
How to Evaluate a Business Before You Buy It
The short answer: Evaluating a business before buying it means digging into five core areas: the financials, the seller’s motivation, operational risks, customer concentration, and whether the asking price is grounded in reality. Most Main Street businesses in Indiana sell for 2–3x seller’s discretionary earnings (SDE), and due diligence typically takes 30 to 90 days. A deal that looks solid on paper can fall apart quickly when the books don’t tell the full story — which is why asking the right questions before you sign anything is the most important thing a buyer can do.
You found a business that looks promising. Revenue is steady. The industry makes sense. The seller seems motivated. But before you spend serious time — or serious money — on this opportunity, you need to know what’s actually under the hood.
A lot of buyers focus too early on price. Price matters, but it’s almost never the thing that kills a deal or destroys value after the close. What kills deals — and what destroys value — is what buyers didn’t ask about. This guide covers what to look for when evaluating a business in Indiana before you commit.
Start With the Financials. All of Them.
The first thing you want is three to five years of financial statements. Profit and loss, balance sheets, and tax returns. Not just a summary the broker prepared — the actual documents.
Here’s what you’re looking for:
Consistency. Does the business earn roughly the same amount each year, or are there dramatic swings? One great year followed by two average ones tells a different story than three years of steady growth.
Owner add-backs. Most Main Street businesses are priced on seller’s discretionary earnings — SDE — which is net income plus the owner’s compensation and any non-recurring expenses added back. Make sure every add-back is documented and legitimate. Aggressive add-backs are one of the most common ways asking prices get inflated.
Revenue concentration. If one customer accounts for more than 25% of the business’s revenue, that’s a material risk. Ask for a breakdown of the top 10 to 15 customers by revenue, and how long each relationship has existed. A business where the top customer has been a client for 12 years is very different from one where that same customer signed on 10 months ago.
Cash vs. accrual. Smaller businesses often keep their books on a cash basis. That’s fine — but understand the difference when reviewing the numbers, especially around accounts receivable and timing of revenue recognition.
Most Main Street businesses in Indiana sell in the 2.0x to 3.2x SDE range. Service businesses with recurring revenue and clean books often land at the higher end. Owner-dependent, high-variability businesses tend to come in lower. If a seller is asking 4x with no clear justification, you need to understand why before you move forward.
Understand Why the Seller Is Leaving
This one sounds obvious. It rarely gets enough attention.
Sellers have a lot of reasons for selling — retirement, health, burnout, partnership disputes, outside opportunity, or a genuine belief that this is the right time to transition. Most of those are fine. A few are not.
What you want to understand is: if this deal doesn’t close, what does the seller do next? Do they have another buyer lined up? Are they walking away regardless? Are they genuinely motivated, or are they fishing to see what the market says?
The answer tells you how flexible they’ll be in negotiations, what their timeline actually is, and whether there’s a real problem with the business they haven’t mentioned yet.
Ask directly: What would you do differently if you were starting over with this business? That question tends to produce honest answers. Sellers who’ve been running something for 10 years have opinions. The things they bring up — inefficiencies, missed opportunities, difficult customers — are exactly what you need to know before you buy.
Assess Whether You Can Actually Run This Business
Every business requires a specific combination of skills, relationships, and bandwidth. A profitable business can struggle badly under the wrong owner.
Be honest with yourself. Do you have experience managing employees in this industry? Do you have the technical knowledge to oversee the core work, even if you’re not doing it yourself? Do you have the relationships — with suppliers, customers, or the community — that this business depends on?
One of the questions I always encourage buyers to ask is: What does a typical week look like for the owner? If the answer is “I’m here 60 hours a week handling everything from sales to operations to customer complaints,” that’s not a business — it’s a job. A very expensive job.
On the other hand, if there’s a documented process, a capable team, and the owner has actually stepped back from day-to-day operations, that’s a business with real transferable value. Documented standard operating procedures (SOPs) make transitions dramatically smoother. Businesses without them — where everything lives in the owner’s head — carry a real transition risk that should be reflected in the price.
Look for Risks That Aren’t in the Sales Materials
Nobody is going to hand you a document that says “here are the things most likely to go wrong after you buy this.” You have to find them yourself.
A few areas that consistently get overlooked:
Key employee risk. What happens if the top salesperson — or the person who knows how every piece of equipment works — leaves after the sale? Ask directly which employees are critical to operations, whether they know the business is for sale, and whether they plan to stay.
Lease and contract terms. If the business is in a leased location, how much time is left on the lease? Is the landlord likely to renew, and at what rate? A business with 18 months left on a lease in a building the landlord wants to redevelop is a very different investment than one with a 5-year option in place.
Pending legal issues. Ask specifically whether the business has any open or threatened litigation, regulatory issues, or outstanding liens. This isn’t about being adversarial — it’s about knowing what you’re acquiring. An asset purchase structure can protect you from most liabilities, but not all.
Supplier dependencies. Similar to customer concentration, a business that sources 80% of its product through a single vendor carries supply chain risk. Ask what would happen if that vendor relationship ended or terms changed significantly.
Know What You’re Paying For — and Whether the Price Makes Sense
Valuation is part art, part math, and sometimes part negotiation theater.
The most common valuation method for Main Street businesses is a multiple of SDE. Across more than 9,500 transactions tracked in recent BizBuySell data, the average multiple was approximately 2.5x SDE. That’s an average — which means some businesses sell for more and some sell for less.
What pushes a price up: recurring revenue, strong customer retention, documented systems, a tenured team, and an owner who is genuinely ready to transition and will stay for a reasonable training period.
What brings a price down: owner dependency, inconsistent financials, concentration risk, deferred maintenance, aging equipment, and an industry with structural headwinds.
Don’t just ask what the asking price is. Ask how the seller arrived at it. If the answer is a clear, documented multiple of normalized earnings — great, you have something to work with. If it’s vague (“we’re asking what the business is worth”), that’s a negotiation, not a valuation.
We’ve worked through enough Indiana acquisitions to know that buyers who understand valuation before they make an offer negotiate better outcomes. Buyers who don’t tend to either overpay or walk away from deals they should have done.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does due diligence take when buying a small business in Indiana? For most Main Street transactions, due diligence takes 30 to 60 days once both sides are under a signed letter of intent. Smaller businesses with organized records can move in four to six weeks. Larger or more complex acquisitions — or businesses with messy books — can stretch to 90 days or longer. Starting the process before you’re fully under contract is a mistake; sellers typically won’t open their books without a signed LOI.
What financial documents should I request when evaluating a business? Request at least three years of profit and loss statements, tax returns, and balance sheets. You’ll also want current accounts receivable and payable aging reports, a list of the top customers by revenue, and any existing contracts (leases, vendor agreements, customer agreements). If the business uses specialized software, ask for a walkthrough of the data — not just printed summaries.
What is a fair multiple when buying a small business? Most Main Street businesses in Indiana and the broader Midwest sell for 2.0x to 3.2x seller’s discretionary earnings (SDE). The exact multiple depends on industry, revenue stability, owner involvement, growth trend, and whether there are documented systems in place. Highly owner-dependent businesses typically land below 2.5x; businesses with strong recurring revenue and a capable team can command 3x or higher.
What is the biggest red flag when buying a business? Customer concentration is one of the most common red flags we see. If a single customer accounts for more than 20 to 25% of revenue, losing that relationship after the sale could be devastating. The second most common: financials that don’t match the owner’s verbal claims. If the books say one thing and the seller’s story says another, dig in before you go any further.
Do I need a business broker to buy a business in Indiana? You don’t legally need one, but having a broker on the buy side — or working with the listing broker — helps you move faster, understand what’s normal versus concerning in due diligence, and navigate offer structure. For buyers new to acquisitions, the process has a lot of moving parts: LOIs, purchase agreements, SBA financing timelines, and closing mechanics. Professional guidance is usually worth it.
The Right Questions Change Everything
Buying a business is one of the biggest financial decisions most people make. The buyers who do it well aren’t necessarily smarter or wealthier — they’re more methodical. They ask more questions. They don’t confuse enthusiasm for due diligence.
If you’re currently evaluating a business in Indiana and want a second set of eyes on the opportunity — or if you’re just starting your search and want to understand what the process looks like — I’m happy to talk through it.
Troy Frank has helped Indiana buyers and sellers navigate dozens of transactions across a wide range of industries. You can reach him directly at troy@indianaequitybrokers.com or visit Indiana Equity Brokers to learn more.
