How to Increase Your Business Valuation Before You Go to Market
Every service business has a valuation range — not a single number. The difference between selling at the bottom of that range and the top can be 30–50% of your purchase price. That gap is almost entirely explained by specific, addressable factors — most of which you can influence in the 12–24 months before you go to market. Here's what actually moves the needle.
Understand what buyers are paying for
Before optimizing for valuation, it helps to understand the underlying logic. Buyers are paying a multiple of earnings because they believe they'll recoup that investment and generate a return over time. Their multiple reflects how confident they are in two things: that the earnings are real and recurring, and that they'll persist after the acquisition closes.
Every valuation improvement strategy is ultimately about increasing that buyer confidence — reducing uncertainty, improving predictability, and demonstrating that the business performs independent of the current owner.
1. Grow EBITDA — the most obvious lever
The most direct way to increase your valuation is to increase your earnings. A business doing $600K in Adjusted EBITDA at a 4x multiple is worth $2.4M. Grow that to $700K and you're at $2.8M — $400K more in value from $100K more in earnings, because the multiple applies to every dollar.
This is math most owners understand. What's less obvious is that the effort to grow EBITDA in the 12–18 months before sale is often a better return on time than almost anything else you could do — because every additional dollar of earnings is multiplied by your exit multiple, not received as a single dollar.
Specific EBITDA levers to pull before going to market:
- Price increases on your longest-tenured, stickiest customers — the ones least likely to leave
- Eliminating underperforming service lines or customers with negative margins
- Renegotiating supplier contracts or insurance coverage
- Reducing owner-incurred overhead that won't survive your departure anyway
- Adding a high-margin service that complements existing customer relationships
2. Build recurring revenue into the business model
Recurring revenue is valued at a premium over project revenue — often a full turn of EBITDA multiple or more. The reason is risk: a buyer paying $3M for a business where 60% of next year's revenue is already contracted is taking fundamentally less risk than one paying the same amount for a business that has to re-win every job. Less risk means a higher price.
The conversion from project to recurring doesn't require reinventing your business. For most service businesses, it means adding an annual maintenance or service agreement to existing customer relationships:
- Commercial HVAC customers on annual service contracts vs. call-in-only
- Landscaping clients on seasonal maintenance agreements vs. per-job pricing
- Pest control routes with annual recurring agreements vs. one-time treatments
- Janitorial clients under multi-year facility service contracts
- Fire safety customers on inspection and monitoring agreements
Even converting 20–30% of your project revenue to recurring before going to market materially improves how buyers perceive forward revenue risk — and that perception is priced into the multiple.
3. Reduce owner dependency systematically
The most common reason service businesses sell below their potential multiple is owner dependency — and it's almost entirely fixable given enough runway.
The goal is not to make yourself redundant. The goal is to demonstrate that the business continues to perform predictably without your day-to-day involvement. Here's how to get there:
- Hire or develop a general manager or operations lead. This is the single highest-impact structural change for most owner-operated businesses. An operator who can run the business while you're not there — handling scheduling, quality control, employee management, and customer issues — transforms the acquisition profile entirely.
- Move client relationships from personal to institutional. Your top customers should know at least two people at your company before you go to market. Introduce your operations manager, your service lead, or your sales person to every significant customer relationship you currently hold personally.
- Document the processes that live in your head. Quoting methodology, quality standards, vendor relationships, how you handle difficult customers — any institutional knowledge that currently exists only because you know it needs to be captured in writing.
4. Clean up your customer concentration
Every major customer over 15–20% of revenue is a discount on your purchase price. Buyers don't eliminate that discount just because the customer relationship is strong — they adjust the multiple because the risk is real regardless of your confidence in the customer.
The most direct fix is diversification: investing in sales and business development in the 12–18 months before sale to add new customers and dilute concentration. Even modest diversification efforts — converting one large project customer to a service contract customer, adding three new commercial accounts — can meaningfully shift the concentration picture.
If a large customer is going to remain concentrated, lock in a multi-year contract with them before going to market. A concentrated customer on a 3-year contract with a renewal history is a meaningfully different risk profile than the same customer on a month-to-month basis.
5. Get your books on accrual and reviewed
This is a procedural step that pays for itself many times over. The combination of accrual-basis accounting and reviewed (or audited) financial statements tells buyers that someone other than you has independently assessed the accuracy of your numbers.
A reviewed financial statement is not an audit — it's less rigorous and significantly less expensive (typically $2,000–$8,000 depending on size) — but it provides meaningful credibility to your reported numbers. For businesses under $5M in revenue, a review is usually sufficient. For larger businesses, buyers may require a full audit.
At minimum, work with your accountant to have at least one year of accrual-based financials before going to market. The cost is marginal. The impact on buyer confidence — and your ability to defend your EBITDA number in due diligence — is substantial.
6. Build a management team that creates option value for buyers
Beyond reducing owner dependency, a strong management team creates genuine value for buyers because it opens up acquisition strategies that aren't available with an owner-dependent business.
A business with an operations manager, a sales lead, and two or three seasoned field supervisors is an acquisition target for:
- Private equity platforms looking to roll up businesses without bringing in their own operators
- Strategic acquirers who want to integrate an experienced team into their existing operation
- Individual buyers who want to own a business without running it day-to-day
A business where the owner is the operations manager, the lead estimator, and the primary customer relationship — simultaneously — is an acquisition target for a much smaller pool of buyers. Smaller buyer pool means less competition for your deal means lower price.
The sequencing that matters
Not all of these improvements have the same ROI at the same point in time. A rough sequencing framework:
- 18+ months out: Build recurring revenue, address customer concentration, hire or develop your operations lead
- 12 months out: Clean up financials, get on accrual basis, document operational processes, begin transferring customer relationships
- 6 months out: Get a reviewed financial statement, complete your documentation package, confirm your add-back schedule is defensible
- 3 months out: Engage an advisor, refine your understanding of market multiples, build your CIM data
Done in this order, every improvement compounds into the trailing twelve months financial data that buyers will use to value your business. The goal is not to manufacture a good-looking snapshot — it's to actually run a more valuable business in the period before going to market, which simultaneously improves your operations and your exit price.
See where you are today
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The 10 things every owner should have in order before talking to a broker or buyer.
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Last updated April 2026