PetGroomer.com is regularly
approached by its visitors with questions about grooming business
opportunities. Usually it's a business for sale,
sometimes in our PetGroomer.com
Classified Ads or a trade magazine. Is
it good buy? Should I? What are the risks? How do I sell my
business opportunity?
In
this section, we will attempt to give you some basic consultation.
However, realize that your consideration of purchasing a business
opportunity may involve $25,000 to $250,000, even more, and you should
seek more advanced management and financial consultation. One hour
with a pet grooming industry management consultant is likely to cost
you less than $100 and think of what their advice could save you, or
make you indeed!
The creators of
PetGroomer.com are consultants for the pet care
industry, and there are very few other consultants. Our company Find A Groomer, Inc. has been in business since 1987 and our founder
has over 40 years of notable field experience. Hundreds of
new and advanced pet grooming business owners are our clients, and the
world of grooming they work in is nothing like most grooming business
owners. Our clients love their businesses, and prosper from them and
rarely have any of the common problems owners complain about like lack
of skilled groomers.
If you have a
business for sale, or are thinking about selling yours now
or in the future, we have a one hour telephone consultation
you may be interested in that can help you sell your
business more easily and for its maximum value. For more
information, refer to "consultation services" at
Grooming Business in a Box®
owned and operated by
PetGroomer.com founders.
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Why
Buy an Existing Grooming Business - Part One
If you don't want
to start a grooming business from scratch, buying an existing one may
be your alternative. First of all, there are the plusses and minuses.
The plusses are:
Existing
Customers: Customers and loyal clients have already been
developed. Ensuring that they are likely to stay with your new
ownership means you will have demand for services from the start, and
that means cash flow from sales of services. Businesses started from
scratch have much less initial cash flow.
Immediate
Operation: You can start immediately.
Existing
Goodwill: Presumably the present owner has created goodwill
towards the businesses grooming and other pet care services.
Financial
Planning: Financing may be easier to obtain because the
business has a track record.
Eliminate
Competition: Buying a business may eliminate a competitor had
you started your own business.
The minuses are:
Problems: There
may be unapparent problems in the business that you do not discover
till after the sale of the business.
Cost: Sometimes
buying an existing business costs more than starting one from scratch.
Obsolete
Equipment: Grooming equipment, tools and leasehold
improvements may be obsolete or in need of substantial repair.
Personality
Conflicts: If some of the existing employees are staying in
your employment, there may be personality clashes. Specifically,
owners new to the grooming industry keeping very experienced employees
may be pushed to pay higher commission wages or salaries or other
scenarios taking advantage of the new owner. It really helps when the
new owner(s) know how to groom and are not dependent on having no
choice but to maintain the present full-charge staff.
Receivables:
If the seller is owned receivables from clientele, you may
find they are worthless or hard to collect.
When buying a
business you should exercise caution throughout the entire process
from researching it to finally signing a contract of sale. You are
strongly urged to have the assistance of a lawyer and accountant
throughout the process. Not having both has often been the cause of
problems when buying an existing business. Unscrupulous sellers can
take advantage of buyers, the courts have seen many such cases. Never
buy a business without a contract of sale reviewed by your attorney,
never. Don't sign documents relating to the sale without your
attorney's prior review.
You start by
locating a business to buy, researching it exhaustively and making the
decision to buy or not.
Locating a
Business to Buy: Our PetGroomer.com
Classified Ads list grooming businesses for sale. Major pet
grooming industry trade magazines also have business for sale
classifieds. Your local newspapers, especially major metropolitan
newspapers occasionally have grooming business for sale ads. There are
major Internet based classified ads web sites you can
research from most of the major search engines like Excite, Lycos, and
Yahoo. Ask your local commercial real estate broker if they access to
regional business for sale listings.
Researching
the Business: After you locate a business that interests you,
start researching it. Now is the deadline to have an attorney and
accountant representing you and your interests. The more you research
the business the more likely you will make the right decision to buy,
or not buy, an existing business. You should be very confident in your
purchase.
The seller may ask
you to sign a letter of intent to purchase the business, a non-binding
offer for the business, before exposing any sensitive information
about the business. You may also be asked to sign a confidentiality
agreement promising that you won't use the information released for
any purpose other than to make the decision to buy.
If a business is
for sale, there is a reason. Determine the reason very clearly. Is the
business having financial problems? Is the economy of its market area
and demand for pet care services eroding? Is it simply poor
management? Is the owner simply retiring? A thorough investigation is
absolutely warranted. Any problems uncovered must be weighed in making
your decision to buy.
A business
investigation involves taking a hard, OBJECTIVE look at every aspect
of the business. Sometimes the investigation continues even if you
have made an offer to purchase, and an escrow has been opened. Your
attorney can request that should certain problems be discovered during
the escrow you can request adjustments, reimbursements or other
solutions to uncovered problems. Here is where you are very much aided
by an attorney.
We strongly urge
you to have a certified commercial appraiser perform a written
appraisal of the business. The owner may have had one done, but you
should two. They are excellent tools to use in price negotiations.
Your investigation
should include reviewing the business' documentation, including:
Contracts
and Leases: Property and machinery leases, sales contracts
and purchases contracts. What are the obligations you are assuming?
Organization:
How is the business organized? Is it a partnership,
corporation or ? How is it capitalized? Who are the owners, all of
them? How is their ownership documented and do you have copies?
Financials:
Examine the last three years of financial statements, or
further back, to determine the financial condition of the business.
Your accountant can be very helpful in this investigation.
Tax
Returns: Examine the last three years of business tax
returns, or further back, to determine if the business has been
profitable and whether there are outstanding tax liabilities. Again,
your accountant and lawyer will be very helpful in this part of the
investigation.
Please go to the next
page for a continuation of this article.