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Growth After a Pandemic, Considerations for Medical Practices
Many business owners have experienced innumerable challenges since the start of 2020. As the world begins to open, we are now faced with challenges of supply chains, the rising cost of materials, and a changing workforce. Yet, throughout the pandemic, practices did their best to keep operations moving forward. With things “returning to normal,” now is the time to plan for business growth. Whether through technology upgrades, identifying new sources of capital, improving efficiencies, or retaining key personnel, the goal is to set your company up for long-term success through sustainable, methodical growth despite current market forces.
Measuring value in a healthcare practice
Assets like cars or real estate are easier to value because there is an active secondary market for them, and there are comparable sales to help determine what they are worth. But there is no widespread secondary market for business interests, and practices are seldom similar enough for comparable sales to help an appraiser. That is why appraisers must turn to other methodologies to approximate the value of a business. It is accepted that there are three basic ways to describe the value of a business: fair market value, investment value, and liquidation value.
- Fair market value. The hypothetical cash exchange price that a willing buyer and seller would agree upon as payment for the business with mutual knowledge of all the relevant facts.
- Investment value. The value the business represents to a specific investor — a successor in a family business or a competitor looking to buy — and incorporates specific considerations above and beyond the fair market value cited above.
- Liquidation value. This value is based on the assumption that the business is no longer viable — worth more dead than alive — and the owner is compelled to sell its assets piecemeal.
- Earnings history and nature of the business
- Industry and general economic conditions
- Company financial condition, net worth, value of non-operating assets, and intangible value
- Current and estimated future market share
- Earnings capacity of the subject company and similar companies
- Dividend capacity of the subject company and similar companies
- Size of the interest offered by the subject company
