Built to Sell Radio - podcast cover

Built to Sell Radio

John Warrillowbuilttosell.com
Built to Sell Radio is a weekly podcast for business owners interested in selling a business. Each week, we ask an entrepreneur who has recently sold a business why they decided to sell their business, what they did right and what mistakes they made through the process of exiting their business. Built to Sell Radio is the ultimate insider's guide to approaching the most important financial transaction of your life.
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Episodes

Ep. 112 The Strategic vs. The Financial Buyer

Tom Franceski and his two partners built DocStar up to 45 employees when they decided to shop the business to some private equity (PE) investors. The PE guys offered four to six times Earnings Before Interest Taxes Depreciation and Amortization (EBITDA), which Franceski deemed low for a fast-growing software company.

Oct 04, 201752 min

Ep. 111 How to Sell a Consulting Firm

Susan Hrib started an oil and gas industry consulting firm called Signum back in 1994. Recently Hrib received a call from an industry contact who said they would be interested in buying Signum. After more than 20 years in the same company, Hrib decided she was ready to move on.

Sep 27, 201736 min

Ep. 110 How Mainspring Went From a Valuation of 1 to 5 Times Revenue

In 2014, Hank Goddard got an offer of one times revenue to buy his software company, Mainspring Healthcare Solutions. Goddard said, “No, thank you”. A year later, the acquirer came back and doubled their offer to two times revenue. Again, Goddard declined.

Sep 20, 201751 min

Ep. 109 How to Exit a Consulting Business

Sohail Khan built J.V. Global Consulting into a $3 million consulting business, offering training boot camps and consulting on how to set up joint venture partnerships. Khan was approached by one of his clients wanting to buy his business. Khan rejected their initial offer, but when they came back with a deal worth in excess of eight figures, Khan couldn’t refuse.

Sep 13, 201733 min

Ep. 107 Negotiation Secrets From Three Exits

Dan Martell started Spheric Technologies to help Fortune 500 companies build website portals, an emerging business back in 2004. Within four years, Martell had scaled the business to 30 employees when he received an acquisition offer that would change his life.

Aug 30, 201738 min

Ep. 106 Cashing Out of the Oil Business

Terry Lammers took over the family oil wholesaling business in 1991. By 2010, Tri-County Petroleum was selling $42 million worth of gas and oil, when Lammers decided it was time to cash in.

Aug 23, 201744 min

Ep. 105 Why Did This $3MM Company Sell For 5X Revenue?

Brian Ferrilla started Resort Advantage in 2006 to help casinos adhere to new anti-money laundering laws. Criminals were laundering money through casinos and Ferrilla’s software helped casinos help spot the bad guys.

Aug 16, 201743 min

Ep. 102 The Downside Of Being Upfront With Employees

In 2011 Josh Holtzman, the founder and CEO of American Data Company, gathered his employees into a conference room to announce “Fifteen Cubed”, a company-wide initiative to grow to $15 million in revenue by the year 2015.

Jul 19, 201743 min

Ep. 101 The Doer vs. The Deal Maker

Entrepreneurs can be categorized into two groups. On one hand, you have the doers. These are the people who organically grow a business over time. They plod along for years, or even decades in the same business. They look for small, incremental improvements every day. Their natural tendency is to say no to new ideas and they have to be thoroughly convinced before they change strategy.

Jul 12, 201748 min

Ep. 100 How a Vision Board Drove One Owner to Sell

A few weeks ago, Shaun Oshamn sold iSupportU, a Colorado-based IT support business. Oshamn started the business at the age of 32 and knew he wanted to sell before his 40th birthday. As that milestone approached, Oshamn started getting his business ready to sell.

Jul 05, 201741 min

Ep. 99 Why Hitting $10MM In Annual Revenue Matters

Jill Nelson built Ruby Receptionists, a call answering service, into an $11MM business when she met with an investment banker who told her the technology she had built to answer calls could be worth a mint.

Jun 28, 201747 min

Ep. 97 How EBITDA adjustments impact the value of your business

Ari Ackerman started Bunk1 in 1999 to give parents a way to keep in touch with their kids while they were at summer camp. Over 17 years, Ackerman grew his technology business into one of the biggest brands in the summer camp industry, which is about the time they were approached by TogetherWork, a company backed by a billion-dollar private equity giant.

Jun 14, 201758 min

Ep. 96 The Philosophy of Building to Sell

Dan Faggella started Science of Skill, an e-commerce website selling self-defense videos and paraphernalia, in 2013. His goal was to sell the business as soon as possible, and he started soliciting offers just 14 months later.

Jun 07, 201745 min

Ep. 95 The (Awfully) Thin Line Between Success and Failure

Shelley Rogers started Admincomm Warehousing to help companies recycle their old technology. Rogers purchased old phone systems and computer monitors for pennies on the dollar and sold the gear to recyclers who dismantled the technology down to its raw materials and sold off the base metals.

May 31, 201753 min

Ep. 93 What’s Your Company’s Name Worth

In the early 2000s, Carl Gould gained notoriety in New Jersey for building upscale modular and log homes under the banner Outdoor Imaging. Gould invested heavily in growing his reputation in the New Jersey market. When Gould went to sell his business, the buyer wanted his hard assets and for Gould to sign over the development contracts he had commitments on, but the buyer did not want to take Gould’s company name.

May 17, 201737 min

Ep. 92 America’s Condom King Sells His Business

Adam Glickman started hawking “Jumbo Brand Condoms” from his Tuft’s dorm room in 1989 under the moniker “a safe jumbo is a happy jumbo.” His brand grew across campus and, upon graduation, Glickman started America’s first retail condom shop in New York City. Based on the success of the Manhattan store, Glickman expanded to Los Angeles and in 1996 became an e-commerce pioneer.

May 10, 201743 min

Ep. 91 10 X Earnings By Future Proofing Your Buyer

Melbourne-based David Trewern grew DT, a digital advertising agency, to $10 million in annual revenue before he sold it to STW Group in 2007 for almost 10 times profit after tax. Trewern was able to get maximum value for his business and preferred terms because he started to look at the world through the eyes of his would-be acquirer.

May 03, 201758 min

Ep. 90 When to Tell Employees You’re Thinking of Selling

Lois Melbourne and her husband started Acquire Solutions, a software business that helped large companies manage their employees. After 18 years, the self-funded business had grown to 85 people and the Melbournes received an offer from a private equity firm rolling up software companies in the human resources field.

Apr 26, 201746 min

Ep. 89 What UPS looks for when making an acquisition

Acquirers are a secretive bunch. They typically operate behind confidentiality agreements with their motives and tactics disguised from the public. That’s one reason I enjoyed my interview with Rocky Romanella so much.

Apr 19, 201751 min

Ep. 88 What Happens When the Big Dog Sells

Anthony Amos and his brother started HydroDog, an Australian company offering a mobile dog washing and grooming service. For $10, the Amos brothers would show up at your door with a giant dog bath on the back of their trailer and wash your dog.

Apr 12, 201749 min

Ep. 87 The success rate statistics on selling your business

How many people will you have to approach about buying your business before you end up getting an offer? In this week’s episode, you’ll hear from John Arnott who gives you a breakdown of the statistics on how many people he approached, the conversion rate of those approached to those who signed a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA), what proportion of people under NDA requested a face-to-face meeting and, of the people he met with, how many offers he received. It’s the first time that we at Built to ...

Apr 05, 201753 min

Ep. 86 The Speedy Sale

Dan Lok packaged a set of table tennis video tutorials into a membership website and charged a subscription fee to join. Over eight years, Lok managed to build a five-figure recurring revenue stream from subscribers to Table Tennis Master. Table Tennis Master was one of 20 businesses Lok was developing simultaneously when tragedy struck his family. That’s when he decided to simplify his life and sell off some of his business interests. In Lok’s case, speed and ease of transaction were more impor...

Mar 29, 201730 min

Ep. 85 3 Acquisition Offers, 1 Surprising Decision

The Mortgage Reports publishes information about mortgages for home owners. Site founder Dan Green, capitalized on the internet traffic they generated by selling leads to mortgage lenders. Within three years, Green crested a million dollars a year in annual revenue. That’s when he began to worry about new regulations and compliance as his business went from being a hobby to a major player in the mortgage leads industry. Green decided to sell and quickly got three offers from the companies he was...

Mar 08, 201751 min

Ep. 84 Wisdom From The Sale Of Six Businesses

Laura Gisborne has started nine companies and sold six of them, including The Art of Wine, the subject of this week’s episode. The Art of Wine is a tasting room with a subscription-based wine club division. With a little more than $1MM in annual revenue, The Art of Wine was still a relatively small business, but when the lease came up for renewal Gisborne reasoned it was the perfect time to look for a new owner. Gisborne channeled her experience from six exits into the sale of The Art of Wine, a...

Mar 01, 201741 min

Ep. 83 Do You Want An All-Cash Offer?

Most sellers want to be paid all of their money up front, and most buyers want to avoid paying anything up front. Deals usually get done somewhere in the middle, where the seller agrees to accept some cash and to be paid some of their proceeds over time. Eric Weiner, for example, started All Occasion Transportation in college and by the time he turned 35, his company was grossing more than $3MM a year. That’s when Weiner decided he wanted out. Weiner found a buyer and agreed to accept half of hi...

Feb 22, 201736 min
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