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Tom Britten By Tom Britten
Contributing Editor



How to Manage for the Eventual Sale of the Company
Vending operators can be prepared for the eventual sale of their business by following a common sense check list



The mind of the garden variety vending operator is swimming with a jumble of hot topics, day and night, every day:

"Who is going to call in sick tomorrow?"

"What's that new motor for truck #11 going to cost?"

"Is the new contact, at my biggest account, going to test the market?"

"My customers probably won't swallow another price increase."

"Why do my suppliers hammer me with price increases I can't recover?" … on and on.

On a less regular basis, you ponder: "Some day I might buy out my competitor, or maybe some day I'll just hang it up; sell my company to one of my competitors." Not tomorrow or the next day … just some day. That's the way we think of acquisitions and divestitures; it is something down the road.

You must plan for the future
Buying or selling a vending company can be the best thing that ever happened to you or your absolute worst nightmare. As a former executive of a national vending operation and now a business valuation/acquisitions consultant, I have seen more than my fair share of the latter.

I am not going to wax philosophical on the virtues of strategic planning. However, I will suggest that it is strongly in the operator's best interest to periodically set aside some quality time to review the checklist (see below). A couple of times a year should be sufficient.

Make it a formal review. Roll each element around and ask where you are now and how you can add strength and depth to the value of your business. Benchmark areas for improvement and measure your progress.

The core item that drives the entire process is the necessity to prove a sustainable profit; present and future. Everything else is secondary. A business may seem profitable, but this must be verified through the judicious and methodical examination of facts.

The sale price will vary based on the synergies of the acquiring company. For example, a company may own a piece of real estate, but if the acquiring company is going to fold the routes into another facility, the value of the real estate is not part of the deal. The seller then has the task of finding a buyer for the real estate.

Key factor: recasted EBITDA
Most of the items on the checklist are self explanatory. A few of them, however, deserve a little more explanation.

The recasted EBITDA (earnings before income tax, depreciation and amortization) is the first on the list for a reason. Primarily, investors focus on their anticipated return on investment (purchase price) from future cash

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Reader Comments
Sort by Post: Most RecentFirst Comment

Posted by Bryan in orange county
buy out partner
i own half of my vending business with a partner, i want trust him and want to buy him out or sell my half.
(02/18/07 - 03:48 AM)



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