TyrantDesigner
Art! Hot and fresh.
Silvertip, from someone who has sold a business to having a family member to starts and flips turn key businesses ... here is the basic truth. 9 times out of 10 you won't get a decent valuation above 2 times the invested valuation of the equipment of a shop unless you can walk away for a month and it still operate to a reasonable success without you there holding hands. If you walk away from the shop for a month and it folds, most investors won't want to put forth that much time. Sometimes you can find someone if you can take them on as a partner (buying in half) then letting them get up to speed to fully take over (buying the other half). The reason why the valuation stinks is because the owner is the face of the business in most of those cases ... and 90% of the customer interaction has been sold on the basis of the relationship between owner and customer. Change that and the customers usually drop off a significant amount which is why soft transition ownership is a way of getting a decent valuation. Most shops can't survive a hard sale if they lose 30% of the customers because they only liked the old owner and while the new owner is trying to recoup the cost of buying a business within the first 2 years. If that is the case, in an industry that most shops can be started with around $5k and some good design work ... most people will start their own shop and do it their way, with new equipment and a clean reputation (both good and bad) to build off of.
I wish you luck.
I wish you luck.