home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- @131 CHAP 3
-
- ┌───────────────────────────────────────────┐
- │ BUYING AN EXISTING BUSINESS │
- └───────────────────────────────────────────┘
-
- PLANNING NOTE FOR @NAME:
- -----------------------------------------------------------
- @IF900xx](Your business is already started, so the following discussion
- @IF900xx]will probably be relevant to you only if you are considering
- @IF900xx]starting up or buying a second business.)
- @IF901xx]Since you have not started your planned new business yet,
- @IF901xx]you still have an opportunity to choose between starting a
- @IF901xx]new business from scratch, or acquiring an existing business
- @IF901xx]in the @BUSTYPE field.
- -----------------------------------------------------------
-
- If you are going into business for yourself, you have
- probably given at least some consideration to buying an
- existing business. It is a possibility you should not
- overlook, since doing so can have some considerable
- advantages over starting a new business from scratch. One
- of the main advantages, of course, is that buying an
- already functioning business gives you a chance to start
- out with an established customer base, which might otherwise
- take you several years to create. Another is that it is
- sometimes possible to have the seller stay on as an employee
- or consultant for a transitional period, to help familiarize
- you, the new owner, with the operation of the business.
-
- HOW DO YOU FIND A BUSINESS THAT IS FOR SALE?
-
- ADVERTISEMENTS. Finding a business for sale in almost any
- field is usually not very hard. All you need do is look
- in the classified ads in most major newspapers, and you
- will find plenty for sale. Just realize that most of the
- businesses that are advertising they are for sale either
- have serious problems, or else are being offered at prices
- that are out of line with the market, in hopes that someone
- who is not too sophisticated will unwittingly buy them out
- at a premium. The trick with all these advertisements is
- to separate the wheat from the chaff, which, as usual,
- means that "knowledge is power." Developing the knowledge
- or information you need to make an intelligent purchase of
- an existing business will generally require you to do two
- things:
-
- (a) a lot of homework, talking to people in the
- industry or in the market area to find out how
- much, realistically, you should be willing to
- pay for a business of the type you are interested
- in (based on its size and profitability); and
-
- (b) a lot of legwork, looking at different candidates,
- some of which you will need to explore in depth,
- perhaps getting rather deeply into purchase
- negotiations before you finally realize you don't
- want in. The author of this program has had
- clients who have actually spent YEARS looking at
- businesses to buy until finding one that was
- actually a good deal (and wound up very happy
- with the businesses they finally bought, not too
- surprisingly). However, you may not have the
- luxury of waiting several years till the right
- deal comes along, particularly if you are one of
- the millions of refugees from large corporations
- that have "downsized" you out of a job.
-
- BUSINESS BROKERS AND REALTORS. Often, when you respond to
- an ad offering a business for sale, you will find that the
- person running the ad is a business broker, rather than the
- actual owner. These brokers, who represent the sellers of
- a business, and usually get a commission equal to about 10%
- of the sales price, can be very good sources to contact in
- your search for a business to buy. Of course, representing
- the seller, they will be seeking to maximize the sale price,
- and the seller may also tend to ask a bit more if he or she
- knows the broker will be collecting a 10% cut out of the pie.
-
- LOCAL CHAMBERS OF COMMERCE. Talk to the people at your
- local Chamber of Commerce. They usually know a great deal
- about the local business community and may be able to give
- you some free leads to firms that are for sale, perhaps
- before they are formally advertised as being for sale.
-
- ACCOUNTANTS, ATTORNEYS AND BANKERS. Often these professionals
- can be the best sources of leads to good businesses that may
- be coming up for sale, even before they are on the market.
- Many business people tend to confide in their accountants and
- lawyers about things they would not even tell their priest or
- psychiatrist, such as the fact that they are planning to
- retire or sell out their business, long before making any
- formal plans to put the business up for sale. If you have
- friends who are CPAs, lawyers or bankers, take them to lunch
- and tell them what you are looking for. Typically, they will
- have a vested interest in finding a friendly buyer for a
- retiring client's business, since they will fear losing that
- account if the client's firm is sold to strangers who have
- their own CPA, lawyer or banker already.
-
- Certified public accountants (CPAs) can be particularly
- good sources for leads. Having been one for most of my
- own professional life, I can tell you that every CPA has a
- number of clients with "juicy" little businesses that the
- CPA occasionally fantasizes about buying if the client ever
- dies or decides to sell out....Visions of 6-figure incomes,
- heavy cash flow, from a simple little business that only
- takes a few days a month to run, waving palm trees in
- Tahiti, no more "tax seasons" ....etc., complete the
- picture.
-
- But most CPAs (or lawyers or bankers) stick to doing what
- they do. However, if you can find a CPA who is looking for
- a partner to go in with him or her in buying out a client's
- business, and who would want you to be the person who runs
- it day-to-day, with the CPA remaining an investor for the
- most part, don't pass up such an opportunity. In such a
- case, you can generally bet that if the CPA is putting up
- his own money to buy out a client's business, he has studied
- the business carefully for years and feels that it is a real
- bonanza. In short, the accountant will have done much of
- the pre-screening for you already in such a case, on his or
- her own time.
-
- THE DIRECT APPROACH. Often, if you see a small business
- that you think you might like to buy, the simplest approach
- will be to talk to the owner and see if he or she is
- interested in selling. While the owner may have had no
- serious thoughts about selling the business before, the
- appearance of an interested potential buyer is not only
- somewhat flattering, but may even cause them to decide to
- sell out to you. Many businesses are bought and sold in
- just this way every day.
-
-
- ADVANTAGES OF BUYING AN EXISTING A BUSINESS
-
- In addition to the obvious advantages of buying an existing
- business that were mentioned above, there are the following:
-
- . You may be able to take a regular draw or salary
- out of the business right from the start if it is
- a profitable operation. This will rarely, if ever,
- be possible in a true start-up situation, unless
- what you are taking out is borrowed money.
-
- . Your risk is often less when you buy an established,
- profitable business. You KNOW that it has a viable
- market if it is already profitable. Your main risks
- are that something will change (e.g., new competition,
- obsolescence of product) that will adversely affect
- the business after you acquire it. Or you may simply
- screw it up.
-
- . Simplicity in getting started. You won't have to
- reinvent the wheel, since an ongoing business will
- already have facilities, operating systems, employees,
- etc. Thus you can devote most of your efforts to
- maintaining and improving operations, rather than
- worrying about acquiring initial inventory, setting
- up accounting systems, finding employees, designing
- a floor plan for the executive washroom and the like.
-
-