How Best To Respond ​To An Offer To Buy Your Business?

What do you do with an unsolicited offer to sell your business? It’s exciting, it’s surprising, and it’s confusing. I just sold a small business from a surprise offer, and there’s a lot to consider in a short amount of time. Our good people at The EXIT Firm help provide some great advice below (from an article originally posted here).

3 Reasons Why We Decided To Sell Our Business

“When you feel yourself become unwilling to make what you know are the right decisions for the growth of your business based on personal or emotional reasons, take it as a sign that it may be time to get out.” We love the real life stories of those who have built and sold businesses. Barbara Taylor tells a simple, and compelling, story of her journey. See original article here.

Dead Capital in a Business (and Buying a Job)

Great story here from David Barnett. Things get very real at around the 5 minute mark from our perspective. Talk to any business broker and they can tell you stories about business owners who believe in an inflated value of their business. It’s easy to understand why the owner in this story thinks his business should be worth more, but equally easy to understand why a buyer would never pay it.

3 Lessons Learned From A Decade In M&A

Small business owners learn through experience. But that approach creates a serious problem when it comes to exiting our business — because most owners only travel this road once. So what are you supposed to do? What you do is listen, carefully, to what people like Barbara Taylor have to say, in articles like this.

Brutal Seller Honesty

These are true statements for many small business owners. Will you be forced to say these things when you decide it’s time to sell? Is it time for a change.

Why Your Business Needs a Curmudgeon

I remember my first curmudgeon. It was a summer internship and I watched in awe as this old, grizzled veteran took swipes at management directives. Difficult, grumpy . . . and almost always speaking from a common sense truth lost on those sitting in meeting rooms higher up. I saw him at the time as trouble, now I realize how important his voice was.