🧠 Valuation Insight: Hands-On = High Risk

Ā šŸ’„ Chiropractic practices often report healthy margins—but valuations take a hit when: The owner performs all adjustments and retains the goodwill No associate doctor or transition plan in place Payer mix (cash vs. insurance) isn’t broken down Addbacks include family benefits, personal wellness, or lifestyle perks šŸ“Œ If the business is the chiropractor, it’s not … Continue reading 🧠 Valuation Insight: Hands-On = High Risk

šŸŽ Resource Drop: Pool Cleaning Valuation Checklist

šŸ“˜ Just dropped: Our Pool Cleaning & Maintenance Valuation Checklist Includes:āœ… Owner labor vs. route technician reviewāœ… Recurring revenue vs. one-time cleanup trackingāœ… CapEx for trucks, vacuums, testing kitsāœ… Route documentation and territory mappingāœ… SBA normalization for seasonal cash flow šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Dripping with Risk

A pool service company claimed $150K in cash flow and asked $795K. But: āŒ Owner handled 70% of pool routes—no formal route logsāŒ Work truck titled personally + tools unaccounted forāŒ Addbacks included home internet, child payroll, and beach fuelāŒ Revenue dropped 40% in off-season—no adjustment āœ… Adjusted FCF: ~$55Kāœ… Revised value: ~$265K with route … Continue reading āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Dripping with Risk

🧠 Valuation Insight: Clean Routes ≠ Clear Value

Ā šŸ’¦ Pool cleaning businesses often look strong—until you adjust for: Owner cleaning pools personally No backup staff or route documentation Revenue spikes in warm months without smoothing CapEx missing for vehicle, equipment, and water testing supplies šŸ“Œ A full route book means nothing if the value isn’t transferable.

šŸŽ Resource Drop: Residential Cleaning Valuation Checklist

šŸ“˜ Just released: Our Residential Cleaning & Maid Services Valuation Checklist Covers:āœ… Owner labor vs. staff normalizationāœ… 1099 vs. W-2 classification risksāœ… Churn, recurring customer data, and CRM usageāœ… CapEx (vehicles, equipment) + cash-based income adjustmentsāœ… SBA-aligned labor and margin review šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Dust in the Details

A cleaning company priced at $395K claimed $125K in cash flow. But: āŒ Owner cleaned homes and coordinated all clientsāŒ Staff were paid cash + misclassified as 1099sāŒ Addbacks included vehicle gas, personal vacation, and rentāŒ No customer tracking or CRM—jobs booked via text āœ… Adjusted FCF: ~$45Kāœ… Final valuation: ~$210K after labor and admin … Continue reading āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Dust in the Details

🧠 Valuation Insight: Cleaning Up the Cash Flow

 🧹 House cleaning businesses can look steady—but valuations fall apart when: Owner does the cleaning or schedules all the work Customer churn isn’t tracked or normalized Labor is underpaid or misclassified (1099 vs. W-2) Addbacks include family wages, personal fuel, or vacations šŸ“Œ A full calendar doesn’t always mean clean cash flow.

šŸŽ Resource Drop: Roofing Contractor Valuation Checklist

šŸ“˜ Just released: Our Roofing Contractor Valuation Checklist for SBA lenders Covers:āœ… Owner licensing and labor normalizationāœ… One-time storm jobs vs. recurring revenueāœ… CapEx for trucks, ladders, lifts, and safety systemsāœ… Customer mix, margin review, and backlog analysisāœ… SBA-aligned project revenue normalization šŸ“© Click here to grab your copy.

āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Storm Surge Surprise

A roofing company was priced at $1.2M based on $315K in cash flow. But: āŒ 40% of revenue came from one hurricane yearāŒ Owner was only licensed roofer + ran bids and inspectionsāŒ Three trucks were leased personally—not in booksāŒ No CapEx or payroll adjustment for labor shortages āœ… Adjusted cash flow: ~$75Kāœ… Revised value: … Continue reading āš ļø Red Flag Case Study: Storm Surge Surprise

🧠 Valuation Insight: Revenue Peaks ≠ Sustainable Cash Flow

Ā šŸ  Roofing companies often show strong income—but valuations need to correct for: Owner as lead estimator or licensed roofer No adjustment for seasonality (weather + storm response) Deferred CapEx on trucks, trailers, safety gear Revenue spikes from one-time insurance jobs šŸ“Œ High sales during storm season don’t always mean transferable value.