Most owners believe there’s only one perfect time to sell:
“At the top.”
Maximum revenue. Maximum growth. Maximum excitement.
But in real transactions—especially in gyms, franchises, and service businesses—buyers often pay more for stability than for a short-lived peak.
Here’s how buyers think about selling at the top vs. selling at stability, and which strategy usually produces the better outcome.
What “Selling at the Top” Really Means
Selling at the top usually looks like:
On the surface, it feels like the ideal exit.
But buyers don’t just ask how high you climbed—they ask how repeatable and sustainable it is.
Why Buyers Are Cautious About Peaks
From a buyer’s perspective, peaks raise questions:
When performance looks too perfect, buyers instinctively model regression, not continuation.
That uncertainty can lead to:
What “Selling at Stability” Signals
Selling at stability means:
Stability reduces perceived risk.
And in M&A, lower risk often equals higher effective value.
Why Stability Often Commands Stronger Multiples
Buyers pay premiums for:
Stable businesses:
A slightly lower revenue number with stability can outperform a higher—but volatile—peak.
The Multiple vs. the Number
Many owners fixate on top-line numbers.
Buyers fixate on multiples.
A business doing:
can outperform:
Stability protects the multiple. Peaks often compress it.
Where Earn-Outs Usually Appear
Earn-outs are far more common when selling at a perceived peak.
Why?
Selling at stability often:
Clean deals usually come from calm businesses.
Which One Pays More in the Real World?
In most cases:
The highest “headline” price isn’t always the highest net outcome after:
The Smart Exit Strategy
The best exits are engineered—not timed emotionally.
Smart sellers:
They don’t chase the absolute top. They create confidence.
Conclusion
Selling at the top sounds ideal—but selling at stability often pays more in reality.
Buyers don’t buy excitement. They buy certainty.
If your business shows predictable performance, clean systems, and low risk, you’ll often command:
And that’s what actually maximizes exit value.