5 Steps to Getting Sell-Ready (The Pre-Market Checklist That Changes Your Number)

By Ryan Williams March 31, 2026 9 min read

The difference between a business that sells at the top of its multiple range and one that sells at the bottom isn't usually the industry, the size, or the market conditions. It's preparation. Most owners who get top dollar did specific things — in order — before their business ever went to market. Here are the five that matter most.


Step 1: Get your financials clean, documented, and defensible

Every buyer's first question — whether they ask it directly or not — is: can I trust these numbers? Clean financials are not just about accuracy; they're about confidence. A buyer who trusts your numbers moves faster, negotiates less aggressively, and is less likely to re-trade after due diligence.

What "clean financials" means in practice:

Start this 12–18 months before you intend to go to market. Restating financials takes time, and you want the cleaned-up version to represent at least one full operating year.


Step 2: Reduce your business's dependency on you

Owner dependency is the single most common reason service businesses sell at below-average multiples. If the business's revenue, key relationships, or day-to-day operations are primarily tied to you personally, buyers will price in the risk of what happens when you leave.

The question every buyer is implicitly asking: does this business work without this owner?

Steps that directly address this:


Step 3: Lock in your recurring and contracted revenue

Recurring revenue is the most direct lever on your valuation multiple. Businesses with predictable, contracted revenue streams command premium multiples because they reduce the buyer's primary concern: what happens to revenue after I close?

For service businesses, this typically means converting project-based relationships to maintenance or service agreements:

Even simple, one-page service agreements with annual auto-renewal — signed with your existing clients — transform revenue from assumed to contractual. Buyers will value that differently than a verbal relationship, even with the same customer.

Concretely: moving from 20% recurring revenue to 40% recurring revenue in your business over 12 months can meaningfully shift where you land in your industry's multiple range. The math of compounding that improvement against your EBITDA base often justifies significant investment in the conversion effort.


Step 4: Fix the customer concentration problem

If any single customer represents more than 15–20% of your revenue, you have a customer concentration problem — and buyers will find it in due diligence whether you disclose it proactively or not.

The issue isn't that large customers are bad. The issue is that a buyer who pays a multiple for your business is essentially paying for predictable future cash flow. If one customer leaving would materially impair that cash flow, the business is worth less than a similarly-sized business without that concentration.

Strategies to address concentration before going to market:


Step 5: Build the documentation package before you need it

Sellers who go to market without their documents in order spend the first 30–60 days of due diligence scrambling to produce records — which tells buyers something about how the business is run. Sellers who have organized documentation ready before the LOI is signed move through due diligence faster and project competence throughout.

Build this package 3–6 months before engaging an advisor:

This is not a complete due diligence list — it's the foundation. Having it ready before the process starts signals to every buyer's advisor that the seller is serious and the business is well-run. That perception has monetary value.


The compound effect of preparation

Each of these five steps moves your multiple. Done together, they compound in a way that individual improvements don't.

A business with clean three-year financials, a management team that can operate independently, 50% recurring revenue, no customer above 15% concentration, and a complete documentation package is a fundamentally different acquisition target than the same business with none of those attributes — even at the same EBITDA. Buyers pay for certainty, and every item on this list reduces uncertainty.

Start 12 months out. Not because you need 12 months to do all of this — because the financial record you're building during that period becomes part of your trailing twelve months data, and trailing twelve months data is what buyers base their valuations on.

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Ryan Williams

Ryan Williams

Founder, bzwrth

Ryan helps owners of $1M–$50M service businesses understand what their company is worth and prepare for a successful exit. Learn more

Last updated April 2026