FAQs

What most business owners ready to sell are asking:

What is exit readiness advisory and how does it help me sell my business for more?

Exit readiness advisory is the financial and operational preparation that happens before a business goes to market. FCF works with business owners in the months and years before a sale to normalize financials, document add-backs, improve EBITDA quality, reduce owner dependency, and build the financial picture that holds up when a buyer looks. The result is a business that commands a better price, attracts stronger buyers, and closes without surprises. Most owners who try to sell without this preparation either leave money on the table or never find a qualified buyer at all.

According to the Exit Planning Institute, only 20 to 30 percent of owners who attempt to sell actually find a qualified buyer. Preparation is what separates the ones who do.

How far in advance should I start preparing my business for sale?

Earlier than most owners expect. The 12 to 24 months before a sale is the most intensive preparation window, but the owners who get the best outcomes start 2 to 5 years out, when there is still time to make meaningful financial improvements that move the sale price. If an exit is anywhere on your horizon, the right time to understand what your business is worth and what needs to change is now, not when a buyer is already at the table.

Why do deals fall apart after an LOI and how do I prevent it?

Most deals that fall apart after an LOI fail because of what a buyer finds in due diligence. Not because the buyer lost interest. Undocumented add-backs, owner dependency, revenue concentration, and financials that cannot withstand scrutiny are the most common causes. The Axial 2025 Dead Deal Report confirmed that diligence issues (not financing) are the primary cause of failed lower middle market transactions. The preparation that prevents this almost always starts too late or never happens at all. FCF does that preparation before a business goes to market so when due diligence starts, the findings support the asking price rather than undermining it.

What is EBITDA normalization and why does it matter when selling a business?

EBITDA normalization is the process of adjusting your reported earnings to reflect the true ongoing earnings power of the business: removing one-time expenses, owner-specific costs, and non-recurring items a buyer would not expect to continue after a sale. A normalized EBITDA tells a buyer what the business actually earns under normal conditions, which is what determines the multiple they apply and the price they pay. In the lower middle market a difference of just 0.5x in the EBITDA multiple on a $3M EBITDA business equals $1.5 million in exit value. Undocumented or poorly normalized EBITDA is one of the most common reasons that gap exists. FCF normalizes EBITDA as part of every engagement so the number is defensible before a buyer ever looks at it.

How can I increase the value of my business before I sell?

The starting point is knowing exactly where the gaps are. FCF's Pre-Market Diagnostic delivers The Exit Intelligence Report: a scored business exit readiness analysis that identifies the specific margin improvements, revenue quality gaps, and EBITDA changes that increase your business value before you sell. In the lower middle market, a difference of just 0.5x in the EBITDA multiple on a $3M EBITDA business equals $1.5 million in exit value. FCF's business value optimization work models the financial impact of each improvement so you know what to fix, in what order, and what each change is worth to your exit valuation. Giving you a specific plan to maximize your sale price before you go to market. The founders who get the most out of their exit are not the ones who prepared fastest. They are the ones who started early enough to actually move the number.

How does FCF work with my financial advisor, CPA, and M&A broker?

FCF works upstream from all of them. Your CPA handles compliance and tax. Your financial advisor manages your personal wealth picture. Your broker runs the deal. FCF prepares the business financially before any of those conversations start — so when they do, the numbers hold up and the process moves faster for everyone.

That is exactly why CPAs, financial advisors, and M&A brokers across South Florida and nationwide refer clients to FCF. When a business owner is thinking about selling but the financials are not buyer-ready, the valuation expectations are off, or the business is too dependent on the owner to close well, that is when they make the call. FCF does the preparation work that makes every downstream advisor more effective and every deal cleaner. We are based in Miami and serve founders and referral partners across South Florida and nationwide.

How is FCF different from a fractional CFO firm or a general exit planning advisor?

Fractional CFO firms manage ongoing financial operations. General exit planning advisors focus on personal financial readiness and succession. FCF is exit-specific and financial-first: focused on the work that determines what a business sells for. EBITDA quality, financial normalization, add-back documentation, margin improvement, and transaction readiness. We do not manage your back office. We do not run your deal. We prepare you and your business for the most important financial transaction of your life.

How do I know if my business is ready to sell?

Most owners assume readiness means the business is profitable and running well. Buyers define readiness differently. They look at whether the financials are normalized and documented, whether the EBITDA story holds up under scrutiny, whether the business runs without the owner in every key decision, and whether revenue is stable and not too concentrated in a handful of customers.

The gap between what an owner thinks their business is worth and what a buyer will actually pay is almost always a preparation problem, not a business quality problem. FCF's Pre-Market Diagnostic delivers The Exit Intelligence Report — a scored assessment that tells you exactly where your business stands against what buyers look for, and what needs to change before you go to market.

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