In Focus: Profitable advice business  

Preparing for sale: building a plan and executing it

  • Learn how to prepare your business for sale
  • Understand what buyers are looking for
  • Understand what to avoid when selling a business
CPD
Approx.30min

Understanding a potential buyer’s client proposition and investment approach allows you to identify synergies and opportunities or conversely anomalies, such as charging structure, passive vs active investment approach, model portfolio vs bespoke, frequency of client meetings etc.  

If you know what you need from a buyer in advance, a good broker can assess how realistic that may be to achieve. 

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Understanding the market

Objectives are only truly valuable if they have been externally validated. It is all very well being clear on what you want, but any plan can fall apart if you have not verified that what you want exists or is achievable. 

Buyers come in many shapes and sizes, and no one deal is the same. The positive of that is many things are possible with time and planning, but reviewing your plan with an industry expert annually will identify gaps in the plan.

Ideally you would also get a review of the buyer market at that point too, to get a feel for the type of buyer that may suit you.

They all have pros and cons and trade-offs. For example, a large national buyer may be less flexible, but has a very clear ability to pay in full. 

And while buyers vary wildly, they are all looking for some core elements. 

What are the core factors attracting buyers?

Client make up

Even looking at multi-adviser, going concern purchases, buyers will value most significantly the underlying client base.  

In an ideal world, buyers are looking for young, engaged clients with large average asset values. The reality is most client books are a mix of old, young, rich and poor. 

However, the larger the average client size, the greater the level of income received per business unit. While acquirers may vary in their desired average client size, the majority of businesses would look for a minimum of £250,000 per household. 

Additionally, while some businesses will specialise in ultra-high net worth clients, many will consider taking on clients at circa £1mn AUM average as too high a risk.

Because if they are unable to retain these clients, the financial impact on the deal would be significant.

As the typical age of financial planner is creeping up, we are also seeing the average age of clients creeping up too. Where a buyer is assessing the return-on-investment opportunities from an acquisition, those with older client banks are becoming less and less attractive.  

As an antidote, intergenerational planning may be the best way to secure the long-term value. Now may be the perfect time to start feeding it into your business, particularly if you continue to embrace Zoom meetings.