Every founder fixates on the multiple. Tim Hellebrand will tell you the (second) most important number on a letter of intent is the one almost nobody understands until it is too late: working capital.
When Tim and his four brothers took their $105 million family appliance business to market, six letters of intent came back, and the spread between the lowest and the highest was 60 percent. Most of that gap had nothing to do with the multiple. Don’s Appliances ran on a mountain of inventory, refrigerators and ranges and washers sitting across two distribution centers, and every buyer had a different view of how much of that had to stay locked in the company on closing day. Whatever stayed in was money the brothers did not get to take home. Tim assumed they would simply get their inventory money back. That is not how it works.
You’ll learn how to:
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Spot why working capital is the (second) most important number on your offer letter, right behind the multiple.
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Calculate how the working capital peg can move your proceeds by more than a full turn of EBITDA.
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Protect yourself if your business carries heavy inventory before you go to market.
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Understand why the highest offer on the table is rarely the one that pays you the most.
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Read a 60 percent spread between offers that came from the very same set of books.
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Carve out your real estate before the deal closes and turn it into your next business.
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Structure an equity rollover and earnout so you get paid twice when your acquirer is itself acquired.
To hear the full conversation with Tim Hellebrand, former owner of Don’s Appliances, watch this week’s episode of Built to Sell Radio below.
Quote of the Week
Every offer had a working capital calculation that quietly determined how much cash we actually walked away with. That’s the number we didn’t understand enough.
Deals
Newark Engineering Group, a Singapore-based company that designs, installs, and maintains cooling systems that keep data centers from overheating, was acquired by Wesco International (NYSE: WCC), a global B2B distribution and supply chain company, for $136M. Newark generated $60M in revenue, implying a valuation of 2.3x revenue.

