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What Is A Business Valuation Report?

  • Writer: Miranda Kishel
    Miranda Kishel
  • Nov 13, 2024
  • 6 min read

Many business owners know they should understand what their business is worth.

But far fewer understand what a business valuation report actually is—and why it can be one of the most valuable strategic tools a business owner possesses.

A business valuation report is far more than a document that assigns a number to a company.

A well-prepared valuation report answers critical questions such as:

  • What is the business worth today?

  • What factors are driving value?

  • What factors are reducing value?

  • How would a buyer view the company?

  • What risks exist within the business?

  • What improvements could increase value over time?

For many owners, the most valuable part of the report is not the final valuation conclusion.

It is the insight into what creates enterprise value.

A business valuation report is not simply a pricing document. It is a roadmap that explains how value is created, preserved, and increased.

Whether you are preparing to sell your business, planning succession, applying for financing, resolving a dispute, or simply evaluating long-term strategy, understanding business valuation reports is essential.

What Is a Business Valuation Report?

A business valuation report is a formal document prepared by a qualified valuation professional that provides an opinion of a company's value based on recognized valuation methodologies and financial analysis.

The report explains:

  • The valuation conclusion

  • The methods used

  • The assumptions applied

  • The risks considered

  • The financial analysis supporting the conclusion

Unlike a simple estimate or online calculator, a valuation report documents the reasoning behind the valuation.

It provides a defensible framework that can be reviewed by:

  • Buyers

  • Lenders

  • Investors

  • Attorneys

  • Accountants

  • Courts

  • Business owners

The report becomes the foundation for understanding the economic value of the company.

Why Business Valuation Reports Matter

Many business owners rely on assumptions when estimating value.

Common examples include:

  • "My competitor sold for five times earnings."

  • "Businesses in my industry sell for one times revenue."

  • "I've spent twenty years building this company."

While these observations may provide context, they rarely provide a complete picture.

Valuation reports matter because they introduce objectivity.

Rather than relying on assumptions, a professional report analyzes:

  • Financial performance

  • Cash flow

  • Industry conditions

  • Operational risk

  • Transferability

  • Growth potential

This creates a more reliable and defensible valuation conclusion.

When Do You Need a Business Valuation Report?

Many owners assume valuation reports are only necessary when selling a business.

In reality, they are used in a wide range of situations.

Common uses include:

Business Sales

Owners need a realistic understanding of market value before entering negotiations.

SBA Financing

Many SBA-financed acquisitions require independent valuation reports.

According to the U.S. Small Business Administration, lenders often require independent valuations to support acquisition financing and verify transaction pricing.

Succession Planning

Valuation helps owners plan ownership transfers and establish fair pricing.

Partner Buyouts

Independent valuation can reduce conflict and create transparency.

Estate and Gift Planning

Valuation reports may be necessary for tax and transfer planning purposes.

Litigation

Valuation reports are frequently used in:

  • Divorce proceedings

  • Shareholder disputes

  • Partnership disputes

  • Commercial litigation

Strategic Planning

Many owners use valuation reports to identify opportunities for increasing enterprise value.

What Is Included in a Business Valuation Report?

While every report is different, most professional valuation reports contain several common sections.

1. Company Overview

This section provides background information about the business.

It often includes:

  • Company history

  • Ownership structure

  • Products and services

  • Customer base

  • Geographic markets

  • Competitive position

The purpose is to help readers understand how the company operates.

2. Economic and Industry Analysis

Business value is influenced by external conditions.

As a result, valuation reports often analyze:

  • Industry trends

  • Economic conditions

  • Competitive pressures

  • Market growth expectations

  • Regulatory factors

These external influences can affect risk and valuation multiples.

For example, businesses operating in growing industries often receive different valuation treatment than businesses operating in declining markets.

3. Financial Statement Analysis

Financial analysis forms the foundation of most valuation reports.

This section typically evaluates:

  • Revenue trends

  • Profitability

  • Cash flow

  • Balance sheet strength

  • Liquidity

  • Debt levels

  • Historical performance

The goal is to determine the financial health of the business.

4. Financial Normalization Adjustments

One of the most important—and often overlooked—sections of a valuation report involves normalization.

Privately owned businesses frequently contain expenses that do not reflect true operating performance.

Examples may include:

  • Personal expenses paid through the business

  • Excess owner compensation

  • One-time legal costs

  • Non-recurring revenue

  • Extraordinary expenses

Valuation professionals adjust these items to estimate sustainable earning power.

This process helps answer a critical question:

What would a typical buyer expect this business to earn going forward?

Understanding EBITDA

Many valuation reports rely heavily on EBITDA as a measure of operating performance.

EBITDA=Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization

EBITDA allows analysts to compare businesses more consistently by removing the effects of financing and accounting decisions.

5. Valuation Methodologies

The report explains how value was determined.

Most valuation professionals consider three primary approaches.

Income Approach

The income approach values a business based on future earnings potential.

It focuses on:

  • Cash flow

  • Risk

  • Growth expectations

Market Approach

The market approach compares the business to similar companies that have sold.

This may involve:

  • EBITDA multiples

  • Revenue multiples

  • Industry transaction data

Asset Approach

The asset approach evaluates assets minus liabilities.

This method is more common for asset-intensive businesses.

Most professional valuations consider multiple approaches before reaching a final conclusion.

6. Risk Assessment

Risk is one of the most important drivers of value.

Valuation reports often analyze risks such as:

  • Customer concentration

  • Owner dependency

  • Industry volatility

  • Employee turnover

  • Financial reporting quality

  • Operational weaknesses

The higher the risk, the lower the valuation is likely to be.

Valuation is not simply a measure of earnings. It is a measure of risk-adjusted earnings.

7. Valuation Conclusion

The final section provides the valuation opinion.

Depending on the engagement, this may include:

  • Enterprise value

  • Equity value

  • Fair market value

  • Minority interest adjustments

  • Marketability considerations

This conclusion reflects the combined impact of financial performance, risk, transferability, and market conditions.

Why Buyers and Lenders Care About Valuation Reports

Valuation reports help buyers and lenders evaluate:

  • Purchase price reasonableness

  • Cash flow sustainability

  • Operational stability

  • Financing supportability

  • Risk exposure

The report helps answer an important question:

"Does this business justify the price being paid?"

This is why valuation reports often play a central role in acquisitions and financing transactions.

The Most Overlooked Benefit: Identifying Value Drivers

Many owners focus only on the valuation number.

But the greatest value often comes from understanding what drives that number.

A valuation report may reveal opportunities such as:

  • Increasing recurring revenue

  • Reducing owner dependency

  • Improving margins

  • Strengthening leadership teams

  • Diversifying customers

  • Improving systems

These insights can become a roadmap for future value growth.

Why Transferability Matters

One of the most important concepts discussed in many valuation reports is transferability.

Transferability refers to how easily a business can continue operating after ownership changes.

Businesses with strong transferability often have:

  • Leadership depth

  • Recurring revenue

  • Documented systems

  • Customer diversification

  • Operational consistency

These businesses frequently receive stronger valuations because buyers perceive lower risk.

Common Misconceptions About Business Valuation Reports

Several misconceptions frequently arise.

"The Report Guarantees a Sale Price"

It does not.

The report provides a professional opinion of value, not a guaranteed transaction outcome.

"Revenue Determines Value"

Revenue is only one factor.

Profitability, risk, and transferability often matter more.

"Valuation Is Only Useful During a Sale"

Many owners use valuation reports for strategic planning, financing, succession planning, and growth initiatives.

"The Number Is the Most Important Part"

Often, the insights behind the number create the greatest long-term value.

A New Perspective: A Valuation Report Is Really a Business Health Report

Most owners think a valuation report exists to determine price.

In reality, it often functions as something much more valuable.

A strong valuation report helps owners understand:

  • What drives value

  • What destroys value

  • Where risks exist

  • How buyers think

  • What improvements matter most

In many ways, a valuation report serves as a comprehensive business health assessment.

The valuation conclusion is simply the final result of that analysis.

Final Takeaway

A business valuation report is a comprehensive analysis that explains what a business is worth and why.

It typically evaluates:

  • Financial performance

  • Cash flow

  • Industry conditions

  • Risk factors

  • Valuation methodologies

  • Transferability

  • Growth opportunities

While many owners focus on the final value conclusion, the greatest benefit often comes from understanding the factors driving that value.

The strongest businesses are usually the businesses with:

  • Predictable cash flow

  • Recurring revenue

  • Strong leadership

  • Clean financial reporting

  • Diversified customers

  • Documented systems

A valuation report helps identify those strengths—and the opportunities to improve them.

Closing Thought

Many business owners spend years building valuable companies without fully understanding what creates that value.

A business valuation report provides that understanding.

It transforms valuation from a simple number into a strategic tool that helps owners build stronger, more profitable, and more transferable businesses over time.

Author Bio

Miranda Kishel, MBA, CVA, CBEC, MAFF, MSCTA, is an award-winning business strategist, valuation analyst, and founder of Development Theory, where she helps small business owners unlock growth through tax advisory, forensic accounting, strategic planning, business valuation, growth consulting, and exit planning services.

With advanced credentials in valuation, financial forensics, and Main Street tax strategy, Miranda specializes in translating “big firm” practices into practical, small business owner-friendly guidance that supports sustainable growth and wealth creation. She has been recognized as one of NACVA’s 30 Under 30, her firm was named a Top 100 Small Business Services Firm, and her work has been featured in outlets including Forbes, Yahoo! Finance, and Entrepreneur. Learn more about her approach at https://www.valueplanningreports.com/meet-miranda-kishel

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