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Contact
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| How
ManyBusinesses
Are There? |
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We suspect that it
depends on whom you ask! The Internal
Revenue Service (IRS) reports that they
received some 24.8 million business tax
returns for the year 1999. We can hear
the joyful sounds emanating from new business
brokers and those considering the profession.
Wow almost 25 million businesses we can
hear them adding up the commission dollars.
This is a very misleading figure.
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Many of these are hobby-type
businesses, one-person consultants, writers,
artists and the like. In fact, one source
reports that there are 18 million non-employee
businesses, and they account for only
2 percent of total sales. INC, in their
Small Business issue reports that Sole
Owners generate only 3.3 percent of all
revenues and have annual sales of about
$38,000.
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According to INC magazine 61 percent of the
firms in their 500 fastest-growing companies
list started out as home-based. And, on average
15 months after they started, they moved to
outside space.
We dont want to take anything
away from these non-employee businesses, many
of which are home-based, as obviously some of
them will grow to be large businesses. Quite
a few of these businesses rather than have actual
employees use independent contractors or outsource
work needed. Many others are making an excellent
living for the owner, and still other owners
are quite content with the results of their
business. However, they are not the kind of
businesses that business brokers and intermediaries
normally sell. Certainly there are a few exceptions
some one-person businesses generate sufficient
revenues that would be quite salable. And, its
not that business brokers couldnt sell them
or that people wouldnt buy them quite frankly,
they are just not commissionable.
Most business brokers, out of necessity, have
a minimum fee and adding $10,000 to a selling
price of $10,000 would price many small businesses
out of the marketplace. There may be a way of
handling them, but these small businesses cant
afford full-service brokerage services. This
is coupled with the fact that obviously many,
many of these non-employee businesses dont generate
enough profit, if any, to make them salable.
Total annual sales of $38,000 arent going to
create a lot of excitement among prospective
business buyers.
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As we have discussed earlier we are really
only interested in those businesses that have
at least one employee. When we are asked how
many businesses there are, we assume that they
mean how many possible businesses are available
for sale. The above figures give a false impression
of the overall marketplace of businesses that
might be for sale at some point. Certainly many
of the businesses that have no employees might
be available for sale, most will not and secondly,
business brokers and intermediaries will most
likely not be involved in a sale if one does
occur. Since most people who call are interested
in the business brokerage profession, very few
of the businesses that file business income
tax returns are really businesses that would
sell, especially by business brokers.
Our feeling is that to qualify as a real business,
it must have at least one employee. As we mentioned
above, we suspect that some no employee businesses
use outsourcing rather than go through all of
the red tape required by governmental agencies
to have even one employee.
An article in the Boston Globe March 4, 2001
stated that there were 7.7 million small businesses
with less than 100 employees. Last years Business
Reference Guide reported that there were 5.5
million businesses with one employee or more.
INC in their Small Business issue said that
there were 5.8 million with at least one employee.
One other source reported 7.2 million.
BizStats reported that there were 5.547 million
businesses with at least one employee. We're
going with that figure.
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Here Is A Further Breakdown:
4,467,900 represent 80.5% of the total and
have sales under $1 million
790,600 represent 14.3% of the total and have
sales of $1-5 million
265,600 represent 4.8% of the total and have
sales of $5-100 million
23,311 represent 0.4% of the total and have
sales of $100 million +
Total Businesses =5,547,400
*Courtesy: BizStats
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Here's A Breakdown By Type of Business:
Services - 40% (87.8% Of Those
Have Revenues Under A Million)
Retail - 19.8% (80.3% Of Those
Have Revenues Under A Million)
Wholesale - 7.5% (50.7% Of
Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
Manufacturing - 6.0% (61%
Of Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
Construction - 12% (81% Of
Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
Finance, Insurance & Real Estate
- 8.3% (83% Of Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
Transportation/Utilities -
3.9% (81.3% Of Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
Agriculture & Mining -
2.4% (89.8% Of Those Have Revenues Under A Million)
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