Succession planning works best when it begins years before the owner steps back. Whether you are preparing for retirement, a family transition, a management buyout or a long-term exit, an early valuation gives you the clarity to plan with confidence.
Understand current value as a starting point for planning
Plan retirement income with realistic numbers
Prepare a family transition fairly and transparently
Support a management buyout with credible figures
Reduce tax and ownership surprises
Identify value improvement opportunities you still have time to act on
— 02 — Detail
Common succession scenarios
Passing the business to family
Selling to the existing management team (MBO)
Selling to a third party
Partial exit while retaining a stake
Staged retirement over 2–5 years
— 03 — Detail
What affects succession value
Management dependency and the strength of the leadership team
Recurring revenue and contracted income
Systems and process documentation
Owner involvement in day-to-day operations
Customer relationships and how transferable they are
Staff depth and key-person risk
Profitability and margin trend
— 04 — Detail
When Should You Value a Business Before Retirement or Succession?
We recommend starting 1–3 years before your desired exit. That window gives you time to act on the value drivers most likely to improve your outcome, and to structure the transition tax-efficiently with your accountant and solicitor.
— FAQs
When should I value my business before retirement?
Ideally 1–3 years before your planned exit. That gives time to act on value-improvement opportunities while still leaving room for a tax-efficient transition.
Can a valuation help with family succession?
Yes. An independent valuation creates a fair starting point for family discussions, gifting strategies, and structuring the transition.
How is a management buyout valued?
MBOs are usually based on adjusted EBITDA multiples, then structured with a mix of cash, vendor loan and earn-out so the management team can fund the deal.
Can I improve value before exit?
Almost always. Reducing owner dependency, building recurring revenue, strengthening management and tightening reporting are typical levers.
Is succession planning confidential?
Yes. Conversations are private and no information is shared with staff, family members or third parties without your consent.
Take the next step
Find out what your business could be worth before buyers do.
If you are considering a sale now or in the next few years, a confidential valuation call can help you understand where you stand, what buyers may look for, and what could improve your outcome.