Top Strategies to Make Informed Commercial Decisions When Buying and Selling a Business

Make Smarter Business Decisions with Expert Guidance

Buying or selling a business is one of the most important commercial decisions an entrepreneur can make — and it’s not a journey you should walk alone. Whether you’re looking to acquire a high-performing enterprise or sell your business for maximum return, informed decision-making is the difference between wealth creation and financial regret.

Strategy 1: Conduct Robust Commercial Due Diligence

Due diligence is non-negotiable.
Buyers should inspect:

  • Financial statements & historical cash flow
  • Legal obligations & contract liabilities
  • Supplier and customer dependencies
  • Operational bottlenecks

Sellers must prepare:

  • Clean, auditable financials
  • Demonstrated profitability and SDE/EBITDA
  • Organised documentation (leases, IP, employment contracts)
  • Growth forecasts backed by data

💡 Pro Tip: Use due diligence to uncover risks and hidden value that affect deal terms, timing, and valuation.


Strategy 2: Perform Comprehensive Financial Analysis

Buyers: Validate EBITDA, ROI, working capital needs, and risk-adjusted returns.
Sellers: Know your valuation metrics — Price to Earnings (P/E), Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE), and recent comparable sales in your industry.

🧲 Did You Know?
Australian small business sale multiples range between 2.5x–4.5x SDE depending on sector, size, and risk profile (source: SeekBusiness & ATO benchmarks).


Strategy 3: Understand the Market and Industry Landscape

Every smart deal starts with market knowledge.

Buyers:

  • Evaluate local demand, market trends, and threats
  • Analyse barriers to entry and long-term viability
  • Leverage ATO and ABS industry benchmarks

Sellers:

  • Position your business in a growth market
  • Highlight your unique competitive advantage
  • Provide verified data on recurring revenue and customer retention

🔎 Market Data Snapshot:

  • Demand for essential services (healthcare, trades, logistics) remains high
  • Online and tech-enabled businesses continue to attract premium valuations

Strategy 4: Get Legal & Regulatory Compliance Right

Deal structures are as important as price. Ensure:

  • Clean legal standing (no disputes, fines, or compliance gaps)
  • Properly assigned contracts and licenses
  • IP, leases, and staff contracts are transferable

Tip: Work with legal advisors experienced in SME and mid-market M&A to protect your interests.


Strategy 5: Evaluate Your Financing Options

Buyers:

  • Traditional bank loans (secured/unsecured)
  • Private equity or silent partners
  • Vendor finance (seller holds part of payment)
  • Earn-outs or performance-based milestones

Sellers:

  • Consider what’s more important — upfront payout vs long-term value
  • Be flexible but protect your downside with proper deal terms

📈 With interest rates steadying in late 2025, business acquisition finance has become more accessible for qualified buyers.


Strategy 6: Have a Crystal-Clear Exit Strategy

Both parties need a defined outcome beyond the transaction:

Buyers:

  • Build-to-exit plan (3–5 year hold)
  • Expansion strategy (franchise, acquisition, diversification)

Sellers:

  • Lifestyle planning
  • Asset reinvestment
  • Tax minimisation strategies

💼 Did you know?
Over 62% of Australian business owners aged 50+ plan to sell in the next 5 years — competition is growing.

Why Business Owners Miss Out On Lucrative Exits
(And How You Can Avoid It)

  • 75% of business owners understand the true value of their business.
  • 64% fail to plan their exit properly, risking a 20–40% reduction in potential sale price.
  • Buyers want profitable, well run businesses now more than ever
  • M&A activity for sub-$15M deals is at a 10year high.