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Should I Sell?

Evaluate five quantitative tests to determine if now is the right time to exit your business.

From Chapter 30 & Appendix F: Deciding When to Sell

The decision to sell your business is one of the most important you'll ever make. It requires weighing emotional attachment, financial needs, market timing, and personal goals. This framework helps you evaluate whether an exit aligns with your life priorities and whether current market conditions support a sale.

Timing matters enormously in acquisitions. A business sold in a strong market can fetch 30-50% higher valuation than the same business in a weak market. Personal readiness also varies: some founders are burned out and eager to exit, while others feel their best years lie ahead. This assessment tool helps you analyze both the tactical and emotional dimensions of the decision.

Five Tests for Selling

TEST 1Personal Wealth Concentration

What percentage of your net worth is in this company?

50%

TEST 2Marginal Value of Money

At your current net worth, how much would proceeds change your life?

TEST 3Growth vs Risk

Outlook for next 3 years of revenue growth

3/5

TEST 4Market Timing

Compare current multiples to historical average

TEST 5Personal Readiness

Rate your current state (1-5 scale)

3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5
3/5

Why Business Sale Timing Matters

The best time to sell is often not when you need the money, but when your business is positioned for maximum value. Growth trajectory, market conditions, industry trends, and competitive positioning all influence timing. A business growing 50% annually at high margins will command far higher multiples than a mature business with declining growth. Most strategic buyers prefer acquiring high-growth companies because they believe they can accelerate growth further through integration or cross-selling.

Similarly, market cycles affect valuations. In strong M&A markets with abundant capital, you may fetch 7-9x EBITDA for the same business that would sell for 4-5x in a down market. Timing your exit for peak market conditions can mean millions of dollars in additional proceeds.

The Five Decision Framework Tests

This tool evaluates five critical dimensions: personal wealth concentration, financial impact of proceeds, business growth trajectory, market timing, and gut feel. Each test combines quantitative metrics with qualitative judgment. No single test determines your decision, but together they provide a comprehensive assessment of whether selling makes sense right now.

The framework is intentionally multi-dimensional because selling requires aligning business opportunity, personal circumstances, and market conditions. A founder with excessive wealth concentration at retirement age in a hot market should evaluate exit very differently from a young founder building a high-growth company in a weak market.

Personal Wealth Concentration Risk

If more than 50-60% of your net worth sits in your business, you face concentration risk. A single customer loss, regulatory change, or market shift could devastate your financial security. Most financial advisors recommend diversifying when business concentration exceeds 50%. Conversely, if your business represents less than 20% of net worth, you have flexibility to stay private longer if you believe upside potential justifies the risk.

Consider also how much time the business requires. If you're working 70 hours per week and your business is 70% of net worth, the concentration is both financial and temporal. The opportunity cost of your effort and the risk of burnout become additional reasons to consider exit.

Life Impact of Exit Proceeds

The value of proceeds depends on your current financial situation. A $10M sale means something completely different to someone with $2M net worth (transforms their life, enables retirement, eliminates financial stress) versus someone with $50M net worth (modest increase, perhaps enables lifestyle upgrade). Financial advisors call this the "marginal value of money," and it's deeply personal.

Consider also your age and stage of life. A 35-year-old with high financial needs has different priorities than a 55-year-old nearing retirement. Similarly, founders with dependents or major financial goals (funding education, real estate, philanthropy) place different weight on proceeds than those with minimal financial obligations.

Growth Trajectory and Market Opportunity

A business in early exponential growth should rarely exit. If you're adding $5M revenue annually and only 3 years from IPO potential, the upside of staying private is likely worth far more than current buyers will offer. However, if growth is slowing to low single digits and you're no longer excited by the business, even modest offers may appeal because future upside is limited.

Conversely, if your industry is consolidating and competitors are getting acquired at premium prices, the window for maximizing your valuation may close quickly. Strategic buyers often value a business higher than financial buyers because they see cost synergies and cross-selling opportunities. If those synergies are about to disappear, you've lost your window.

Frequently Asked Questions

When is the right time to sell a business?
The right time depends on five factors: personal wealth concentration (is your net worth too dependent on the business?), financial impact of proceeds (would the money meaningfully improve your life?), growth trajectory (is the business still growing rapidly?), market conditions (are valuations high or low?), and personal readiness (do you want to keep building or move on?). Use this framework to evaluate all five dimensions rather than making a binary decision on a single factor.
How does business growth affect selling decisions?
Rapidly growing businesses command higher multiples, but they also offer more upside if you stay. A business growing 75% annually might be worth 8x EBITDA, while a 10% growth business trades at 4x. The key question: is the high multiple justifiable by remaining upside? If growth will accelerate further, staying private may be more valuable. If growth is peaking, selling into strength makes sense.
What personal factors should influence an exit decision?
Consider your age and stage of life, your financial needs and goals, whether you're burned out or energized by the business, your health and family situation, and how much wealth concentration feels uncomfortable. A 60-year-old founder with adequate wealth who's burned out has different priorities than a 35-year-old founder still excited about the business.
How does market timing affect valuation?
Valuations fluctuate with capital availability and investor sentiment. In hot M&A markets, you might get 7-9x EBITDA. In weak markets, similar businesses sell for 4-5x. Selling in strong markets can be worth 50-100% more proceeds than selling in weak markets. However, trying to time the market perfectly often backfires. Better to evaluate whether current conditions are favorable rather than waiting for the absolute peak.
What if I'm torn between multiple scenarios?
That's normal. Use this framework to quantify your priorities and see which scenario aligns with the most factors. If 3-4 of the five dimensions point toward selling, selling makes sense. If they're evenly split, you have more optionality and can choose based on which option maximizes your personal fulfillment.