As I have mentioned a time or two in passing here on the forums, I have recently been looking into buying a local business. The purchase would be from a man that I is not close enough to be called a friend, and not distant enough to be called an acquaintance. Just a person I know and have worked with on occasion. To say the man views his business through rose colored glasses, now that I see the big picture, would be an understatement.
The initial discussion talked about some rough figures on his sales, profit margin, overall profits, etc. Based upon that I said that his $350,000 asking price would be within negotiation range most likely. I got the P&L, AvL and balance sheet this week. Not even in the ballpark. This year is the first year, out of five being in business, that it has turned a profit. Of an entire $15,000 on $213,000 in sales. In those five years, he has not drawn a single paycheck. The $65K he told me he paid out in payroll, is actually $35K. From a cashflow basis, the business has a negative value.
Looking at assets, he purchased approximately $65K in equipment, spent $30K on the buildout of the space he leases (that is horrendously laid out) and roughly $5K on office, POS and such. He also spent $37K on a franchise agreement that also costs him 5% of gross per year. The franchise agreement has zero value to anyone, it costs him every year more than it saves him and there is zero brand name recognition.
So that equals $100K in assets worth purchasing, when they were new. Discounted 50% (going rate for used equipment in this field) and we are down to $50K. He holds about $20K in inventory so the actual value of the business is roughly $70,000. Two accountant friends with years of experience came up with figures within a grand of my actual numbers along with a half dozen business owner friends of mine. Another friend who has spent the last ten years working in mergers and acquisitions for a Fortune 100 company agreed with myself and everyone else. So I have no doubt about the value unless there is another half million in equipment somewhere in the 3,000 sq ft retail space, lol.
I am supposed to meet with him tomorrow afternoon to discuss this. I am not sure how to approach him about it. Looking at the balance sheet and ledger he probably has $300K or better in it. But also looking at the ledger it appears that most of that went to poor business decisions. I also have no doubt that the business could thrive, under different management. The last two years advertising has been around 1% of gross profit. It is rather hard to get people to do business with you unless you invite them. I can also get great advertising at bargain prices right now through friends in media. The major problem with the business overall is simply that he puts no effort into it. He is in his sixties and he has sank all of his retirement into it and failed. He is looking for some way to make that back, but no one is going to pay the price he asks.
I am torn between just saying I cannot commit myself to that much right now and walking away with no hard feelings, or taking the chance and pointing out to him that you can't get to his asking price without multiplication. I know the guy who looked into purchasing this business two years ago and he chose option one, to walk away. I feel like after putting in this sort of effort that I should at least show him the value that I and several professionals (much more knowledgeable than I) came up with.
Rose colored glasses. NEVER listen to what a franchiser tells you.
Just needed to rant!
The initial discussion talked about some rough figures on his sales, profit margin, overall profits, etc. Based upon that I said that his $350,000 asking price would be within negotiation range most likely. I got the P&L, AvL and balance sheet this week. Not even in the ballpark. This year is the first year, out of five being in business, that it has turned a profit. Of an entire $15,000 on $213,000 in sales. In those five years, he has not drawn a single paycheck. The $65K he told me he paid out in payroll, is actually $35K. From a cashflow basis, the business has a negative value.
Looking at assets, he purchased approximately $65K in equipment, spent $30K on the buildout of the space he leases (that is horrendously laid out) and roughly $5K on office, POS and such. He also spent $37K on a franchise agreement that also costs him 5% of gross per year. The franchise agreement has zero value to anyone, it costs him every year more than it saves him and there is zero brand name recognition.
So that equals $100K in assets worth purchasing, when they were new. Discounted 50% (going rate for used equipment in this field) and we are down to $50K. He holds about $20K in inventory so the actual value of the business is roughly $70,000. Two accountant friends with years of experience came up with figures within a grand of my actual numbers along with a half dozen business owner friends of mine. Another friend who has spent the last ten years working in mergers and acquisitions for a Fortune 100 company agreed with myself and everyone else. So I have no doubt about the value unless there is another half million in equipment somewhere in the 3,000 sq ft retail space, lol.
I am supposed to meet with him tomorrow afternoon to discuss this. I am not sure how to approach him about it. Looking at the balance sheet and ledger he probably has $300K or better in it. But also looking at the ledger it appears that most of that went to poor business decisions. I also have no doubt that the business could thrive, under different management. The last two years advertising has been around 1% of gross profit. It is rather hard to get people to do business with you unless you invite them. I can also get great advertising at bargain prices right now through friends in media. The major problem with the business overall is simply that he puts no effort into it. He is in his sixties and he has sank all of his retirement into it and failed. He is looking for some way to make that back, but no one is going to pay the price he asks.
I am torn between just saying I cannot commit myself to that much right now and walking away with no hard feelings, or taking the chance and pointing out to him that you can't get to his asking price without multiplication. I know the guy who looked into purchasing this business two years ago and he chose option one, to walk away. I feel like after putting in this sort of effort that I should at least show him the value that I and several professionals (much more knowledgeable than I) came up with.
Rose colored glasses. NEVER listen to what a franchiser tells you.
Just needed to rant!

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