Exit Smarter. Keep More. Control The Deal.

Exit Smarter.
Keep More.
Control The Deal.

Full Price Exit ayuda a los propietarios a posicionar el negocio, negociar desde una posición de fuerza y evitar errores costosos de venta antes de salir al mercado.

  • Proteja la valoración. Evite descuentos prevenibles por un posicionamiento débil o un control deficiente del proceso.
  • Aumente la confianza del comprador. Muestre a los compradores estabilidad, oportunidad y valor transferible.
  • Genere poder de negociación. Mejore los términos, no solo el precio principal.
  • Reduzca el caos. Avance desde la primera conversación hasta el cierre con menos sorpresas.

Confidencial. Sin presión. Diseñado para salidas disciplinadas y mejor estructuradas.

Estrategia primero Posicionamiento, estructura y presentación antes de que los compradores presionen el trato.
Enfocado en el propietario Diseñado para empresas privadas donde cada término importa.
Proceso confidencial Comience con una conversación directa y elija el siguiente paso.

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Cuéntenos su objetivo. Lo revisaremos y nos pondremos en contacto.

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Casos de Estudio

A serious buyer is not merely purchasing revenue. He is purchasing continuity, transferability, and the probability that the business will continue functioning after ownership changes hands. That distinction is more important than most owners realize. Many businesses appear profitable from the outside, yet rely too heavily on memory, improvisation, founder heroics, or undocumented routines. They may produce income, yes, but they are fragile. And fragility is expensive the moment scrutiny begins.

That is why experience matters in pre-acquisition consulting. Not because experience makes one immune from error. It does not. But because it teaches you where value actually lives. It lives in repeat demand. It lives in documented systems. It lives in operational continuity. It lives in the quiet, practical architecture of a business that can survive transition without collapsing into confusion.

Long before FullPriceExit existed, I worked inside that kind of environment directly. I was not merely talking about businesses from the outside. I was helping build one. And eventually, I watched what happens when a company becomes more than effort and begins to resemble a transferable asset.

Featured Experience: Expressions Tributes

Expressions Tributes was not a theory exercise. It was a functioning business in a specialized market. My role sat at the intersection of sales, product development, infrastructure, customer support, and systems design. I created and sold websites to funeral-home customers, drafted proposals, set billable hours, worked directly with clients, coordinated delivery with design, and helped build tools that made the platform more useful and more commercially viable. :contentReference

That matters because a business is not strengthened only by code or only by marketing. It is strengthened when the operational pieces begin to align. The offer makes sense. The delivery mechanism works. The customer can use the system. The internal team can manage the workflow. The infrastructure is stable enough that the company becomes more than a collection of good intentions.

At Expressions Tributes, I helped create that kind of alignment. I developed administrative systems for both clients and internal staff, simplifying recurring management tasks and reducing friction in daily operations. I built marketplace and commerce functionality. I integrated outside technologies and APIs. I supported more than 300 funeral-home customers directly, which meant I had continuous exposure not only to the product itself, but to the practical problems customers actually faced in the field.

That kind of experience changes how you look at businesses. You begin to see very quickly that a company is only partially defined by what it sells. It is also defined by how cleanly it operates, how well its systems communicate, how dependent it is on specific people, how much institutional knowledge is trapped in one person’s head, and how repeatable the workflow truly is when the pressure rises. Those are acquisition questions, even before anyone calls them that.

Why This Matters to Sellers

The seller preparing for exit is often trapped in a common delusion: because the business works for him, he assumes it will appear clear to everyone else. But the buyer does not inherit his memory. The buyer does not inherit his intuition. The buyer does not inherit the years of context he accumulated slowly and unconsciously while operating the business. The buyer sees only what is visible, documented, transferable, and defensible.

That is why preparation matters so much. A company with real customers and real revenue can still underperform in a sale process if the systems are weak, the information is disorganized, or the value is too dependent on the current owner’s personal involvement. What should have been an attractive opportunity begins to look like a rescue mission. And serious buyers do not pay premium prices for rescue missions.

My background makes that problem easier to identify because I have lived inside the machinery. I have built operational systems. I have dealt with users of varying technical ability. I have worked with hosting providers, vendors, third-party developers, APIs, analytics tools, data structures, and administrative workflows. I have seen firsthand how much of a company’s true value is hidden in the quality of its underlying systems. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}

Relevant Technical Foundation

That technical background also matters in a pre-acquisition context because many small and mid-sized companies now depend on digital infrastructure far more than their owners realize. A business may not call itself a technology company and still be deeply shaped by technology: customer flow, internal administration, payments, reporting, communications, websites, lead generation, vendor integrations, analytics, and operational visibility.

My resume reflects that foundation clearly: LAMP systems, PHP, MySQL, JSON, JavaScript, jQuery, Git, analytics tools, security practices, regex and data parsing, ecommerce functionality, API integrations, and workflow-oriented admin systems. What that means in practical terms is simple: I know how to look beneath the surface. I know how to ask whether a business is merely functioning, or whether it is structured. I know how to distinguish between an operation that can be transferred and one that is still overly dependent on improvisation.

And that is one of the central ideas behind the consulting work at FullPriceExit. A business should not be sold as a personality. It should be prepared as an operating system. That is entirely consistent with the way the investor report frames business quality: actual infrastructure, actual processes, actual repeat demand, and real operational continuity beyond the founder himself. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}

The Lesson of a Real Sale

Expressions Tributes was ultimately sold in 2013. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7} And that fact matters not because it makes for a glamorous story, but because it reinforces a serious principle: businesses become sellable when they become coherent. Not perfect. Not frictionless. But coherent. When the systems hold together. When the customers remain. When the delivery mechanism works. When the infrastructure supports the promise. When the business begins to look like something that can continue beyond the current arrangement.

That lesson is directly relevant to the work we do here. Pre-acquisition consulting is, in large part, the discipline of helping a business owner move from private familiarity to market readiness. From internal logic to external credibility. From “I know how this works” to “a buyer can understand, verify, and trust how this works.”

That is not cosmetic. That is value creation before the sale.

What This Means for FullPriceExit Clients

When we work with owners, the objective is not to impress them with jargon. The objective is to help them see their business the way a serious buyer will see it. What is strong? What is fragile? What is transferable? What is too dependent on the owner? What can be organized more clearly? What can be explained better? What can be tightened before the market begins asking questions you should have answered in advance?

Those are the right questions. And they are the same kinds of questions that become visible when you have spent years building systems, supporting customers, selling solutions, and watching what makes a company more useful, more orderly, and ultimately more transferable.

Request Your Free Evaluation

I learned something important from that chapter of my life, and it is this: a business does not become valuable merely because someone worked hard to build it. Hard work is common. Exhaustion is common. Sacrifice is common. But those things, noble as they may be, do not by themselves create a transferable asset. What creates a transferable asset is order. At Expressions Tributes, I was not sitting at a distance making abstract observations. I was inside the machinery. I was helping create offers, systems, workflows, administrative structure, technical infrastructure, and customer-facing solutions. I was dealing with the friction that appears whenever a business is real enough to have customers, problems, dependencies, and consequences. And over time, I began to understand something that I now regard as fundamental: a business is not merely a source of income. It is a structure of competence. If that competence lives only inside the founder, then the business is weaker than it appears. If the logic is undocumented, the systems are messy, the workflows are improvised, and the value depends on one person remembering how everything works, then what appears strong may in fact be fragile. But if the business has real processes, real continuity, real infrastructure, and the capacity to function beyond the personality of its owner, then it becomes something categorically different. It becomes something that another serious person can evaluate, trust, acquire, and continue. That is one reason I care about this work. I have seen the difference between activity and structure. I have seen how businesses mature. And I have seen that what buyers are really searching for is not noise, not theater, not self-congratulation, but coherence. Something understandable. Something durable. Something that can survive transfer. That is what FullPriceExit is ultimately about: helping owners move closer to that condition before the market forces the question upon them.

Servicios

La mayoría de los propietarios de negocios creen que con el tiempo venderán su empresa por una prima. Lamentablemente, creer no es una estrategia. La realidad es esta: la mayoría de los negocios nunca se venden. De los que sí lo hacen, muchos se venden por mucho menos de lo que el propietario esperaba, a menudo despues de años de incertidumbre, negociación y riesgo innecesario. La diferencia entre una venta caótica y una salida estratégica es la preparación. Ahí es donde entramos nosotros.

Lo Que Hacemos

FullPriceExit ayuda a los propietarios de negocios a transformar un futuro incierto en un resultado deliberado. Trabajamos con propietarios que quieren preparar sus empresas para una adquisición — no adivinando lo que quieren los compradores, sino estructurando el negocio para que los compradores sofisticados reconozcan su valor de inmediato.

Nuestro trabajo se enfoca en tres áreas:

  • Preparar los negocios para la adquisición
  • Estructurar tratos que los compradores realmente desean
  • Posicionar las empresas para que obtengan ofertas más sólidas

En resumen: ayudamos a los propietarios de negocios a convertir años de esfuerzo en una salida exitosa.

Nuestro Proceso

Vender un negocio no es simplemente una transacción. Es una secuencia de decisiones — estratégicas, operativas y psicológicas. Cuando se manejan mal, esas decisiones crean incertidumbre y destruyen valor. Cuando se manejan correctamente, atraen compradores, crean poder de negociación y maximizan el resultado. Nuestro proceso se enfoca en poner orden en ese caos.

Un negocio bien estructurado atrae compradores. Uno mal estructurado los ahuyenta.

Paquetes de Servicio

Auditoría de Preparación para la Venta

La mayoría de los propietarios comienzan con la misma pregunta:

“Si quisiera vender mi negocio, ¿podría hacerlo?”

La Auditoría de Preparación para la Venta responde esa pregunta con claridad. Analizamos su empresa desde la perspectiva de un comprador experimentado e identificamos los factores que influyen en la valoración, la estructura del trato y el interes del comprador.

  • Revisión operativa
  • Análisis de la estructura financiera
  • Identificación de riesgos
  • Evaluación del atractivo para el comprador
  • Puntaje de preparación para la salida

Al finalizar este servicio sabrá exactamente cuál es su situación — y qué debe cambiar para mejorar su posición.

Preparación para Salir al Mercado

Una vez que un negocio está preparado para la venta, el siguiente desafío es presentarlo correctamente. Los compradores no compran historias vagas. Compran oportunidades bien estructuradas, respaldadas por documentación clara y proyecciones creíbles.

Esta etapa se enfoca en construir los materiales y el posicionamiento necesarios para atraer compradores serios.

  • Desarrollo del modelo financiero
  • Estrategia de posicionamiento ante el comprador
  • Planificación de la estructura del trato
  • Materiales de presentación para inversionistas
  • Memorando de información confidencial (CIM)

Hecha correctamente, esta etapa aumenta drásticamente tanto el interes del comprador como el poder de negociación.

Navegación del Lado Vendedor

Cuando aparece el comprador adecuado, comienza el verdadero trabajo. La negociación, la debida diligencia y la estructuración del trato son donde colapsan muchas transacciones. Nuestro papel durante esta fase es ayudar a guiar el proceso para que las oportunidades prometedoras realmente se concreten.

  • Calificación del comprador
  • análisis de la estructura del trato
  • apoyo en la negociación
  • preparación de la debida diligencia
  • navegación de la transacción hasta el cierre

El objetivo es simple: ayudar a asegurar que el trato llegue a la meta en términos que tengan sentido para el propietario.

Con Quién Trabajamos

Nuestros clientes suelen ser propietarios de negocios establecidos que:

  • están considerando vender dentro de los próximos 1–5 años
  • quieren entender cuánto vale su empresa
  • quieren estructurar su negocio para atraer compradores serios
  • quieren orientación experimentada a lo largo del proceso de adquisición

Si simplemente siente curiosidad por saber cuánto podría valer su negocio, esa curiosidad es un buen punto de partida.

La Realidad de Vender un Negocio

Vender una empresa es uno de los eventos financieros más significativos en la vida de un emprendedor. Tambien es uno de los menos comprendidos. Sin preparación, los propietarios a menudo descubren demasiado tarde que los compradores ven riesgos que nunca notaron, debilidades que nunca abordaron y oportunidades que nunca comunicaron. La preparación cambia esa ecuación.

Cuando un negocio está estructurado correctamente, no hay que convencer a los compradores. Simplemente reconocen la oportunidad.

Siguiente Paso

Si desea entender cómo aparecería su negocio ante un posible comprador, el siguiente paso es una evaluación confidencial. No hay obligación. Solo claridad.

Solicite una Evaluación Gratuita

Corredores

Good brokers do not lose deals because they lack effort. They lose deals because too many sellers come to market unprepared. The financials are unclear. The positioning is weak. The documentation is incomplete. The owner is emotionally attached to a number that cannot survive scrutiny. Then the listing sits, the buyer hesitates, due diligence gets ugly, and the broker does more work for less certainty. That is the problem FullPriceExit is built to help solve.

We Are Not Brokers

FullPriceExit is not a business brokerage. We do not replace the broker. We do not insert ourselves into your client relationships. We do not pretend to be the intermediary of record.

Instead, we serve as a pre-acquisition consulting resource that can help your sellers become better prepared for the process you already lead.

That distinction matters. A broker’s role is to bring buyers, manage the market, maintain confidentiality, navigate offers, and help get a transaction across the finish line. Our role is different. We help strengthen the asset before it is presented to the market so that your job becomes easier, your listing becomes stronger, and your path to commission becomes shorter and more defensible.

A weak listing makes everyone work harder. A prepared business makes everyone look smarter.

Why Brokers Partner With Us

The truth is simple: the quality of the seller determines much of the difficulty of the engagement. When the owner is disorganized, unrealistic, undocumented, or operationally dependent, the broker inherits the burden. That burden shows up as longer timelines, repeated objections, pricing pressure, buyer distrust, and deals that die halfway through diligence.

We help reduce that friction before it turns into lost momentum. Our work is designed to help brokers do what they do best — market, negotiate, and close — without being forced to spend their highest-value time cleaning up problems that should have been addressed earlier.

Benefits to Brokers

Bigger Commissions Start With Stronger Deals

A business that is better prepared tends to support a more credible asking price, a cleaner buyer conversation, and a more convincing value narrative. That does not guarantee a higher price in every case. But it does improve the quality of the presentation and often reduces the kind of preventable weaknesses that buyers use to grind price down.

In plain English: when the seller is positioned better, your commission has a better chance of surviving intact.

Faster Movement Means Less Drag on Your Pipeline

Every broker knows the hidden tax of a weak listing. It consumes calls, follow-up, explanations, re-explanations, and emotional management. A seller who is not ready slows everything down. A buyer who senses confusion slows it down further. Weeks become months.

We help compress that waste by improving readiness on the front end. When the information is more organized and the business is easier to understand, serious buyers move with more confidence and fewer avoidable delays.

More Credibility With Buyers

Sophisticated buyers notice disorder quickly. They may not say it directly, but they see it in inconsistent financials, vague add-backs, sloppy explanations, weak systems, and owner dependence. Once confidence falls, everything gets harder.

We help the seller present a more coherent business. That reflects well on the broker, improves the tone of the process, and supports a more professional transaction from the beginning.

Fewer Deals Die in Due Diligence

Many deals do not fail because the business is unsellable. They fail because the seller was never prepared to answer the questions a real buyer was inevitably going to ask. That is not a marketing problem. It is a preparation problem.

Our role is to help reduce that avoidable failure. We help identify weaknesses, organize information, and tighten the seller’s story before the market or the buyer punishes disorder.

You Stay the Broker of Record

This is important. We are not trying to stand in front of you. We are trying to stand behind the quality of the opportunity. The broker remains the broker. The relationship remains yours. The commission remains yours.

Our value is additive. We help make the listing easier to defend, easier to explain, and easier to move.

How We Can Help Your Sellers

Depending on the situation, we can assist with services such as:

  • sale-readiness review before going to market
  • financial organization and value-positioning support
  • buyer-perspective analysis of risk, transferability, and operational weakness
  • deal packaging and presentation improvement
  • due diligence preparation and document organization
  • owner coaching around what buyers actually care about
  • clarifying the story behind the numbers and the business model

The point is not to make the process sound impressive. The point is to remove the avoidable reasons a deal becomes harder than it needed to be.

Who This Is Best For

Our broker support is especially useful when:

  • the seller is strong operationally but poor at presenting the business
  • the financials need interpretation, cleanup, or stronger narrative framing
  • the owner is overly involved in day-to-day operations and buyers will notice
  • the business has value, but not yet a market-ready presentation
  • you want to protect time, accelerate readiness, and improve the odds of a clean close

A Better Way to Get Paid Faster

There is a deeper principle here. When the seller is weak, everyone downstream pays for it. The broker pays in time. The buyer pays in uncertainty. The deal pays in friction. And eventually, the commission pays in delay, reduction, or disappearance.

But when the business is more prepared, the entire process becomes more rational. The seller is more credible. The broker is more effective. The buyer is more confident. And the transaction has a better chance of progressing at the pace serious people actually want.

The objective is not more activity. The objective is fewer avoidable obstacles between listing and closing.

Let’s Help You Close More of the Right Deals

If you work with sellers who have real potential but are not fully prepared for market, FullPriceExit can help strengthen the engagement before those weaknesses cost you time, leverage, or commission.

You bring the buyers. You run the process. We help make the asset easier to sell.

Talk With Us About a Seller

Equipo

Pre-acquisition consulting is not merely about paperwork. It is about judgment. It is about knowing what to look for before a buyer ever makes an offer, and just as importantly, knowing what to fix before the market punishes neglect. A business owner preparing for a sale does not need noise. He needs structure, clarity, and an honest assessment of what makes a company transferable, financeable, and attractive to serious buyers.

That is the standard we bring to FullPriceExit. Our work combines financial discipline, process analysis, systems thinking, marketing awareness, and real-world communication. One side of the team is focused on underwriting logic, diligence, technology, and operational structure. The other is focused on relationship management, positioning, communication, and making sure the process moves forward with trust and professionalism. Together, that creates a consulting approach built not on generic advice, but on practical preparation for real transactions.

Trent Tompkins

Trent Tompkins

Founder & Lead Consultant

Trent Tompkins leads the financial, analytical, and operational side of FullPriceExit. His background is rooted in systems thinking, business building, and disciplined evaluation. In the acquisition world, that matters. A company does not become attractive to buyers because the owner hopes it will. It becomes attractive when the numbers are coherent, the operations are understandable, the risks are visible, and the business can be transferred without collapsing into improvisation.

Trent approaches pre-acquisition consulting from exactly that perspective. His work centers on identifying what is structurally sound, what is fragile, and what must be improved before a company is truly ready for buyer scrutiny. That includes reviewing business positioning, helping owners think more clearly about valuation drivers, organizing information for due diligence, and turning what is often a founder-dependent operation into something more systematic, more credible, and more saleable.

By trade, Trent is a software developer and business builder. That technical foundation is not incidental. It shapes how he thinks. Good acquisitions require the same habits that good systems require: precision, clean logic, documentation, process discipline, and the ability to separate what merely sounds persuasive from what actually functions under pressure. That mindset is especially useful in lower middle market and Main Street transactions, where the difference between a real business and an owner’s job with overhead is often hidden in the details.

Before returning to the sales and consulting side of business, Trent spent roughly a decade in web development and technical operations. He served as a Lead PHP Developer, created custom websites and administrative systems, worked directly with clients, drafted proposals, supported hundreds of end users, coordinated with designers and vendors, and built practical tools that simplified day-to-day operations for real businesses. That background translates naturally into pre-acquisition consulting because buyers care deeply about whether a company has usable systems, organized data, repeatable workflows, and infrastructure that can survive a transition in ownership.

He has also worked in direct sales and investment-related communication, which gives him an unusual combination of technical fluency and market awareness. He understands that owners need more than spreadsheet language. They need help expressing the real strengths of their business, fixing weaknesses before they become objections, and presenting an opportunity in a way that buyers, lenders, and advisors can understand quickly. That combination of analytical rigor and practical communication is a large part of what he brings to FullPriceExit.

Relevant Background

Financial & Diligence Review Operational Analysis PHP & LAMP Systems MySQL & JSON JavaScript & jQuery Analytics & Webmaster Tools API Integration Workflow / Admin Systems SSL & Security Practices Regex / Data Parsing Git & Versioning Client-Facing Technical Support
Corey Rodriguez

Corey Rodriguez

Chief Strategy Officer

Corey Rodriguez leads the relationship and strategy side of FullPriceExit. His background is rooted in customer relations, account management, sales, and negotiation. In theory, acquisitions are driven by numbers. In practice, they are also driven by trust, communication, timing, and the ability to guide people through difficult decisions without confusion or unnecessary friction. That is where Corey’s role becomes essential.

A founder preparing to sell a business is not dealing with a purely financial event. He is dealing with identity, uncertainty, leverage, and often years of accumulated operational habits that were never designed to withstand outside scrutiny. Buyers and intermediaries notice those things quickly. Corey helps create order in that process by keeping communication clear, expectations realistic, and momentum professional. He brings the kind of steady client-facing discipline that prevents opportunities from collapsing for reasons that have nothing to do with the business itself and everything to do with avoidable human error.

His work at FullPriceExit is focused on helping bridge the gap between analysis and action. That means making sure owners understand the process, helping maintain alignment across conversations, supporting strategic positioning, and handling the relational side of a transaction with the seriousness it deserves. Deals are not won in spreadsheets alone. They move forward when communication is consistent, follow-through is dependable, and everyone involved feels that the process is being handled by adults who know what they are doing.

Corey’s experience in account management and negotiation is particularly useful in pre-acquisition consulting because many business owners are strong operators but weak translators. They know how to run the business, but not always how to present it. They know the history, but not always the value narrative. They know the people, but not always the buyer concerns. Corey helps close that gap. He contributes to the process by making sure the owner’s message is coherent, the opportunity is positioned properly, and the overall interaction remains credible from first contact through deeper discussions.

In that sense, his role is not ornamental. It is structural. A business may have strong underlying economics and still lose buyer confidence if communication is weak, expectations are unmanaged, or the process becomes disorganized. Corey helps prevent that. He brings practical relationship judgment to the front end of consulting work, helping owners move toward a stronger presentation of their business and a more professional path toward market readiness. That is one of the reasons FullPriceExit is designed as a team effort rather than a purely analytical service.

Relevant Background

Client Relations Account Management Sales Strategy Negotiation Owner Communication Lead Qualification Strategic Positioning Process Follow-Through Professional Buyer Interaction Relationship Management Expectation Setting Transaction Support

The point of this team structure is simple. Pre-acquisition consulting requires both analysis and translation. One side must be able to examine the business with discipline: the numbers, the systems, the operational dependencies, the due diligence issues, the presentation logic, and the actual transferability of the company. The other side must be able to help move people through the process intelligently: communicating clearly, managing expectations, preserving trust, and making sure the owner does not feel lost inside a technical exercise that is supposed to create value.

That combination is what FullPriceExit is built to provide. We are not here merely to hand you a checklist. We are here to help you understand what sophisticated buyers notice, what undermines valuation, what increases credibility, and what it takes to prepare a company for a serious acquisition conversation. The objective is not noise. It is readiness. Not theater. Not vague optimism. But a business that is cleaner, clearer, better positioned, and substantially more defensible when the market begins asking hard questions.

Evaluación Gratuita

Todo propietario de negocio termina haciéndose la misma pregunta. “¿Cuánto vale realmente mi empresa?” Lamentablemente, la mayoría de las respuestas son conjeturas. Algunas son conjeturas optimistas. Algunas son conjeturas pesimistas. La mayoría simplemente están equivocadas. Una respuesta seria requiere examinar el negocio desde la perspectiva que más importa: la perspectiva de un comprador.

Por Qué Importa una Evaluación Profesional

Cuando los compradores evalúan un negocio, no comienzan con las esperanzas o expectativas del propietario. Comienzan con el riesgo. Observan la claridad financiera, la estabilidad operativa, los riesgos de dependencia, el potencial de crecimiento y la estructura del trato. Evalúan si el negocio puede operar de forma independiente del propietario. Examinan si la empresa representa una oportunidad — o un problema a punto de surgir.

Muchos propietarios nunca ven su negocio a través de esa lente hasta que intentan vender. Para entonces, a menudo es demasiado tarde para corregir las debilidades que reducen el valor.

Un comprador no compra esfuerzo. Un comprador compra resultados predecibles.

Lo Que Evaluamos

Nuestra evaluación revisa los factores principales que determinan cómo un comprador verá su negocio:

  • Estabilidad de los ingresos y claridad financiera
  • Independencia operativa respecto del propietario
  • Concentración de clientes y exposición al riesgo
  • Potencial de crecimiento y atractivo estratégico
  • Posibilidades de estructura del trato
  • Alineación con el tipo de comprador

El objetivo no es simplemente estimar el valor. El objetivo es entender cómo los compradores evaluarán la oportunidad.

Lo Que Aprenderá

Despues de la evaluación, tendrá una comprensión más clara de:

  • Cómo es probable que un comprador sofisticado vea su negocio
  • Qué factores pueden aumentar o reducir el valor potencial de venta
  • Si su empresa está actualmente posicionada para una adquisición
  • Qué mejoras podrían aumentar significativamente el interes del comprador
  • Qué plazo puede tener sentido para una eventual salida

Para muchos propietarios, este proceso por sí solo es sumamente valioso. La claridad elimina la especulación.

Para Quién Es Esto

Esta evaluación está diseñada para propietarios que:

  • están considerando vender su negocio dentro de los próximos años
  • quieren entender cuánto puede valer realmente su empresa
  • quieren mejorar su posición antes de salir al mercado
  • quieren una perspectiva objetiva sobre su estrategia de salida

No es necesario que tenga la intención de vender de inmediato. De hecho, el mejor momento para prepararse para una venta suele ser años antes de que ocurra.

La Verdad Sobre la Venta de Negocios

La mayoría de los propietarios de negocios pasan décadas construyendo su empresa. Sin embargo, cuando llega el momento de vender, muchos abordan el proceso con sorprendentemente poca preparación. El resultado es predecible. Los compradores ven riesgos que nunca se abordaron. Los tratos colapsan durante la debida diligencia. Las ofertas llegan muy por debajo de las expectativas.

La preparación cambia ese resultado.

Cuando un negocio está debidamente preparado, la negociación se vuelve más fácil. Cuando no lo está, la negociación se vuelve supervivencia.

Solicite una Evaluación Confidencial

Si desea una perspectiva profesional sobre cómo puede aparecer su negocio ante posibles compradores, le invitamos a solicitar una evaluación confidencial. No hay obligación. Solo una evaluación honesta y una comprensión más clara de su situación.

Comience su Evaluación Gratuita