What to Look For When Buying a Business

- Steady financial performance year-after-year, going back several years (with the exception of years where things were out of the ordinary - such as the Covid pandemic).
- Solid source of financial documents supporting the operation, such as tax returns that reflect the business accurately. If tax returns are not available, another strong method of verifying the financial performance of the business, such as internal P&Ls with bank statements to substantiate, can work if everything else looks good in the business.
- Been in business for several years.
- No serious public issues - Google the business and see what comes up online. Hopefully it has a good online presence already.
- In line with your skill set, and if not, one that has the hired talent or licensed individual on the payroll.
- Fits how much you'd like to work (hours of operation and hours the owner works), or if you'd like it to be hands off and automated, an absentee owner business with management in place.
- Well-priced compared to the income it is making. Check comparables, if any. Request this from the business broker.
