Entrepreneurialism

Buy A Business With These Facts And Your Success Is All But Guaranteed

The other day a guy contacted me and told me he was interested in buying a business that was far away from where he lives. And he was almost frantic about what to do as far how much information he should get from the seller before planning the four-hour flight and face-to-face visit.

Here's what I told him:

The main things you?re looking for with an owner before getting on the plane are the same questions you would ask if he was just down the block:

1.) What is the price on it.

2.) What is the net profit.

And besides that, before you fly across the country, you?re going to want to see the financials for the past three years...the balance sheets from different years so you can see what the assets look like...and how long the owner will stay with the company after the sale.

Now, you don?t have to ask him for leases and inventory lists and all these other things because what?s going to happen is you may get there and find out you don?t have a deal or that you can?t put it together. And so, if you?ve asked for too much information, you?re just wasting your time and the other person?s time, too.

Bottom line: Whether it's long distance or not, asking these questions up front is a must. You want to make sure the thing is going to work before you get there. If it does, your success is all but guaranteed as long as they're telling the truth. On the other hand, if you think the business is doing $2 million a year and it?s worth $8 million, and the guy wants $15 million, then you probably want to walk away and not bother.

Personally -- and I've been doing this for half a century and have seen it all -- I never go a long distance or drive a long distance to visit the business unless the price and the terms and the deal the owner?s offering is in the ballpark.

Arthur B. Hamel has bought over 200 businesses in the past 50 years, and is a well-known author, consultant, investor, business owner, and dynamic lecturer who has shared the stage with such business greats as Robert Allen of "No Money Down" fame. For the past 20 years Art has taught thousands of people around the world -- even so-called "little guys" with no formal education or money -- how to quickly and easily buy large, multi-million dollar businesses with no credit, banks or prior business experience. He has recently decided to share his unique business-buying secrets and tactics free of charge at: http://arthurhamel.com

Art Hamel

 Tags: buy a business, buy sell business, Franchise, business, business plan, business opportunity

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Aphorism

You should invest in a business that even a fool can run, because someday a fool will.

Warren Buffett


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