Ā š Med spas may look profitableābut valuations collapse when: The owner is the only licensed injector or provider Revenue depends on seasonal promos or social media hype Services are bundled without proper cost allocation Addbacks include beauty supplies, personal self-care, or luxury perks š A sleek waiting room doesnāt make for a stable valuation.
business appraisals
š Resource Drop: Urban Farm & Garden Retail Valuation Checklist
š¼ Just released: Our Urban Farm & Garden Retail Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Includes:ā Owner vs. staff labor in farm, retail, and event opsā Seasonality smoothing across growing/selling seasonsā Real estate, lease, and co-use disclosuresā CapEx for greenhouses, irrigation, fixturesā SBA SOP-aligned adjustments for inventory, perks, and crop cycles š© Click here to grab … Continue reading š Resource Drop: Urban Farm & Garden Retail Valuation Checklist
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Garden of Uncertainty
A nursery + garden retail business was priced at $775K based on $115K in cash flow. But: ā Owner grew and sold product, managed store, and booked eventsā Addbacks included home irrigation, family payroll, and food costsā Greenhouse and farm tools were not included in CapExā Revenue spiked in spring, dipped severely in Q3āQ4 ā … Continue reading ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Garden of Uncertainty
š§ Valuation Insight: Urban Farm & Garden Retail Roots ā Revenue Stability
Ā šæ Urban farms and garden shops can look lushābut valuations wilt when: The owner manages planning, retail, and vendor ops solo Seasonality isnāt normalized (spring booms, winter busts) Real estate is co-owned or intertwined with residential land Addbacks include farm tools, family payroll, and lifestyle perks š Green doesnāt always mean growth in transferable value.
š Resource Drop: Veterinary Clinic Valuation Checklist
š¾ Just released: Our Veterinary Clinic Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Includes:ā Owner labor vs. associate DVM structureā Diagnostic and surgical CapEx reviewā Client retention + referral loyalty systemsā Normalization for pet perks, travel, and lifestyle addbacksā SBA-aligned valuation logic for licensed pet care providers š© Click here to grab your copy.
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Vet Check Reveals Issues
A vet clinic was priced at $950K based on $245K in "cash flow." But: ā Owner was sole DVMāno associate or succession planā Addbacks included personal kennel, pet food, and family wagesā No CapEx normalization for aging X-ray and surgical gearā Client loyalty was owner-drivenānot brand-driven ā Adjusted FCF: ~$75Kā Revised value: ~$420K with owner … Continue reading ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Vet Check Reveals Issues
š§ Valuation Insight: Pets StayāBut Will Clients?
Ā š¶ Veterinary clinics may show strong numbersābut valuations need triage when: The owner is the sole licensed veterinarian Client goodwill is tied to the doctorānot the clinic Diagnostic equipment is outdated or excluded from value Addbacks include pet insurance, personal vehicle, or family staff š A full schedule doesnāt mean a sustainable transition.
š Resource Drop: Boutique Fitness Valuation Checklist
š Just released: Our Boutique Fitness Studio Valuation Checklist Includes:ā Owner teaching load vs. staff supportā Membership model vs. one-time drop-in revenueā Instructor pay benchmarking + labor normalizationā CapEx for equipment, software, and leasehold improvementsā SBA SOP alignment for seasonal, service-based businesses š© Click here to grab your copy.
ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Downward Dog, Downward Value
A yoga studio priced at $510K claimed $135K in SDE. But: ā Owner taught 75% of classes and ran operations soloā No instructor contracts or backup leadershipā Addbacks included massage chair, home studio use, and coaching retreatsā No normalization for seasonal drop-off or promo-driven spikes ā Adjusted FCF: ~$40Kā Revised value: ~$225K after labor normalization … Continue reading ā ļø Red Flag Case Study: Downward Dog, Downward Value
š§ Valuation Insight: Full Classes ā Full Value
Ā š§ Boutique studios can look strong on paperābut valuations bend when: The owner teaches most classes and is the studio brand Memberships spike seasonally or around New Yearās promotions Instructor wages are below market or use barter agreements Addbacks include wellness perks, retreats, or family payroll š Community-driven doesnāt always mean transferable.
