English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I'm might sell my barbershop, how do I put a value on it?

Thanks in advance...

2007-02-10 16:51:34 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Small Business

I'm renting the building, but want to sell the business.

2007-02-10 16:52:36 · update #1

6 answers

If your shop has no other barbers it has no value, because when you leave, the business is gone.

If the shop has other barbers, then whatever they contribute to your profitablility has value but the calculation is too complicated to explain in a posting such as this.

Get someone to come in and train under you, learn your customers and then sell to them at some point in the future.

2007-02-11 09:58:50 · answer #1 · answered by planningresult 4 · 0 0

GraphSight is capable of plotting Cartesian, polar, parametric, table defined, as well as specialty graphs, such as trigonometric functions (sin, cos, tg, and others). Importantly, it features a simple data and formula input format, making it very practical for solving in-class and homework algebra or calculus problems. Trace curves. It makes it possible to visually observe how the function Y(X) depends on the variable X . Print the resulting picture or export it to a file or windows clipboard as a bitmap and keep several coordinate spaces opened at a time. Automatically adjust coordinate grid and axes appearance. Analyze data. Correlation coefficient, mean values...

2007-02-13 06:48:51 · answer #2 · answered by Anthony cdsa 1 · 0 0

Based on net income, before taxes, show the R.O.I. (return on investment). If your annual profit is $75,000 and you sell it for $225,000 , the ROI would be 33%. So the question is, what kind of ROI is your buyer looking for. If he wants an ROI of 50% then the business would be worth $150,000

2007-02-11 01:03:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

then you really only own the name of the business and that isnt worth very much best thing to do is sell a partnership with somebody then try and sell the other half of it to him or somebody best thing is to average yearly income and sell based on that

2007-02-11 00:58:07 · answer #4 · answered by gary p 2 · 0 0

The goodwill price is normally estimated at 25% of your annual turnover and then you add your assetts, stock on hand, etc.

2007-02-11 00:59:56 · answer #5 · answered by MaggieSA 3 · 0 0

What do you have to offer???
Solid asset... (equipment, tools, material)
customer base??
is the name itself worth anything?
Does the co. make money now?
How much?
How much can it make?
employees?
debt
and most importantly, what is your pitch?

Many factors to answer here.

2007-02-11 01:03:07 · answer #6 · answered by and,or,nand,nor 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers