NOHOME said:
In reply to SV reX :
You don't give us much to go from as far as valuing the service. From what you describe, you are buying a trade secret ( of some kind) with a barrier to entry for competition. If the product has a market, then this barrier to entry is what you are paying for.
What would it cost you to replicate the business and how long would it take? How close are potential competitors from entering the market?
Read enough of your post to think that you are far from naive and looking at a magic bean enterprise, so curious what it might be. Standing by...
Pete
I'm thinking you may have missed a few posts. I added more infor later.
It's not really a secret. It's a kitchen and bath remodeling company. Trade secret? Not really. Barrier to entry? Sure. The barrier is having the skills available to complete the work, and market the services.
I have the skills to complete the work. Far more than most. The skills to manage the work, and to do the work, hire and train.
What I lack is the skills to market the services. Been there, done that. I fully understand the value of the name recognition, the internet presence, and the marketing abilities necessary. It's not my skill set. It's what limited my previous company. Anybody that thinks it's just a matter of a few Google ads is crazy.
I am hoping this business has the name brand in the area, the presence online, and the skills to sell and market the service. If it doesn't, I'm not buying.
As previously noted, it would take me 5 years to build from scratch. IF I was fortunate enough to land the marketing prowess. If not, then I'd never be able to build it. If the numbers are right, then the revenue generated immediately would offset the amount I would lose building it for 5 years. It would also enable me to give it full-time effort now, instead of needing to maintain an income while I tried to build a business at the same time in a different location.
Competitors? Of course. There are always competitors entering the market. Everybody thinks they can do it. Most will be my own employees. But they can also make the best subcontractors if handled well.
Thanks!