Join Darrell Amy for the One Ideal Client Away Challenge, March 20-24
SCALE YOUR IMPACT!
DESIGN
Your Engine
Come to the 2-day Performance Workshop
BUILD
Your Engine
A mentorship to help you upgrade your sales and marketing processes.
ACCELERATE
Your Growth
Enjoy faster and easier revenue growth as you scale your company.
During challenging economic times it can be hard to maintain your current revenue, let alone grow it.
We believe you can grow revenue, even in a recession, by getting strategic about your Revenue Growth Engine®.
Revenue Growth Engine® , created by Darrell Amy, is a set of tools and resources to help companies scale.
If you own an established business and want to scale your revenue so you can make more of an impact, this is designed specifically for you.
DESIGN
Your Engine
Come to the 2-day Performance Workshop
BUILD
Your Engine
A mentorship to help you upgrade your sales and marketing processes.
ACCELERATE
Your Growth
Enjoy faster and easier revenue growth as you scale your company.
Build your Revenue Growth Engine
Develop Physical Endurance
Trek to Everest Base Camp
Join adventurous entrepreneurs in an epic journey to scale your business as we train to trek to Mount Everest Base Camp!
As the co-founder of the non-profit Kingdom Missions Fund, Darrell Amy noticed that the largest donations came from business owners, and he wondered how he could help generous business owners quickly grow revenue so they could give even more. With this in mind, Darrell set a goal:
Darrell’s experience as a leader in sales and marketing has given him a unique perspective on what it takes to grow revenue. Distilling 27 years of experience, Darrell authored Revenue Growth Engine: How To Align Sales & Marketing To Accelerate Growth.
He is a member of the Forbes Business Council and he helps companies maximize growth through sales and marketing alignment. Darrell hosts the Revenue Growth Podcast and co-hosts the Selling From the Heart Podcast. He also volunteers as the executive director of the ManAlive EXPEDITION, an organization that helps men find healing and identity.
When he isn’t helping generous business owners grow their profits in order to give more, Darrell, along with his wife Leslie, enjoy spending time with their children and four grandchildren.
When potential acquirers first evaluate your business, their initial classification can significantly impact its value. Some industries inherently command higher valuations than others, and being categorized in a less favorable industry can pose challenges.
Consider the experience of Jeremy Parker with Swag.com. Initially, investors perceived Swag.com as a mere distributor of promotional products, an industry with notoriously low valuations. Despite Parker's attempts to reframe Swag.com as more than a middleman, investors offered only low single-digit multiples of EBITDA.
Determined to change this perception, Parker repositioned Swag.com as an e-commerce platform with a memorable domain name, world-class merchandising, and a top-tier direct-to-consumer (DTC) buying experience. This strategic rebranding shifted investor perception, transforming Swag.com from a simple distributor to a technology-driven digital commerce leader. Consequently, Parker received acquisition offers valuing his $30 million company at a significantly higher revenue multiple.
This story underscores the importance of initial categorization by acquirers and the difficulty of shifting that perception once set. If your business doesn't fit neatly into a favorable industry, it can be challenging to change initial impressions. Acquirers often compare businesses to others within the same industry, using lower benchmarks and valuation multiples from less favorable categories, which complicates efforts to argue for a higher valuation. Additionally, the initial narrative about your business can stick, and attempts to reframe it later may face skepticism.
To ensure your business is categorized favorably from the start, consider these strategies:
1. Clear Positioning:
Articulate your business’s value proposition and industry position clearly. Avoid ambiguous descriptions that might lead to misclassification. Be explicit about where your business fits and why it should be valued accordingly.
2. Highlight Industry Trends:
Emphasize positive trends in your industry and how your business is positioned to capitalize on them. Use data and market analysis to support your claims and shift perceptions.
3. Put Your Best Foot Forward:
If your business spans multiple industries, highlight the most favorable one. Demonstrate how your company leverages the strengths of high-value industries, and downplay associations with lower-value ones.
4. Leverage Third-Party Validation:
Use endorsements, industry awards, and analyst reports to support your positioning. Third-party validation can lend credibility to your claims and help shift acquirer perceptions.
When selling your company, perception is everything. The category investors place your business in can make or break the deal. By strategically positioning your business from the outset, you can maximize its valuation and ensure a more favorable outcome in acquisition negotiations.
Are you looking for ways to scale your business? Welcome to the Revenue Growth Podcast with Darrell Amy. This is the place for business owners, sales leaders, and marketing professionals to get ideas an inspiration to drive exponential revenue growth. Each week you’ll get actionable insights from the world
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