DISCOVERY CALL

3 Ways To Make Your Company More Valuable Than Your Industry Peers

company value customer diversification point of differentiation recurring revenue value builder May 13, 2022

Have you ever wondered what determines the value of your business?  

Perhaps you’ve heard an industry rule of thumb and assumed that your company will be  worth about the same as a similar size company in your industry. However, when we take a  look at the data provided by The Value Builder System™, we’ve found there are eight factors  that drive the value of your business, and they are all potentially more important than the  industry you’re in.  

Not convinced? Let’s look at Jill Nelson, who recently sold a majority interest in her $11  million telephone answering service, Ruby Receptionists, for $38.8 million.  

That’s a lot of money for answering the phone on behalf of independent lawyers,  contractors and plumbers across America. 

To give you a sense of how high that valuation is, let’s look at some comparison data. At  Value Builder, we’ve worked with more than 30,000 businesses in the last five years. Our  clients start by completing their Value Builder questionnaire, which covers 35 questions that  allow us to place an estimate of value on a company. The average value for companies  starting with us is 3.6 times pre-tax profit and those who graduate our program with a Value  Builder Score of 80+ (out of a possible 100) are getting an average of 6.3 times pre-tax profit. 

When we isolate the administrative support industry that Ruby Receptionists operates in,  the average multiple offered for these companies over the last five years is just 1.8 times  pre-tax profit.   

Nelson, by contrast, sold the majority interest in Ruby Receptionists for more than 3 times  revenue. 

There were three factors that made Nelson’s business much more valuable than her industry  peers, and they are the same things you can focus on to drive up the value of your company: 

  1. Cultivate Your Point Of Differentiation 

Acquirers do not buy what they could easily build themselves. If your main competitive  advantage is price, an acquirer will rightly conclude they can simply set up shop as a  competitor and win most of your price sensitive customers away by offering a temporary  discount.  

In the case of Ruby Receptionists, Nelson invested heavily in a technology that ensured that  no matter when a client received a phone call, her technology would route that call to an  available receptionist. Nelson’s competitors were mostly low-tech mom and pop businesses  who often missed calls when there was a sudden surge of callers. Nelson’s technology could  handle client surges because of the unique routing technology she had built that transferred  calls efficiently across her network of receptionists. 

Nelson’s acquirer, a private equity company called Updata Partners, saw the potential of  applying Nelson’s call-routing technology to other businesses they owned and were considering investing in. 

  1. Recurring Revenue 

Acquirers want to know how your business will perform after they buy it. Nothing gives  them more confidence that your business will continue to thrive post sale than recurring  revenue from subscriptions or service contracts.  

In Nelson’s case, Ruby Receptionists billed its customers through recurring contracts— perfect for making a buyer confident that her company has staying power.  

  1. Customer Diversification 

In addition to having customers pay on recurring contracts, the most valuable businesses  have lots of little customers rather than one or two biggies. Most acquirers will balk if any  one of your customers represents more than 15% of your revenue.  

At the time of the acquisition, Ruby Receptionists had 6,000 customers paying an average of  just a few hundred dollars per month. Nelson could lose a client or two each month without  skipping a beat, which is ideal for reassuring a hesitant buyer that your company’s revenue  stream is bulletproof.  

Nelson built a valuable company in a relatively unexciting, low-tech industry, proving that  how you run your business is more important than the industry you’re in.

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