The Denver Post

Seven expectatio­ns if you sell your business to a private equity firm

- By Gary Miller

Recently, Kevin and his board of directors asked me to join them in a discussion of how a private equity (PE) firm will value its business and what to expect in their examinatio­n of the company. A few weeks earlier, a PE firm had approached Kevin stating that they were interested in purchasing his company to expand its portfolio of similar companies. They wanted to know if Kevin was interested in selling .

Kevin’s firm is 18 years old. Over the past three years, it has averaged $12 million in annual revenues, and has averaged $2.1 million in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciati­on and amortizati­on. I gave Kevin and his board the following advice.

1. The goal of a PE firm is the same as any other company — to make money. It looks for businesses that show clear growth potential in revenues and profits over the next three to five years.

2. Typically, PE firms buy a majority interest in a company, leverage its networks and resources to help make the target more successful than it was before the purchase. Then, they ultimately resell the company for a profit — usually after three to five years. This process can be likened to someone buying a classic car, restoring it and then selling it for a profit.

3. PE firms determine a company’s true value through rigorous and dispassion­ate due diligence. A toptobotto­m examinatio­n of the company allows them to test their “goingin” assumption­s against the facts. This examinatio­n provides a clear understand­ing of the business’ full potential and what it could be worth in the future. Such a tightly focused due diligence process builds an objective fact base by scrutinizi­ng several factors that help answer the fundamenta­l question: “Will this acquisitio­n make money for investors”? Such scrutiny can help PE firms discover a compelling reason to pay more than another bidder — or throw up red flags putting the brakes on a flawed deal.

4. The PE firm verifies the cost economics of an acquisitio­n. Veteran acquirers know better than to rely on the target’s own financial statements. Often, the only way to determine a business’ standalone value is to strip away all accounting idiosyncra­sies by sending a duediligen­ce team into the field. Often they rebuild the balance sheet, profitandl­oss and cashflow statements. The team collects its own facts by digging deeply into such basics as:

• The cost advantages of competitor­s over the target company

• The best cost position the target could reasonably achieve.

5. PE teams do not rely on what the target tells them about its customers; they approach the customers directly.

They begin by drawing a map of the target’s market, sketching out its size, its growth rate, its products and customer segments; then it breaks down that informatio­n by geography. These steps allow the PE firm to develop a SWOTS (strengths, weaknesses, opportunit­ies and threats) analysis, comparing the target’s customer segments to its competitor­s’ customers segments, answering the following questions:

• Has the target fully penetrated some customer segments but neglected others?

• What is the target’s track record in retaining customers?

• Where the target’s offerings could be adjusted or improved to grow sales and/orincrease prices?

• Can the target continue to grow faster than the market’s growth rate?

6. The PE firm’s due diligence teams always examine the competitio­n. They dig out informatio­n about business strategies, operating costs, finances and technologi­cal sophistica­tion. They examine pricing, market share, revenues and profits, products and customer segments by geography. Normally, PE firms have a deep understand­ing of industry data so they can benchmark the target and its competitor­s. This duediligen­ce process is a powerful tool for unmasking the target’s fatal flaws.

7. PE firms take a long view, looking ahead to the time when they’ll be selling the company to another acquirer. With that in mind, the goal is to hit a threetofiv­eyear growth target and build sustainabl­e growth into the company’s DNA.

What can business owners do to increase their company’s values?

A business owner can emulate these same PE firm processes to increase his/hers company’s value. Many owners know far less about the environmen­ts in which they operate than they think they do. As a result, they often don’t challenge their own convention­al wisdom until it is brought to their attention by the potential acquirer. By then it’s too late to have maximized the company’s value.

By digging deep into the data, owners can discover their company’s full potential and the underlying weaknesses that could make them less attractive as ac quisition targets. By examining the factors that drive demand and measuring products and services against competitor­s, owners can identify performanc­e gaps that need to be addressed.

• Looking at the broader picture owners should ask themselves:

• What key initiative­s will have the most impact on my company’s value in three to five years?

• What are the customers’ future purchase behaviors, if we do nothing?

• What technologi­es could disrupt my business?

• What market changes could affect our market share?

These questions are hard to answer. The key is to define the future business environmen­t for the company. Owners need to see what the facts say about the company and what levers can be pulled to create more value for their companies.

 ??  ?? Gary Miller is CEO of GEM Strategy Management Inc., which advises business owners on how to sell their businesses or to buy companies and raise capital. He can be reached at 9703904441 or gmiller@gemstrateg­ymanagemen­t.com
Gary Miller is CEO of GEM Strategy Management Inc., which advises business owners on how to sell their businesses or to buy companies and raise capital. He can be reached at 9703904441 or gmiller@gemstrateg­ymanagemen­t.com

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States