Business valuations
for healthcare information technology companies is more of an art than a
science. Ultimately a competitive market bid situation is the only true method.
I attempt to quantify the important valuation elements in this article.
One
of the most challenging aspects of selling a healthcare information technology
company is coming up with a business valuation. Sometimes the valuations
provided by the market (translation - a completed transaction) defy all logic.
In other industry segments there are some pretty handy rules of thumb for
valuation metrics. In one industry it may be 1 X Revenue, in another it could
be 7.5 X EBITDA.
Since it is critical to our business to help our healthcare
information technology clients maximize their business selling price, I have
given this considerable thought. Why are some of these software company
valuations so high? It is because of the profitability leverage of technology.
A simple example is what is Microsoft's incremental cost to produce the next
copy of Office Professional? It is probably $1.20 for three CD's and 80 cents
for packaging. Let's say the license cost is $400. The gross margin is north of
99%. That does not happen in manufacturing or services or retail or most other
industries.
One problem in selling a small healthcare technology company is
that they do not have any of the brand name, distribution, or standards
leverage that the big companies possess. So, on their own, they cannot create
this profitability leverage. The acquiring company, however, does not want to
compensate the small seller for the post acquisition results that are directly
attributable to the buyer's market presence. This is what we refer to as the
valuation gap.
What we attempt to do is to help the buyer justify paying a much
higher price than a pre-acquisition financial valuation of the target company.
In other words, we want to get strategic value for our seller. Below are the
factors that we use in our analysis:
1. Cost for the buyer to write the code internally - Many years
ago, Barry Boehm, in his book, Software Engineering Economics, developed a
constructive cost model for projecting the programming costs for writing
computer code. He called it the COCOMO model. It was quite detailed and
complex, but I have boiled it down and simplified it for our purposes. We have
the advantage of estimating the "projects" retrospectively because we
already know the number of lines of code comprising our client's products. In
general terms he projected that it takes 3.6 person months to write one
thousand SLOC (source lines of code). So if you looked at a senior software
engineer at a $70,000 fully loaded compensation package writing a program with
15,000 SLOC, your calculation is as follows - 15 X 3.6 = 54 person months X
$5,800 per month = $313,200 divided by 15,000 = $20.88/SLOC
.
Before you guys with 1,000,000 million lines of code get too
excited about your $20.88 million business value, there are several caveats.
Unfortunately the market does not care and will not pay for what it cost you to
develop your product. Secondly, this information is designed to help us
understand what it might cost the buyer to develop it internally so that he
starts his own build versus buy analysis. Thirdly, we have to apply discounts
to this analysis if the software is three generations old legacy code, for example.
In that case, it is discounted by 90%. You are no longer a technology sale with
high profitability leverage. They are essentially acquiring your customer base
and the valuation will not be that exciting.
If, however, your application is a brand new application that
has legs, start sizing your yacht. Examples of this might be a click fraud
application, Pay Pal, or Internet Telephony. The second high value platform
would be where your software technology "leap frogs" a popular legacy
application. An example of this is when we sold a company that had completely
rewritten their legacy management platform in Microsoft.Net. They leap frogged
the dominant player in that space that was supporting multiple second
generation solutions. Our client became a compelling strategic acquisition.
Fast forward one year and I hear the acquirer is selling one of these $100,000
systems per week. Now that's leverage!
2. Most acquirers could write the code themselves, but we
suggest they analyze the cost of their time to market delay. Believe me, with
first mover advantage from a competitor or, worse, customer defections, there
is a very real cost of not having your product today. We were able to convince
one buyer that they would be able to justify our seller's entire purchase price
based on the number of client defections their acquisition would prevent. As it
turned out, the buyer had a huge install base and through multiple prior
acquisitions was maintaining six disparate software platforms to deliver
essentially the same functionality.
This was very expensive to maintain and they passed those costs
on to their disgruntled install base. The buyer had been promising upgrades for
a few years, but nothing was delivered. Customers were beginning to sign on
with their major competitor. Our pitch to the buyer was to make this
acquisition, demonstrate to your client base that you are really providing an
upgrade path and give notice of support withdrawal for 4 or 5 of the other
platforms. The acquisition was completed and, even though their customers that
were contemplating leaving did not immediately upgrade, they did not defect
either. Apparently the devil that you know is better than the devil you don't
in the world of healthcare information technology.
3. Another arrow in our valuation driving quiver for our sellers
is we restate historical financials using the pricing power of the brand name
acquirer. We had one client that was a small healthcare IT company that had
developed a fine piece of software that compared favorably with a large,
publicly traded company's solution. Our product had the same functionality,
ease of use, and open systems platform, but there was one very important
difference. The end-user customer's perception of risk was far greater with the
little IT company that could be "out of business tomorrow." We were
literally able to double the financial performance of our client on paper and
present a compelling argument to the big company buyer that those economics
would be immediately available to him post acquisition. It certainly was not
GAP Accounting, but it was effective as a tool to drive transaction value.
4. Financials are important so we have to acknowledge this
aspect of buyer valuation as well. We generally like to build in a baseline
value (before we start adding the strategic value components) of 2 X
contractually recurring revenue during the current year. So, for example, if
the company has monthly maintenance contracts of $100,000 times 12 months =
$1.2 million X 2 = $2.4 million as a baseline company value component. Another
component we add is for any contracts that extend beyond one year. We take an
estimate of the gross margin produced in the firm contract years beyond year
one and assign a 5 X multiple to that and discount it to present value.
Let's use an example where they had 4 years remaining on a
services contract and the last 3 years were $200,000 per year in revenue with
approximately 50% gross margin. We would take the final tree years of $100,000
annual gross margin and present value it at a 5% discount rate resulting in
$265,616. This would be added to the earlier 2 X recurring year 1 revenue from
above. Again, this financial analysis is to establish a baseline, before we
pile on the strategic value components.
5. We try to assign values for miscellaneous assets that the
seller is providing to the buyer. Don't overlook the strategic value of Blue
Chip Accounts. Those accounts become a platform for the buyer's entire product
suite being sold post acquisition into an "installed account." It is
far easier to sell add-on applications and products into an existing account
than it is to open up that new account. These strategic accounts can have huge
value to a buyer.
6. Finally, we use a customer acquisition cost model to drive
value in the eyes of a potential buyer. Let's say that your sales person at
100% of Quota earns total salary and commissions of $125,000 and sells 5 net
new accounts. That would mean that your base customer acquisition cost per
account was $25,000. Add a 20% company overhead for the 85 accounts, for
example, and the company value, using this methodology would be $2,550,000.
7. Our final valuation component is what we call the defensive
factor. This is very real in the healthcare information technology arena. What
is the value to a large firm of preventing his competitor from acquiring your
technology and improving their competitive position in the marketplace. One of
our clients had an outcomes database and nurse staffing software algorithm. The
owner was the recognized expert in this area and had industry credibility. This
was a small add on application to two large industry players' integrated
hospital applications suite. This module was viewed as providing a slight
features advantage to the company that could integrate it with their main
systems. The selling price for one of these major software systems to a
hospital chain was often more than $50 million. The value paid for our client
was determined, not by the financial performance of our client, but by the
competitive edge they could provide post acquisition. Our client did very well
on her company sale.
After reading this you may be saying to yourself, come on, this
is a little far fetched. These components do have real value, but that value is
open to a broad interpretation by the marketplace. We are attempting to assign
metrics to a very subjective set of components. The buyers are smart, and
experienced in the M&A process and quite frankly, they try to deflect these
artistic approaches to driving up their financial outlay. The best leverage
point we have is that those buyers know that we are presenting the same
analysis to their competitors and they don't know which component or components
of value that we have presented will resonate with their competition. In the
final analysis, we are just trying to provide the buyers some reasonable
explanation for their board of directors to justify paying 8 X revenues for an
acquisition.
Dave Kauppi is a Merger and Acquisition Advisor and President of MidMarket Capital, providing business broker and investment banking services to owners in the sale of healthcare companies. For more information about selling your healthcare company, visit our website MidMarket Capital
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