
In the previous article, we discussed the difference between Seller’s Discretionary Earnings (SDE) and EBITDA, and why the same business may be evaluated differently depending on the type of Buyer involved. Once the earnings base is determined, the next step in the valuation process is applying a multiple to those earnings to estimate what the business may be worth in the market.
This is often the point where many business owners begin searching for a more direct answer. Sellers frequently hear statements like “businesses in this industry sell for three times earnings” or “companies like yours are getting five or six times EBITDA.” While there can be some truth behind those conversations, valuation multiples are not fixed rules or universal benchmarks. They are tools used to help interpret risk, opportunity, Buyer demand, and the overall quality of a business within the market.
At a basic level, a valuation multiple represents the relationship between earnings and value. If a business generates $500,000 in earnings and receives a four-times multiple, that implies a valuation of approximately $2,000,000. The concept itself is relatively straightforward. Determining which multiple is appropriate is where the process becomes significantly more nuanced, particularly in Lower Middle Market business sales where operational structure, owner involvement, financing, and Buyer type can vary substantially from one company to another.
One of the biggest misconceptions Sellers encounter is the idea that there is a universal multiple for a given industry or business size. In reality, valuation ranges are influenced by many factors beyond the industry itself. Experienced brokers, lenders, institutional Buyers, and other market participants often look at broader transaction activity, comparable sales, acquisition demand, and financing conditions to help contextualize value. These comparisons can provide useful reference points, but they are still interpreted within the context of the specific business being evaluated.
In many smaller owner-operated transactions, Buyers are often approaching the opportunity more practically than analytically. Rather than building complex valuation models or studying private market transaction databases, they may focus more heavily on whether the business can support debt payments, replace their current income, and operate in a way they feel comfortable managing. Financing terms, operational familiarity, perceived risk, and confidence in the transition often influence what a Buyer is willing to pay just as much as any broad industry benchmark.
That distinction helps explain why two companies operating in the same industry can still receive very different valuations.
Operational structure, customer concentration, management depth, recurring revenue, growth trends, and owner dependency all influence how Buyers interpret risk. A business with stable recurring revenue, diversified customers, strong systems, and limited owner involvement may justify a stronger multiple than another company in the same industry with inconsistent earnings or heavy reliance on one individual. Buyers are not simply purchasing historical financial performance. They are evaluating how sustainable and transferable those earnings appear to be after the transition.
Industry dynamics also influence how multiples develop over time. Certain industries naturally attract stronger Buyer demand because they are viewed as more stable, scalable, fragmented, or recession resistant. Others may face labor shortages, operational complexity, cyclicality, or regulatory pressure that affect how aggressively Buyers are willing to value earnings. Broader economic conditions, interest rates, financing availability, and acquisition activity can also influence valuation ranges across the market.
In many smaller owner-operated businesses, Sellers will often hear general conversations around companies trading for roughly two to three times earnings. While that range can sometimes serve as a useful reference point, it should not be interpreted as a rule or guaranteed outcome. Some businesses may trade below that range, while others may exceed it significantly depending on the quality of the operation, the structure of the earnings, and the type of Buyer evaluating the opportunity.
This becomes especially important when comparing SDE multiples to EBITDA multiples. EBITDA multiples are often higher on paper, which can initially create the impression that EBITDA-valued businesses are automatically worth more. In reality, the underlying earnings base itself is structured differently. EBITDA assumes management expense remains within the operation, while SDE often reflects the total financial benefit available to a working owner. Looking at multiples without understanding the earnings framework behind them can lead to misleading comparisons and unrealistic expectations.
Sophisticated Buyers spend just as much time evaluating the quality and sustainability of earnings as they do discussing the multiple itself. Businesses viewed as more stable, scalable, transferable, or strategically valuable often command stronger multiples because Buyers perceive greater confidence in the future earnings stream. Businesses with higher perceived risk typically receive lower multiples because Buyers expect greater uncertainty, operational involvement, or transition challenges after closing.
This is one of the reasons business valuation is rarely as simple as applying an industry rule of thumb to a single year of earnings. A multiple is not the answer itself. It is simply one component of a broader process that combines financial performance, operational structure, market conditions, financing realities, Buyer demand, and perceived risk into a market-based conclusion of value.
For Sellers, understanding this distinction is important because it helps frame valuation discussions more realistically. Businesses are not priced solely based on industry averages or online valuation calculators. Buyers spend significant time evaluating the underlying quality of the earnings, how sustainable they appear to be, and what level of infrastructure exists behind them. Those factors often influence value just as much as the numbers themselves.
Throughout this series, we have discussed how Buyers evaluate businesses from multiple angles, beginning with the qualitative drivers of value, moving through recast earnings and add-backs, and ultimately arriving at how different Buyers interpret earnings and apply valuation multiples. Taken together, these concepts begin to illustrate why business valuation is rarely reducible to a simple formula or rule of thumb. Value develops through a combination of financial performance, operational quality, market conditions, Buyer perspective, financing considerations, and perceived risk, all interpreted within the context of a specific business at a specific point in time.
In our final article, we will bring these ideas together and discuss why understanding the process behind valuation is often just as important as the valuation itself.
When it comes to selling your business, there are no do-overs. Understanding how valuation multiples are developed and interpreted is an important part of preparing for a successful transaction. If you want to start that conversation, get in touch with the Business Seller Center.



