ELIOT WAGONHEIM: If you are interested in buying a business, you should watch
out for a company where the value walks out the door right after the sale is
consummated.
FRED PROVORNY: You need to do some due diligence as a buyer.
EDWARD JACOBSON: I would like to see the seller around for a significant
period of time to help with the transition, so that I am buying something that
is not going to evaporate if the seller leaves.
ELIOT WAGONHEIM: If the owner of the company you just bought rides off into
the sunset, is there anybody else that has the relationships that sustain the
business, does anybody know how to work the business. If the salesmen are not
locked down, if there is no contract with them, and so they can take the
relationships out the door right after you buy the company, meaning that they
can take 70% of the revenues out the door after you buy the company, that is a
problem.
FRED PROVORNY: And also get some idea from outside experts as to what its
prospects are?
ELIOT WAGONHEIM: There are several ways to find out, one is to work with an
experienced business broker or depending upon the size of the industry, an
investment banker. These people will have a feel for what a business is worth.
EDWARD JACOBSON: Not knowing what is worth is the biggest question mark that
any prospective buyer has or any seller has.
ELIOT WAGONHEIM: There are many people, who are available and qualified to do
business evaluations.
EDWARD JACOBSON: It is amazing how many people come to me and they say what
is my business worth, they have no idea.
ELIOT WAGONHEIM: If for example, you are purchasing a business that is in a
different industry, an industry with which perhaps you are not as familiar, it
may be a good idea to get a business evaluation.
EDWARD JACOBSON: In simplistic terms, the business is worth what it can
generate in earnings.
FRED PROVORNY: You really need to get an effect into the bowels of the
company and see what makes it tick.
EDWARD JACOBSON: Some businesses will run through personal expenses, some
businesses will either overpay the owner or underpay the owner.
FRED PROVORNY: In the words of the late President Regan, trust, but verify.
EDWARD JOHNSON: Inherently, there is a lot of risk associated with a small
business.
FRED PROVORNY: The due diligence phase is the verification.
RICHARD BOOTH: What buyers are interested in is not getting any liabilities
that they do not understand or that might crop up later and perhaps are not even
known about at the time of the sale of the business.
ELIOT WAGONHEIM: Make sure that what you are buying is going to be the same
company after closing as it was in the days leading up to closing.