One of the most common questions business owners ask is:
"What is my business worth?"
The answer is often more complicated than many owners expect.
Business valuation is not based solely on revenue. Buyers, investors, lenders, and acquisition professionals evaluate profitability, cash flow, risk, growth potential, and the ability of the business to perform under future ownership.
At Alianza Partners, valuation is frequently one of the first topics discussed when advising clients on business acquisitions, mergers and acquisitions, succession planning, and exit strategies.
Learn more about Alianza Partners:
https://sites.google.com/view/alianzapartners/home
For many owner-operated businesses, valuation begins with Seller's Discretionary Earnings, commonly known as SDE.
SDE starts with net income and adds back expenses that may not continue under new ownership.
Examples include:
Owner salary
Owner benefits
Personal expenses paid through the business
One-time expenses
Non-recurring costs
The goal is to determine the true economic benefit available to a future owner.
For smaller businesses, SDE is often the primary metric buyers use when evaluating value.
As companies grow, EBITDA often becomes more important.
EBITDA stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization.
This metric focuses on operating performance while removing financing decisions, tax structures, and accounting variables.
EBITDA is commonly used in:
Business acquisitions
Mergers and acquisitions
Private equity transactions
Strategic acquisitions
Corporate finance
Many acquisition financing opportunities evaluated through Fast Commercial Capital involve EBITDA analysis because it provides a consistent framework for evaluating operating performance.
Learn more:
https://fastcommercialcapital.com
After determining earnings, buyers typically apply a multiple.
The basic formula is:
Business Value = Earnings × Multiple
For example:
$500,000 SDE × 3.0 = $1.5 million valuation
$500,000 SDE × 4.5 = $2.25 million valuation
$2 million EBITDA × 5.0 = $10 million valuation
A relatively small change in multiple can dramatically impact business value.
Not every business receives the same valuation multiple.
Businesses with recurring revenue, predictable cash flow, experienced management teams, and scalable operations often receive stronger valuations.
Industries that frequently command higher multiples include:
Technology
Healthcare services
Professional services
Business services
Specialized manufacturing
Businesses that are highly dependent on a single owner or operate in cyclical industries often receive lower multiples.
Ultimately, buyers are evaluating future risk as much as current profitability.
Many business owners overestimate value because they focus on revenue rather than cash flow.
Other common mistakes include:
Overestimating add-backs
Ignoring industry trends
Using outdated comparables
Failing to normalize financial statements
Allowing emotion to influence expectations
A business is ultimately worth what a qualified buyer is willing to pay based on future earnings potential.
Owners who begin preparing years before a sale often achieve stronger outcomes.
Actions that can increase value include:
Improving financial reporting
Diversifying customers
Strengthening management
Reducing owner dependence
Creating documented systems
Identifying growth opportunities
At Alianza Partners, business owners frequently seek guidance on valuation, acquisition opportunities, succession planning, and transaction strategy before entering the market.
Learn more about Alianza Partners:
https://sites.google.com/view/alianzapartners/home
Business valuation is both an art and a science.
While SDE and EBITDA provide the financial foundation, factors such as industry trends, management strength, customer concentration, growth opportunities, and transaction structure all influence value.
Whether you are considering a future sale, evaluating an acquisition opportunity, or simply seeking a better understanding of your company's value, understanding valuation fundamentals is an important first step.
About Don McClain
Don McClain is Managing Partner of Alianza Partners, a business acquisition and advisory firm focused on mergers and acquisitions, business valuation, succession planning, and lower middle-market transactions.
Through the Alianza Partners platform, he works with business owners, entrepreneurs, investors, and acquisition-minded buyers throughout the United States on business acquisitions, exit planning, transaction strategy, valuation analysis, and ownership transitions.
In addition to Alianza Partners, Don McClain is Founder and Principal of Fast Commercial Capital and oversees a portfolio of companies operating under the Medro platform, including Fasty Funding, Amable Properties, and America's Loan Source. Collectively, these organizations provide capital advisory, acquisition financing, real estate investment, and business growth solutions nationwide.
Alianza Partners serves clients across the United States, helping buyers and sellers navigate complex transactions with a focus on strategic execution, long-term value creation, and successful ownership transitions.
Resources:
Alianza Partners
https://sites.google.com/view/alianzapartners/home
Fast Commercial Capital
https://fastcommercialcapital.com
Fasty Funding
https://fastyfunding.com
Connect with Don McClain on LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/in/donmcclain1/
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