Here’s What You Should Be Doing Right Now (Year-End Guide for Business Owners)**
As the year winds down, many business owners shift their focus to holidays, family, and closing out Q4. But if selling your business is even remotely on your radar in the next 12–36 months, this is also the perfect time to start preparing.
Small operational improvements and financial clean-up efforts made now—before you’re ready to sell—can dramatically increase valuation, enhance buyer confidence, and shorten the eventual time on market.
Here’s a practical, step-by-step year-end checklist to help position your business for a smooth and profitable exit when the time is right.
1. Clean Up Your Financials Before the Calendar Resets
Your financial statements are the very first thing buyers and lenders scrutinize.
Year-end is the ideal moment to:
Get the books caught up and accurate
Remove personal or non-recurring expenses
Prepare last 3 years of P&Ls, balance sheets, and tax returns
Ensure YTD financials are clean and complete through December
Even a small improvement in SDE/EBITDA can significantly boost valuation—multipliers amplify every dollar of profit.
2. Reduce Owner Dependency (Buyers Pay a Premium for This)
Businesses that rely heavily on the owner are harder to sell and often sell for less. The next year or two is your window to create space.
Focus on:
Delegating key responsibilities
Cross-training staff
Building out simple processes and SOPs
Strengthening middle management
Your goal: make your business transferable, not tied exclusively to you.
3. Review Your Team, Payroll, and Contractor Structure
Use the end of the year to assess your staffing situation:
Update compensation
Identify weak links
Reward or secure key employees
Ensure 1099 vs W-2 classifications are compliant
A clean, confident team structure gives buyers and lenders reassurance.
4. Revisit Contracts, Agreements, and Your Lease
Long-term stability is a major valuation factor.
This is the moment to:
Renew and renegotiate leases
Review vendor and customer agreements
Identify contracts expiring soon
Confirm key contracts are assignable to a buyer
The more predictable your revenue and obligations, the smoother the sale.
5. Make Smart Capital Expenditures (Timing Matters)
Should you buy new equipment now? It depends.
If you’re 3+ years out, upgrades can raise value.
If you’re 12–24 months out, large capex rarely pays off in time.
Cosmetic and maintenance upgrades? Almost always worth it.
Buyers love a business that looks well-maintained.
6. Clean Up Your Inventory
If you carry product, now is the time to tighten it up:
Sell off slow or obsolete inventory
Reconcile physical counts
Avoid overstocking heading into Q1
Buyers want clean numbers—not piles of dead product.
7. Resolve Legal, Tax, and Compliance Issues Early
The worst time for a surprise is during due diligence.
Use year-end to:
Clean up old liens or disputes
Ensure corporate records are up to date
Get tax filings and payroll filings current
Ask your CPA about long-term tax positioning for a future sale
A “clean file” reduces deal risk and keeps buyers at the table.
8. Build (or Improve) Your KPI Dashboard
Numbers tell a story buyers love to see—especially trends.
Key KPIs to track include:
Monthly revenue trends
Gross margin by service or product line
AR/AP aging
Customer acquisition cost & lifetime value
Recurring vs non-recurring revenue
Employee turnover and labor efficiency
If you don’t have this structure, now is the time to build it.
9. Strengthen Your Brand and Digital Presence
Buyers often form their first impression online before they ever tour the business.
Consider:
Updating your website
Improving Google reviews
Refreshing signage and branded materials
Boosting your social media footprint
Reinforcing top customer relationships
Perception matters—it influences value more than many owners realize.
10. Talk to a Business Broker Before You’re Ready to Sell
This is one of the highest-ROI moves a business owner can make.
A broker can help you:
Establish a realistic valuation range
Identify value drivers
Spot red flags early
Create a 12–36 month exit plan
Position the business to command top market value
A simple conversation now can save months later—and add tens or even hundreds of thousands to your exit.