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What to Fix Before Selling a Business

The issues that reduce sale price are known before the process starts. Most owners discover them when the buyer does.

Where this fits

Demand → Pricing → Cash → EBITDA → Network → Visibility → Value

What a Buyer Will Find That You Haven't Looked For

There is a short list of things that consistently reduce business value at sale. They are not mysteries. They are the same issues that come up in due diligence, deal after deal, sector after sector.

What this means in practice: a forensic review of everything you have said about the business. The issues it surfaces either reduce the price, change the structure, or — in some cases — stop the deal.

The frustrating part is that most of them are fixable — in the twelve to twenty-four months before a sale. The owners who come out of a sale process feeling good about the outcome are the ones who looked at their business through a buyer's eyes before the buyer did — and closed the gaps they found.

This page covers the main issues, how they show up, and what addressing them actually looks like in practice.

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The Issues That Consistently Surface

Due diligence is a forensic process. Buyers and their advisors are paid to find every problem, inconsistency, and risk. They do not miss things. The question is not whether they will find issues — they will — but whether those issues are ones you already know about and have addressed, or ones that come as a surprise.

Surprises during due diligence damage trust, provide grounds for price adjustment, and occasionally kill deals entirely.

In plain terms: Due diligence is the process where a buyer and their advisors examine everything about your business — financial records, customer relationships, contracts, operations, legal obligations — before committing to the purchase price. Think of it as a thorough audit that typically takes six to twelve weeks.

The issues that surface most consistently in Australian mid-market business sales fall into a short list: customer concentration, unclear or inconsistently-earned margin, owner dependency, inefficient working capital, poor financial reporting, and a team that cannot demonstrably run the business without the founder.

What this means in practice: managing debtors, inventory, and creditor terms tightly before a sale directly improves the settlement position. It is a cash impact, not just a financial metric.

These are not exotic problems. They are the ordinary consequences of running a business that has grown through effort, relationships, and founder judgment — without always building the systems and structures that make that performance visible and transferable.

What this means for you:

  • What the business does and what it can demonstrate are often very different — the gap is where value gets lost.
  • Every issue a buyer finds in due diligence is a negotiating tool. Issues found by you first are addressed on your terms.
  • The businesses that perform best in sale processes are not always the best businesses — they are the best prepared ones.

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This is usually where things get misread.

Most owners know the problems exist. What they do not know is which ones actually cost value at sale — and what to do about them in the time available. An external view before the process starts pays for itself.

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Translation — What the Language Actually Means

What they say:

Customer concentration

What it means:

When a single customer or small group represents a disproportionate share of revenue. Buyers see this as a risk that earnings could collapse if one relationship changes. It is consistently one of the largest discount factors in Australian mid-market transactions — and one of the hardest things to fix quickly.

What they say:

Key-person dependency

What it means:

The business cannot operate or maintain its performance without a specific individual — usually the owner. This creates risk for the buyer and reduces how much cash you receive upfront, because the buyer needs you to remain and perform post-sale. It affects both the price and the deal structure.

What they say:

Normalisation adjustments

What it means:

Changes the buyer's accountants make to your reported earnings to remove items they consider non-recurring. If your P&L includes personal expenses, related-party transactions, or one-time items, these will be scrutinised and potentially used to reduce the earnings base being valued.

In plain terms: Normalisation means adjusting your reported profit to show what the business truly earns in normal conditions. Owner salaries above market rate, personal vehicle expenses, family members on payroll, and one-off costs are typical examples. These adjustments reduce the earnings number that is multiplied to set the price.

What they say:

Deferred maintenance

What it means:

Capital expenditure that should have been spent but was not, in order to improve near-term profit. Buyers identify this and model the future capital catch-up cost, reducing the value they attribute to the earnings.

What they say:

Revenue quality

What it means:

The assessment of whether your revenue is contracted, recurring, repeat, or transactional. Higher quality revenue — with contracts or high retention rates — is valued more than revenue that must be won again each period.

What they say:

Management depth

What it means:

The capability and independence of the leadership team below the owner. A business where the team can run operations, manage customers, and make sound decisions without the founder present is structurally more valuable — and gives the seller more control over deal structure.

The issues that reduce value at sale are usually visible before the process starts. The question is who finds them first.

Most owners know the problems exist. What they do not know is which ones to fix first, or how to fix them in a way that is credible to a buyer. That is where an external view pays for itself before the process starts.

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How This Plays Out in a Real Business

Before state

An industrial services business with $4.1 million in EBITDA went to market expecting to achieve $24 to $28 million in enterprise value. The owner had run the business for twenty-one years, maintained strong customer relationships, and had a team he considered capable of running the operation.

What this means in practice: knowing your normalised EBITDA before the buyer calculates it means you can defend it. If you do not know it, you are negotiating blind against someone who has already built a model of your business.

The issue

During due diligence, four issues surfaced simultaneously: two customers represented 54% of revenue with no formal contracts; the owner personally managed the three largest accounts; margin on one division was overstated due to how overhead was allocated; and the debtor book included $380,000 in overdue balances that had not been provisioned.

What the buyer saw

Each issue individually was manageable. Together, they provided grounds to reduce the normalised EBITDA to $3.3 million and to insist on an earn-out structure rather than full cash at completion. The buyer also required the founder to remain for an extended period to manage the customer transition risk.

What this means in practice: the earnings figure used for valuation, after the buyer removes items they consider non-recurring or non-representative. You need to know this number before they calculate it.

What this means in practice: the number buyers use to value your business is adjusted for risk. Fixing the issues that create risk — before they are discovered — directly improves the valuation outcome.

Impact on value

The final deal was $18.5 million — significantly below the initial expectation of $24 to $28 million. Not because the business was not good. Because the documentation, structure, and financial reporting had not been prepared to demonstrate what the business was actually worth. Most of those issues were addressable in the twelve months prior to going to market.

What this means for you:

  • Four issues found simultaneously in due diligence compounds the impact — each one provides grounds for further adjustment.
  • Owner-managed customer relationships without contracts are both a revenue quality issue and a key-person dependency issue at once.
  • Unprovisioned debtors discovered in due diligence are treated as a reduction in working capital quality — not as a one-off item.

What Fixing These Issues Does to Value

Pricing clarity

Identifying and closing margin gaps — particularly on customers or products where pricing has drifted — directly improves the earnings number being valued. It also demonstrates to a buyer that margin is managed, not assumed.

Cost visibility

Knowing and demonstrating what it costs to serve each part of the business reduces the risk a buyer attributes to the earnings. Lower perceived risk translates to a higher multiple.

Revenue composition

Diversifying the customer base, securing contracts where possible, and growing in margin-accretive segments improves both the earnings figure and the multiple applied to it.

Overhead justification

A cost structure that is clearly explained and connected to revenue-generating activity removes uncertainty from the buyer's model. Unexplained overhead or costs that cannot be connected to outcomes create discount risk.

The Order of Operations

Not everything can be fixed at once. The question is what to fix first.

Start with financial reporting

If management accounts are not reliable, timely, and detailed enough to support your claims about business performance, fix that first. Everything else rests on a foundation of credible financial information.

Then address working capital

Debtor days, inventory management, and supplier terms all have a direct cash impact at settlement. Visible, measurable improvement over twelve months creates a track record that supports your narrative.

Pricing and margin next

A disciplined pricing review produces results that flow directly into the earnings figure. Done early, the improvement has time to appear in the trailing twelve months of results buyers will use for their model.

Customer and team development last — but start early

Formalising customer relationships, broadening the customer base, and demonstrating that the team can operate without the founder all take time to evidence convincingly. Start as early as possible.

What this means for you:

  • Financial reporting quality is the foundation — without it, no other improvement can be properly demonstrated.
  • Working capital improvement has a direct cash impact at settlement, not just on the earnings multiple.
  • Customer diversification takes the longest to achieve credibly — start it before you think you need to.

Common Questions

What is the most common issue that reduces sale price?

Customer concentration is the most consistent value discount in Australian mid-market transactions. When a small number of customers represent a large share of revenue, buyers price the risk that those relationships could change after the acquisition. It affects both the earnings quality assessment and the multiple.

How do I address owner dependency before selling?

Start withdrawing from day-to-day operations before you go to market. Let the team handle customer interactions, operational decisions, and performance management. The goal is to demonstrate — through a sustained period — that the business performs without you present. This cannot be manufactured in the final months before a sale.

Can I fix financial reporting quickly?

Reporting can be improved relatively quickly, but historical accounts are harder to change. Buyers want to see a track record of clean, timely management accounts. Starting to produce them consistently at least twelve months before going to market gives you something credible to show.

Should I invest in the business before selling?

Only in areas that demonstrably improve earnings or reduce buyer risk. Investment in systems, team capability, and customer relationships has a higher return in a sale context. Cosmetic improvements — refurbishment, new equipment that does not improve margins — are rarely valued appropriately in a transaction.

How do buyers assess the quality of my management team?

Through direct interaction during due diligence and through the evidence of how the business operates when you are not in the room. They will meet your managers, assess their capability, and form a view on whether the business has a functional leadership layer below the founder.

What happens if I disclose a problem and it reduces the price?

It will affect the price. But problems discovered by the buyer during diligence — rather than disclosed by you upfront — typically result in larger adjustments, damage trust, and can provide grounds to withdraw. Disclosure gives you control over how the issue is framed. Discovery gives that control to the buyer.

How do I manage customer concentration risk if I cannot diversify quickly?

You can formalise the relationships you have through contracts, service agreements, or preferred supplier arrangements. Demonstrating the depth of those relationships through data — tenure, spend history, product breadth, decision-maker access — reduces the perceived risk of concentration even when the revenue share cannot change.

What does a buyer mean when they say the earnings are not clean?

They mean the reported profit includes items that are not representative of what the business normally earns — personal expenses, one-off items, related-party transactions, or costs that were unusually low in a particular year. Cleaning up the earnings means identifying and removing these items so the true ongoing profitability is clear.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the most common issues that reduce sale price?

Customer concentration, owner dependency, inconsistent margin, and financial reporting that cannot support the claims being made about performance. These four issues appear in the majority of Australian mid-market transactions and account for most of the gap between seller expectation and final outcome.

How do I address customer concentration before selling?

You cannot always change the revenue distribution quickly. What you can do is formalise relationships through contracts or preferred supplier agreements, document the depth and tenure of those relationships, and demonstrate that the customer knows the team — not just the founder.

What does due diligence actually involve?

Financial, legal, commercial, and operational workstreams run in parallel over four to eight weeks. Buyers and their advisors will test every claim you have made. Issues discovered during diligence are used to adjust the price or change the deal structure. Issues disclosed upfront are treated differently.

Should I invest in the business before selling?

Only in areas that demonstrably improve earnings or reduce buyer risk. Cosmetic improvements are rarely valued in a transaction. Investment in systems, reporting quality, team capability, and customer documentation has a measurable return in a sale context.

How do I reduce owner dependency before selling?

By withdrawing from day-to-day decisions for a sustained period before you go to market. The goal is to demonstrate — through evidence, not assertion — that the business performs without you present. Buyers will look for at least twelve months of evidence.

Related Insights

Built by an operator who has scaled and exited businesses across private equity, listed and private environments.  View track record →

Find out what your business is actually worth — using real PE metrics

Built on real operating and private equity metrics — not generic multiples.

Used by founders and operators preparing for growth, capital or exit.

Start valuation →

See also: Sell-Side Readiness  ·  Profit & Working Capital

This perspective is based on operating and scaling businesses across manufacturing, distribution and industrial sectors, including private equity-backed environments.

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