Forum Moderators: buckworks
I believe my business is worth a pretty good amount because of its unique product that could make anyone with time very rich. The problem is I don't know where to go to sell it. I've looked at bizbuyandsell and ebay and similar services but I'm not sure if I trust those or if there will be serious buyers.
Has anyone here ever sold a business or know how to go about doing it? Thanks so much.
Unless businesses get in a bidding war over you as a strategic acquisition (i.e. buying a critical piece of technology or business process or helping lock up a segment of the market), your business value will usually depend in large part on existing revenue, not potential value.
Even if your business value is mostly based on existing revenue, there are other possible factors that might goose up the price. For additional hypothetical value, potential acquirers should be asking not only how unique the product is (as you describe it) but what the market size is and what the barriers to entry are for other possible businesses (i.e. you have put in years of writing code which would require competitors a lot of money to replicate or you own the only known quarry for the unique rock you sell or you have the patent). The latter is a particular hurdle for most e-businesses since they don't do anything that could not be repeated by others rather quickly. You may genuinely be different but you need to be realistic about making a good solid business case why you should be worth something.
I'll give you one shortcut. You could spend years buying and selling sites before fully appreciating this. But I'll give it to you for free :)..... buyers want to know what's in it for them. Obviously. But when spending a lot of money they want guarantees of profits. Not just an opinion that the idea is unique and that it will make them rich. They want to see historical earnings. There's no guarantee like historical earnings (and even that's no guarantee). But what of new sites without history? Hmm. You'll find that buyers don't accept "new" as an excuse for no earnings history. If you want a good price you'll have to prove the site can earn a lot. As simple as that. Sounds stupid. But you'll find that that's the only thing that will get buyers to bite at the higher prices.
If you're business is going as well as you let on, you should be able to afford this within your business model. If your business model can't afford this--who would want to buy the company? Why buy a job when I can get one for free?
Your short terms goal should be to completely isolate yourself from day to day operations, while still (hopefully) have some profit left once everything is said and done.
Work on your business, not in your business. You've got what sounds like a great thing going.
What you don't have, I think, is the potential for a very large business. It's definitely niche and while I would say your products are unique, let's face it, you do have thousands upon thousands of competitors and there are very very low barriers to entry - in fact my wife is thinking of starting a similar (but don't worry, not head-to-head) business.
I don't mean to pooh-pooh your idea because done right, it can definitely be a business that pays the rent or mortgage and gives you your independence, especially if you explore other outlets for sales of these items (established stores, other web sites, etc). And that's good.
But I think when you sell the business, you have to base the sale price largely on existing profits and not count a lot on much pricing of intangibles.
I'm not a big fan of Ebay and BizBuySell -- too much clutter on the former and too many brokers & crazy valuations on the latter. Maybe those sites work better on the seller side.
Like people here are saying, your business will be evaluated on its historical performance....primarily profit. If you want a rough rule of thumb on value for ecommerce businesses, start with a base of 1-1.5x annual profit and nudge up or down based on other factors such as organic traffic, growth rate, unique supplier relationships, original products, etc.