
In the previous article, we discussed the importance of reviewing and recasting financials to determine the true earning power of a business. Once those adjustments are made and the earnings base becomes clearer, the next question is how those earnings should actually be viewed. This is one of the most important parts of the valuation process because the same business can be interpreted very differently depending on the type of Buyer evaluating it.
Two of the most common earnings metrics used in Lower Middle Market business valuation are Seller’s Discretionary Earnings, commonly referred to as SDE, and EBITDA, which stands for Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization. While both are intended to measure profitability, they are used in different situations and often reflect very different assumptions about how the business will operate after a sale.
For many smaller businesses, particularly those where an owner is heavily involved in the day-to-day operation, valuation is often based on SDE. Seller’s Discretionary Earnings attempts to measure the total financial benefit available to a single working owner. In addition to the earnings of the business itself, SDE typically adds back the current owner’s compensation and certain discretionary or non-recurring expenses that may not continue after the transition.
This framework is commonly used when the expected Buyer is an Individual Owner-Operator who intends to step directly into the business. In those situations, the Buyer is not only purchasing the company itself, but also the income stream associated with operating it. The owner’s role is expected to transfer along with the business, which is why the owner’s compensation is generally added back into the earnings calculation.
EBITDA is approached differently. Rather than measuring the financial benefit available to one working owner, EBITDA focuses more on the operating profitability of the business itself before financing decisions and certain accounting expenses. Unlike SDE, EBITDA does not assume the owner’s role simply disappears after the sale. Instead, it reflects a business that is expected to support management beyond the owner.
That distinction is important because many Buyers evaluating EBITDA-based businesses assume some level of management or operational oversight will remain in place after the transition. In some cases, that means a general manager already exists within the company. In others, the Buyer may anticipate hiring management to replace responsibilities previously handled by the owner. Either way, the cost of operating the business without direct owner involvement becomes part of the financial analysis rather than something that is simply added back to earnings.
This is one of the reasons the same business can produce very different valuation discussions depending on who is evaluating it. An Individual Owner-Operator may look at a company through an SDE framework because they intend to personally run the operation and capture the owner’s compensation themselves. A private equity group, family office, or certain self-funded searchers may evaluate that same business through an EBITDA lens because they are assessing the company as an investment that must support management independently of the owner.
In practice, the line between SDE and EBITDA is not always determined strictly by company size or revenue, even though there are common market tendencies. Smaller owner-operated businesses are often valued on SDE, while larger or more management-driven companies tend to transition toward EBITDA. At the same time, the operational structure of the business and the expected Buyer profile frequently matter just as much as the numbers themselves.
This is also where Sellers sometimes encounter confusion around valuation multiples. EBITDA multiples are often higher than SDE multiples, which can initially make it seem like EBITDA-based businesses are automatically worth more. In reality, the underlying earnings base is structured differently. EBITDA assumes management expense remains within the business, while SDE often includes the owner’s compensation as part of the earnings available to the Buyer. Comparing the multiples alone without understanding the earnings framework can create misleading conclusions.
Buyers are ultimately trying to answer a relatively simple question: what level of earnings will remain available after the transition, and what will it realistically cost to operate the business moving forward? SDE and EBITDA are simply two different ways of approaching that question depending on how the Buyer expects ownership and management to function after the sale.
For Sellers, understanding the difference is important because it shapes how Buyers interpret financial performance, how businesses are marketed, and how value is ultimately discussed in the market. Two Buyers may review the same financial statements and arrive at very different conclusions based on the role they expect to play after closing.
In the next article, we will move further into valuation multiples and discuss how they determine what those earnings are actually worth in the market, including how comparable sales, industry trends, and risk influence valuation ranges.
When it comes to selling your business, there are no do-overs. Understanding how Buyers evaluate and interpret earnings is an important part of preparing for a successful sale. If you want to discover the true earnings of your business as you prepare for sale, get in touch with the Business Seller Center.



