Before You Start
This guide assumes a strong understanding of financial statements and financial modeling concepts. It’s designed for experienced accountants and firm owners.
Overview
What You’ll Learn
- Core principles and methodologies of business valuation
- Applying SDE, EBITDA multiples, and Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
- Analyzing value drivers and preparing for valuation engagements
- Communicating valuation insights to clients effectively
- Expanding your accounting firm’s advisory services
1. Foundational Concepts
Before diving into methods, ensure a grasp of these core areas:
Essential Knowledge Areas
- Financial Statement Analysis (Income Statement, Balance Sheet, Cash Flow)
- Understanding Value Drivers (Growth, Profitability, Risk)
- Basic Economic Principles (Time Value of Money, Opportunity Cost)
- Industry and Market Research
Recommended Skills
- Advanced Excel Modeling
- Risk Assessment and Mitigation
- Communication and Presentation
- Access to Industry Databases
2. Choosing Your Valuation Method
Selecting the right method depends on the client’s business, industry, and purpose of valuation.
Method A: Income Approach (e.g., Discounted Cash Flow - DCF)
Focuses on future earnings potential.
- Comprehensive, forward-looking.
- Accounts for specific company risk.
- Ideal for stable, growing businesses.
- Highly sensitive to assumptions.
- Complex and time-consuming.
- Less suitable for startups or volatile firms.
Method B: Market Approach (e.g., Multiples - SDE, EBITDA)
Compares the company to similar businesses recently sold.
Expert Tip: For small businesses, Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE) multiples are often more appropriate than EBITDA multiples. SDE normalizes for owner compensation and non-essential owner expenses, giving a clearer picture for potential owner-operators.
3. Step-by-Step: Applying Multiples
This method offers a quick yet reliable valuation based on market comparables.
{
"company_name": "Acme Widgets Inc.",
"valuation_date": "2025-09-30",
"financials": {
"revenue_ttm": 1250000,
"sde_ttm": 350000,
"ebitda_ttm": 220000
},
"market_data": {
"sde_multiple_range": [2.5, 3.5],
"ebitda_multiple_range": [4.0, 6.0]
},
"calculated_value_sde_low": 875000,
"calculated_value_sde_high": 1225000
}
4. Deep Dive: Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
The DCF method requires projecting future free cash flows and discounting them back to the present.
- 1
Project Free Cash Flows (FCF)
Forecast revenue, expenses, working capital, and capital expenditures for 5-10 years.
- 2
Estimate Terminal Value
Calculate the value of cash flows beyond the projection period, typically using a perpetual growth model.
- 3
Determine Discount Rate (WACC)
Calculate the Weighted Average Cost of Capital (WACC) to discount future cash flows to their present value.
- 4
Calculate Enterprise Value
Sum the present value of projected FCFs and the present value of the Terminal Value.
Common Error: Over-optimistic Projections
Ensure your growth rates and profit margins are realistic and justifiable. Small changes in assumptions can drastically alter the final valuation.
5. Communicating Valuation Insights
Key Communication Checklist
- Clearly explain the valuation purpose and scope
- Transparently present all key assumptions and inputs
- Discuss the range of valuation outcomes, not just a single number
- Address client objectives and how the valuation impacts them
- Highlight value drivers and potential areas for improvement
Need Help?
Get Expert Support
Expand your firm’s advisory capacity with expert insights into business valuation. We can help you build robust models and client communication strategies.
Contact Us
Books Automator