12 July 2024
Growth V’s Value in Business

We live in a business world where growth is worshipped. Entrepreneurs measure themselves by how many people they employ and dream about making lists whose sole criteria is revenue growth.
However, if your
endgame is to sell your business to a strategic acquirer one day,
indiscriminate revenue growth may not result in a commensurate spike in your
company’s value; in some cases, it may even detract from it.
Strategic Buyers
Value What They Cannot Replace
Strategic
acquirers—the buyers that usually pay the most—are looking for something they
can’t easily do themselves. They covet that unique offering that would take too
long—or cost too much—for them to duplicate. But the more extraneous offerings
you add, the less valuable you become in their eyes.
Michael Lieberman,
who co-founded a software company named Datastay. It revolutionised how brake
manufacturers cataloged their design drawings through its product lifecycle
management software. Datastay became synonymous with the brake manufacturing
industry. Lieberman was on a first-name basis with almost every brake
manufacturing executive in the industry. He was the man to know, the one who
hosted dinners at trade shows—he was the guy.
Then Autodesk
entered the picture, seeing Datastay as their gateway to the product lifecycle
management software market. Autodesk, a billion dollar serial acquirer renowned
for software tools indispensable to designers and builders across various
sectors, acknowledged Datastay’s dominance in the brake industry and saw the
potential to market Datastay’s product lifecycle management software across the
myriad industries Autodesk served.
Autodesk offered
Lieberman an extraordinary ten times revenue for his nine-employee
company. Had Lieberman prioritised broad revenue growth, he
might have diversified his offerings to the brake manufacturers, diluting the
core value that attracted Autodesk. Brake manufacturers need all sorts of other
software, but Lieberman remained disciplined and focused exclusively on product
lifecycle management tools.
Lieberman could
have branched out to other industries, but spreading his attention to other
industries would have weakened his connection to the brake industry and invited
competition.
Instead, he stuck
to his knitting: Make the world’s best product lifecycle management software
for the brake industry.
Private Equity and
Strategic Acquirers See Things Differently
Unlike the private equity acquirer that usually bases their valuation on a multiple of your Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization (EBITDA), the typical strategic acquirer is trying to calculate what your product or service offering is worth in their hands.
The typical strategic acquirer is much larger and
better resourced than the companies they target. They don’t need you to
diversify for them. Instead, they want the company that has the one puzzle
piece they want, and the less diversified that offering is, the higher the
premium they’re prepared to pay.
Michael loves the company of family, friends, work mates and clients. Weekends are spent with family — watching his boys play sport and enjoying life. He’s played table tennis and cricket at the top level locally, and these days spends plenty of time on a bike and at the gym.
Michael works as a business coach for our clients, as well as growing our business in the SME advisor sector.
Bachelor of Commerce, CA, LinkedIn
