YBAWS! Growing Corporate Value and Marketability

YBAWS! Growing Corporate Value and Marketability

Venture Capital

From $5.2M Floor to a $9M Ceiling, Find Out How!

How Understanding FMV as Your Floor Generated $3.52 Million in Additional Value

Sean Cavanagh YBAWS!'s avatar
Sean Cavanagh YBAWS!
Jan 30, 2026
∙ Paid

Jacob Thompson sat across from me in 2019, frustrated and confused. He’d just received a formal valuation on his specialized precision machining business: $4.8 million at a 2x EBITDA multiple. A competitor had made an unsolicited offer at $5.2 million, and Jacob thought he should accept it.

“It’s above fair market value,” he told me. “That means it’s a good deal, right?”

Wrong. Dead wrong. And over the next 18 months, he was proved exactly how wrong.

The Starting Point: Understanding the FMV Baseline

Jacob’s business, Thompson Precision Manufacturing, generated $2.4 million in EBITDA serving the aerospace and medical device industries. The formal valuation applied a 2x multiple reflecting several risk factors:

  • Customer Concentration: Top three customers represented 62% of revenue

  • Key Person Dependency: Jacob personally managed all major customer relationships

  • Operational Complexity: Manufacturing processes existed primarily in Jacob’s head

  • Limited Management Depth: No documented succession plan or leadership pipeline

The $4.8 million FMV was mathematically correct given these risk factors. But it represented the hypothetical price between fictional “willing parties” under perfect conditions that would never exist in an actual transaction.

It was explained to Jacob that professional buyers don’t operate in FMV’s theoretical world. Strategic competitors, financial buyers, and industry consolidators all have specific motivations, competitive pressures, and integration capabilities that drive premiums above baseline valuations.

The $5.2 million unsolicited offer was just 8% above FMV, essentially a lowball dressed up as “fair.” Jacob could do dramatically better, but it would require systematic preparation and strategic positioning.

Phase One: De-Risking for Premium Positioning (Months 1-12)

He implemented a systematic risk reduction program targeting the factors suppressing his multiple:

Customer Concentration Reduction:

  • Launched targeted business development campaign for mid-sized customers

  • Implemented formal diversification tracking and incentives

  • Reduced top-three concentration from 62% to 47% over 12 months

  • Created documented customer retention programs and relationship protocols

Key Person Dependency Elimination:

  • Hired experienced sales director to manage customer relationships

  • Implemented formal account transition program over six months

  • Documented all customer preferences, technical requirements, and relationship history

  • Created customer service protocols that worked independent of Jacob’s involvement

Operational Systematization:

  • Documented all critical manufacturing processes in detailed SOPs

  • Implemented formal quality control systems with statistical process control

  • Created cross-training programs ensuring no single-person production dependencies

  • Invested in process improvement reducing defect rates by 40%

Management Development:

  • Promoted operations manager to general manager with expanded authority

  • Created formal leadership team with weekly strategic meetings

  • Implemented professional financial reporting and budgeting systems

  • Developed documented organizational chart with clear succession planning

By month 12, Thompson Precision looked dramatically different. EBITDA had actually grown to $2.6 million through operational improvements, but more importantly, the risk profile had transformed completely.

Phase Two: Strategic Buyer Identification (Months 13-15)

He engaged a specialized M&A advisor who identified nine potential buyers across three categories:

Strategic Competitors (4 targets):

  • Regional machining companies seeking specialized aerospace capabilities

  • Could eliminate duplicate overhead and cross-sell to existing customers

  • Estimated cost synergies: $800K-$1.2M annually

Financial Buyers (3 targets):

  • Private equity firms focused on manufacturing roll-ups

  • Valued documented systems and management depth for add-on acquisitions

  • Saw platform potential for further consolidation

Strategic Consolidators (2 targets):

  • Larger aerospace supply chain companies seeking vertical integration

  • Could leverage Thompson’s precision capabilities across massive customer bases

  • Estimated revenue synergies: $2-4M within 24 months

The advisor created buyer-specific positioning materials emphasizing different value drivers for each category. Strategic competitors heard about integration readiness and cost synergies. Financial buyers learned about systematic operations and scalability. Consolidators focused on revenue expansion potential.

Phase Three: Competitive Process Execution (Months 16-18)

The M&A advisor orchestrated a controlled competitive process:

Week 1-2: Confidential outreach to all nine buyers with teaser documents Week 3-6: Eight buyers signed NDAs and received detailed information memorandums Week 7-10: Six buyers conducted management presentations and facility tours Week 11-12: Four buyers submitted preliminary letters of intent

The competitive dynamics created exactly what FMV assumptions exclude: urgency, strategic motivation, and fear of missing out.

The Final Results: FMV Floor to Premium Ceiling

Four serious offers emerged:


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