| Some business
owners feel that they can sell their business themselves.
After all, who knows the business better than they do. Often,
these owners become sellers by simply placing an ad in the
newspaper and waiting for the telephone to ring. They think
of the money they can save by not paying a broker's fee. Sounds
good, but it very seldom works! First, the telephone may not
ring. If it does, it may be the local competition attempting
to find out what is for sale and for how much. Those who may
be interested will visit the business, ask a thousand questions,
leave, and never come back. So much for confidentiality, proper
pricing, qualifying the prospects, and finding the right buyer.
Business Advisors are not magicians. They can't
sell an overpriced business or create a demand that isn't
there. What they can do, however, is market the business so
it is shown only to qualified and interested buyer prospects.
Sellers have to understand that Business Advisors can provide
suitable prospects from the overwhelming majority of people
who don't really know what they want. Very few buyer prospects
really know what kind of business they want, or what best
fits their needs. In fact, 90 percent of all buyers are considering
buying a business for the first time, and are open to all
suggestions. A business broker can supply many prospective
buyers that sellers couldn't find on their own.
Another advantage is that a business broker
acts as an intermediary between the buyer and the seller.
Without an intermediary, the seller often gets frustrated
with the buyer pointing out items they see as wrong with the
business, or taking up too much of the seller's time investigating
the business. A good business broker shields the seller from
most of these frustrations.
Very few sellers price their business properly.
A business broker has a handle on the local marketplace, access
to market data, and pricing information not available to a
seller. Business Advisors are also good sources of outside
financing, if available. In some cases, the full sale price
is not the issue, but rather how the sale is structured is
the key to a successful sale.
Business Advisors generally have a backlog of
buyers that they work with on a current basis. They prepare
a business profile on the businesses they represent, designed
to show the business in its best light. They know how and
when to advertise, when to use trade publications, how to
use the Internet, and how to qualify buyers. Business broker
can maximize the price of a business and create added value
so that their fee is generally a non-issue. Sellers usually
receive a higher price when working with a business broker,
even after the fee, than they would if selling the business
on their own. Remember, it always pays to use a professional!
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