Maximizing Value in a Corporate Sale: Obsolescence
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March 13, 2019Is your company’s infrastructure adequate to support its current operations? Is it adequate to support your projected growth?
Your company’s infrastructure includes many things. Office, manufacturing and/or warehouse space; IT systems; purchasing and supply chain logistics; administrative functions; and more.
Potential buyers will view your company’s infrastructure as either mitigating or creating risk to your quality of earnings and growth potential.
If your company’s infrastructure is where it needs to be, the business will be more robust and able to take on challenges and growth opportunities. If it is fragile, and barely able to keep up with current operations, then the possibility that something will go wrong (whether or not you sell) skyrockets.
Inadequate infrastructure signals to prospective buyers that there is high risk to quality of earnings and potential for growth. Any prospective buyer will understand that they will have to develop and implement an investment plan to improve the basic assets of your company. This represents additional time and cost, and slows down a buyer’s post-acquisition plans.
Alternatively, having your company’s infrastructure primed, and ready to take on growth opportunities and industry challenges provides assurance to prospective buyers and mitigates their perception of risk.
Company infrastructure is an aspect of your business that you may take for granted; potential buyers won’t. Due diligence will unveil the adequacy of your company’s infrastructure and will be a factor in whether or not you are able to maximize value in a sale.