NTA Homes


May 31, 2009

Before you buy a business

Filed under: Other, Commercial, Real Estate — Evan @ 6:21 pm

Before you buy a business

Study the disclosure document and proposed contract carefully.
Interview current owners in person. (They should be listed in the disclosure document.)

Visiting them in person may help you identify any who are “shills” - people paid to give

favorable reports.
Investigate claims about your potential earnings. Some companies may claim that you’ll earn a

certain income or that existing franchisees or best home business to start purchasers earn a

certain amount. Companies making earnings representations must provide you with the written

basis for their claims. Be suspicious of any company that does not show you in writing how it

computed its earnings claims.
Sellers also must tell you in writing the number and percentage of owners who have done as well

as they claim you will. Keep in mind that broad sales claims about successful areas of business

- “Be a part of our $4 billion industry,” for example - may have no bearing on your likelihood

of success. Also, recognize that once you buy the business, you may be competing with franchise

owners or independent best home businesses from home people with

more experience than you.
Listen carefully to the sales presentation. Some sales tactics should signal caution. For

example, if you are pressured to sign immediately “because prices will go up tomorrow,” or

“another buyer wants this deal,” slow down. A seller with a good offer doesn’t use

high-pressure tactics. Under the FTC’s Franchise and best home

business to start Rule, the seller must wait at least 10 business days after giving you the

required documents before accepting your money or signature on an agreement. Be wary if the

salesperson makes the job sound too easy. The thought of “easy money” may be appealing, but

success generally requires hard work.
Get the seller’s promises in writing. Any oral promises you get from a salesperson should be

written into the contract you sign. If the salesperson says one thing but the contract says

nothing about it or says something different, it’s the contract that counts. If a seller balks

at putting oral promises in writing, be alert to potential problems and consider doing business

with another firm.
Consider getting professional advice. Ask a lawyer, accountant, or business advisor to read the

disclosure document and proposed contract. The money and time you spend on professional

assistance, and research - such as phone calls to current owners - could save you from a bad

investment decision.

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