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How to Build a Business Someone Actually Wants to Buy
The brutal truth about what makes companies sellable (and what doesn't)
Kinza here. This week I'm covering:
Why 80% of businesses that go to market never find a buyer
The four pillars that make businesses irresistible to acquirers
The common mistakes that instantly kill buyer interest
And more...
The Business That Nobody Wanted
I watched a profitable $5M service business sit on the market for 18 months without a single serious offer. Great financials, desperate owner.
But when I looked closer, I understood why buyers kept walking away.
The top 3 customers represented 60% of revenue. The owner made every major decision. Customer relationships depended on him personally. The "systems" were actually just him working 70-hour weeks.
On paper, it was a $5M business. In reality, it was a well-paid job nobody wanted to buy.
The Four Pillars of a Sellable Business
Pillar #1: Revenue That Survives Your Departure
Buyers Want:
No single customer above 15% of revenue
Recurring revenue above 40% of total
Contracts longer than 12 months
Revenue tied to market demand, not owner relationships
Pillar #2: Operations That Run Without You
Buyers Want:
Documented processes for critical functions
Management team running day-to-day operations
Decisions made without owner input
Performance tracked by others
Pillar #3: Clear Growth Opportunities
Buyers Want:
Market trends supporting 5+ years of growth
Expansion plans using existing resources
Realistic timelines and budgets
Competitive advantages hard to replicate
Pillar #4: Clean Financial Story
Buyers Want:
Three years of consistent, audited statements
Clear profit drivers and cost structure
Predictable cash flow patterns
Financial systems providing real-time visibility
The Sellability Test
The 90-Day Test: Could your business maintain current performance if you disappeared for 90 days? If no, you don't have a sellable business. You have a well-paying job.
The Stranger Test: Could an intelligent stranger understand your business in 30 minutes? If no, you haven't documented your business well enough for sale.
Common Sellability Killers
Customer Concentration: Top 3 customers representing more than 45% of revenue
Owner Dependency: Business revolving around your personal involvement
Financial Chaos: Messy, incomplete, or unreliable books
No Growth Story: Can't articulate realistic expansion opportunities
Start Building Sellability Now
Don't wait until you want to sell. Life has a way of forcing decisions when you're least prepared.
I've seen too many business owners scramble to create sellability after a health scare, family emergency, or market shift. By then, it's too late to get full value.
The best time to make your business sellable is when you have no intention of selling.
Until next time,
Kinza
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