fortunate enough to have stowed away some cash, and Lipscomb has been seeing opportunity everywhere. Indeed, the buying opportunities are so attractive that Lipscomb is considering investments outside the entertainment area, in industries as far afield as green technology. “The capital markets have changed,” says Lipscomb. “For investors, small, profitable companies are going to prove to be a good alternative to the stock market. There are an awful lot of great companies out there that just need a partner to help them weather the storm.”
There are plenty of data to support Lipscomb’s view, says Brian Hamilton, CEO of Sageworks, a financial information company that tracks financial activity among private businesses. A recent analysis by the company found that in three major sectors — manufacturing, wholesale trade, and retail trade — private firms are enjoying higher net profit margins and better return on equity and return on assets than their publicly traded counterparts. “Sales are down a bit at the average business,” says Hamilton. “But these businesses certainly aren’t tanking.”
HOW TO GET A DEAL DONE
It helps a lot to have cash in your pocket. Business brokers report that cash deals typically yield discounts of 10 percent to 15 percent. If that option is not available — and for most buyers, it isn’t — seller financing has become crucial. In previous years, Gordon White says, she would broker deals in which the seller would finance 10 percent to 20 percent of a deal, with the rest of the transaction in cash or incentives. Today, she says, that number has gone as high as 50 percent. “It’s almost as if sellers today are taking the place of banks,” says Gordon White.
Buyers are also getting more creative — especially in terms of earn-outs, which increasingly are the norm in this economy. Under an earn-out, the seller agrees to remain with the business for a limited period and take a portion of the sale price in the form of future revenue or profits. “Because asking prices and multiples are down, you’re seeing sellers assuming more of the risk,” says Ross Whittaker, co-founder of Boston‘s iMergeAdvisors, a business brokerage that focuses on Internet companies. In this market, Whittaker says, he commonly sees requests from buyers for agreements that are equivalent to 25 percent to 50 percent of the sale price. And in many cases, sellers have little choice but to agree if they want to sell.
Favorable terms such as those have helped James Essey, president and CEO of TemPositions, a New York City company that operates staffing firms in 12 industries, realize his company’s ambitious acquisition plans, which include buying several businesses over the next year. Over the past 12 months, valuations in the staffing industry have fallen 20 percent to 30 percent, says Essey. As a result, he is able to make acquisitions with significantly less money down. In December, for example, Essey acquired Vintage Personnel, an 18-year-old company in Queens. Essey expects to complete two other acquisitions — including a company that saw revenue fall from $11 million to $3.5 million from 2007 to 2008 — by midsummer. Essey structures a typical deal with a two- or three-year earn-out. Sellers receive approximately 30 percent of gross profits for each of those years, as well as a small advance against future earnings. “The entrepreneurs who sell to us are facing the likelihood that their business is going to continue to erode,” says Essey. “I’m absorbing the expenses, and they’re getting a piece of the profits.”
Though the economy remains uncertain, Essey is bullish. The staffing industry has been hit hard by the downturn, but Essey believes it is ripe for consolidation. “We’re looking at buying companies that, not very long ago, were doing much more business than they are now,” says Essey. “With our help, when the economy comes back, I think these companies will be bigger than ever.”