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How to get the most when selling your business - Page 2 PDF Print E-mail
Monitoring - Features
Written by Jennifer Brown   
Friday, 18 January 2008 10:39
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How to get the most when selling your business
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Even before he decided to sell, Taylor had received an offer from another firm a year before. They had heard about his company and asked him if he was interested in talking to them. “I said, ‘Not really.’ I hadn’t thought about it, but we ended up sitting down. We got into some protracted discussions and I learned all the issues around it such as not only what are they going to pay but how are they going to pay you? How much is the risk being borne by me and how much by them? Who is going to service those accounts after? How is attrition going to be dealt with? How do they value the company?”

Taylor’s experience with the first firm showed him how complicated the process can be. “They not only looked at recurring monthly revenue and your attrition but the percentage of commercial/residential and what your service call ratio was.”

His company had a good service call ratio and had maintained good records on that side of the business so that didn’t concern him, but it showed him what a buyer was interested in.

“We could prove we had good quality installations and low service. We also had one of the lowest false alarm rates. The monitoring centre we dealt with had 300 dealers and I was the largest and had the lowest ratio of false alarms and that was because we went to great detail to deal with that,” says Taylor.

Taylor’s staff would get a fax from the monitoring station every morning showing the activity for its accounts for the last 24 hours and then go through the list and see what happened. “If somebody just tripped the door and there was a “cancel” we would just ignore it but if there was a dispatch or a zone going off and you think – hey, that zone went off last week then we’d call the customer. We could articulate that we had those type of procedures in place.”

In the end, Taylor didn’t sell to the first company due to reasons related to their conditions on him following the sale, but the next year Voxcom approached him. Having gone through the preliminary steps with the first company, he knew what to watch for but still had a lot of homework ahead of him.

“If you’re not savvy and not willing to spend the time and read the documents and understand the issues you can really handcuff yourself in a deal,” he says. “We were able to come to terms at the end of the day with something we were both comfortable with but it was a tremendous learning experience. If you’re still trying to run your business, you’ll need some help or you could end up with an inferior agreement or a huge legal bill,” says Taylor.

In selling an alarm company, Taylor says most dealers fail to do the due diligence on what their business is worth which involves taking stock of the number of accounts and the multiple they pay, and also the goodwill of the business.

If that goodwill is going to bring in a considerable amount of business over the next 10-20 years what is that worth? Staff and management personnel also have to be considered — if one key person leaves after the sale is the company going to survive?

Often a purchasing company will also look at how much of your Recurring Monthly Revenue comes through pre-authorized payment. The greater the percentage of pre-authorized payment the more attractive an account list is because it means less hassle on collection.

“They know if a preauthorized payment is going to hit every month that it makes a really big difference and drives up the multiples you’re going to get paid,” says Taylor.

It’s also important to know what your client false alarm rate is. “I had my clients on one of two programs: Pay monthly as insurance or pay per dispatch. We had a really low false alarm rate and the combination of the two things means our police fees are relatively small. It all goes back to how you manage your business that are the big factors – they want to know how long it’s going to take to get their money back.”

Taylor is now advising others on how to approach selling their company.

"I can offer a fresh pair of eyes on their business," he says.

He can be reached at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

Do your homework
8 steps to take before selling your business

• Clean up your customer files and know what’s in them.

• Determine what percentage of your accounts are commercial versus residential.

•  Determine how much you want to get out of the deal and then ask if it’s reasonable: Is that what the market is paying right now?

• What’s your attrition rate? Know your total monthly revenue and growth rate; What do you think the business is worth?

• What are you going to do after the business is sold? If you’re retiring than it’s an easy decision. If you’re not retiring do you still want to be in the industry? Keep your options open.

•  From a tax perspective, structure your deal so that you minimize what you have to pay.

• Get a good lawyer, preferably one with knowledge of the security industry.

• Know what your false alarm rate is.

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