What Actually Happens When You Sell a Business

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From the outside, selling a business can look deceptively simple.

A buyer makes an offer, paperwork gets signed, and the deal closes. In reality, the process unfolds in stages, each with its own risks, decisions, and potential friction points. Understanding what actually happens — and when — helps owners engage the process with realistic expectations and fewer surprises.

The Process Starts Long Before a Buyer Appears

Most successful sales begin well before a business is formally taken to market.

This early phase often includes:

  • Clarifying owner goals and timing
  • Evaluating readiness and risk factors
  • Organizing financials and documentation
  • Defining a target buyer profile

Rushing past this stage can create issues later, particularly during diligence when gaps become visible.

👉 Check out: How to Know When You’re Ready to Sell Your Business

Marketing Is Targeted — Not Public

Contrary to popular belief, most quality business sales are not widely advertised.

Instead, the process typically involves:

  • Confidential positioning materials
  • Direct outreach to qualified buyers
  • Controlled information release

This approach protects confidentiality while ensuring the business reaches buyers who are both capable and serious.

👉 Check out: How Confidentiality Is Protected During a Business Sale

Initial Offers Are About Fit, Not Final Terms

Early offers — often in the form of Indications of Interest (IOIs) or Letters of Intent (LOIs) — are not the finish line.

They outline:

  • Proposed price range
  • Basic structure
  • Assumptions about the business

At this stage, buyers are still testing alignment. Terms are refined later as diligence confirms (or challenges) assumptions.

👉 Check out: Price vs. Terms: How Deal Structure Impacts What You Actually Take Home

Diligence Is Where Deals Are Won or Lost

Diligence is the most intensive part of the process.

Buyers examine:

  • Financial performance and adjustments
  • Customer and revenue concentration
  • Contracts, employees, and systems
  • Operational and legal risk

According to the IBBA Market Pulse Report, a meaningful percentage of deals that fail do so during diligence, often due to preparation gaps, unclear expectations, or newly discovered risk.

👉 Check out: How Preparation Impacts Business Valuation

Closing Is a Process, Not a Moment

Even after diligence concludes, several steps remain:

  • Finalizing definitive agreements
  • Resolving working capital and closing adjustments
  • Securing financing and approvals
  • Coordinating legal and escrow mechanics

Timelines often compress near closing, which is why disciplined process management matters. Most issues at this stage are logistical — but they can still derail a deal if not handled carefully.

👉 Check out: From LOI to Closing: Where Deals Commonly Break Down

The Sale Often Continues After Closing

Many owners assume their role ends at closing.

In practice, sellers often remain involved through:

  • Transition periods
  • Consulting or employment agreements
  • Earn-out measurement and reporting

Understanding post-close expectations ahead of time helps avoid frustration and misalignment.

👉 Check out: Life After the Sale: What Business Owners Don’t Think About Until It’s Too Late

Conclusion

Selling a business is not a single event — it’s a structured process with multiple decision points.

Owners who understand how the process unfolds are better equipped to prepare, evaluate offers, and navigate diligence with confidence. Clarity around what actually happens reduces uncertainty and improves outcomes.

For those considering a sale, understanding the process is one of the most practical steps toward making informed decisions.

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Work with a Partner Who’s Been There.

Founder Bryan Bowles has built, acquired, and sold multiple companies. Let his experience guide your next move.