RESOURCES Blog
Viewing entries tagged marketing

So, you’ve been introduced to the development phase of selling your company. We now bring you Part II of our mini-series: the marketing phase. At this point in the process, you should know your company like the back of your hand, and your Confidential Information Memorandum should be complete. It’s time to go to market and meet your future match. Let the games begin!

Not to say this is a game – we’re referring to the back-and-forth that occurs as you search for and ultimately select your buyer. To fall back on our tried-and-true analogy – it’s like dating. Remember those notes you used to pass to the cute kid in class? Something along the lines of: “Do you like me? Check yes or no.” Well, things haven’t changed much since elementary school.

So, you’re ready to sell your company – and if you did your homework, you don’t have any prior engagements holding you back. Where do you start?

Back in May, we introduced you to the three phases of selling your company: development, marketing and closing. Given that it was the height of wedding season, a marriage analogy seemed appropriate. We’ve decided to take that comparison and run with it: Our next few posts will devote an in-depth discussion to each phase. For purposes of this mini-series, feel free to think of us as your FourBridges Relationship Advisors. (If this goes well, we’ll consider adding “Bridge to Marriage” to our list of services.)

Read Our BlogSign Up For News

INDUSTRY NEWS

ACG InterGrowth Video: 2012: A Good Year to Sell

CFO.com - Private Equity Firms Go for Bolt-Ons in Q1

Colorado Biz Magazine - Looking Under the Hood: Key M&A Advice

VentureBeat - How To Be A Smarter Entrepreneur With VCs

HBR - The Founder's Dilemma: To Sell Or Not To Sell?

Gaebler.com - What Is The Difference Between A Business Broker And An Investment Banker?

Entrepreneur.com - Keep Meticulous Financial Records From Day One Or Pay The Price Later

CFO.com - Why Succession Planning Is So Hard


PRIVACY STATEMENTPATRIOT ACTLEGALBUSINESS CONTINUITY