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Buy Then Build: How Acquisition Entrepreneurs Outsmart the Startup Game

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Entrepreneurs have a startups. Almost all startups either fail or never truly reach a sustainable size. Despite the popularity of entrepreneurship, we haven’t engineered a better way to start. …Until now.What if you could skip the startup phase and generate profitable revenue on day one?In Buy Then Build, acquisition entrepreneur Walker Deibel shows you how to begin with a sustainable, profitable company and grow from there. You’ll learn how ● Buy an existing company rather than starting from scratch ● Use ownership as a path to financial independence ● Spend a fraction of the time raising capital ● Find great brokers, generate your own “deal flow,” and see new listings early ● Uncover the best opportunities and biggest risks of any company ● Navigate the acquisition process ● Become a successful acquisition entrepreneur ● And more Buy Then Build is your guide to outsmart the startup game, live the entrepreneurial lifestyle, and reap the financial rewards of ownership now.

312 pages, Kindle Edition

Published October 30, 2018

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Walker Deibel

2 books15 followers

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5 stars
822 (49%)
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595 (35%)
3 stars
203 (12%)
2 stars
45 (2%)
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11 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 89 reviews
Profile Image for Michael  Korobov.
13 reviews
June 25, 2020
This book grossly oversells the opportunity of entrepreneurship through acquisition and irresponsibly excludes numbers that go against the book's pitch. As a book that's supposed to give you an in-depth understanding of this investment type, the author is actively misleading the reader. A few quick notes to make my point:

* SDE should not be included in its entirety in your return because a part of it (or all of it) is the salary for the 8-12 hour days you are putting in to run the business. It's salary that pays for living costs that you'd be making as an employee working somewhere else. That should not be included in ROI.
* Business taxes are for some reason completely excluded from ROI calculations and because loan repayment is not tax deductible, the tax burden can be meaningful
* The author fails to mention that small businesses are notoriously more volatile and you need to have significant cash cushion
* SBA loans as mentioned in the book require you to personally guarantee all loans which hold your personal assets and credit score as collateral, greatly increasing the overall risk/reward
Profile Image for Taylor Pearson.
Author 3 books743 followers
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January 26, 2019
One of the most interesting investment opportunities I’ve seen in the last few years is acquiring and growing a small business.

There are two macro trends driving this opportunity. One is a huge wave of baby boomers that are retiring and looking to sell their small businesses. The other is the proliferation of niche businesses on the internet which expands the number of small businesses that can operate profitably.

As Deibel points out in Buy then Build, these opportunities are largely overlooked because of the widespread belief that “real entrepreneurs” must start their own business.

20 years from now, I think “acquisition entrepreneurship” will be as common as going to a MBA program is today. In the meantime, it’s a huge opportunity to hop on the train early and Buy Then Build lays out who is a good fit for acquisition entrepreneurship and how the process works, from finding to evaluating to buying a company.
60 reviews
March 7, 2019
Buying and improving small companies is indeed a fantastic opportunity.

It seems to me that this book could had been shorter. Typos distract readers and make us think that you haven’t thought much about what you are communicating. There are also mathematical misconceptions, you can’t just calculate investment returns without considering when you recieve the money (it’s very different to recieve say $60 after 5 years than $12 a year during 5 years, the latter case being way more profitable). A way more appropriate metric is internal rate of return.

Also, buying businesses by borrowing 90% of the money and using your own assets as collateral is absurdly reckless. That’s playing Russian roulette. This book is supposed to be for beginners. You can’t sensibly suggest that to a beginner (nor to anyone who isn’t your enemy).

It’s too US-centric. Nowadays investors from almost anywhere can buy a business from almost anywhere. And this trend will keep growing, as companies are less location dependant.

Profile Image for Tom.
48 reviews5 followers
January 15, 2019
Yes, it is a good book. Good all-round information from why buying to actually concluding a deal. I must admit I was more after information for buying companies with LBO type financial engineering. After reading more about acquisition entrepreneurship lately and not just in this book, I have come to realise that you can read a lot, but you can't learn the soft skills or on the ground skills that are required unless you actually do a deal (handheld or not). Where the author has had a tremendous advantage is that he bought his first company off his parents.
Profile Image for Jamie is.
164 reviews
July 14, 2022
Incredibly helpful. Lots of specific advice, little fluff. The frameworks and formulas were especially helpful. One of the 2 best books I’ve read regarding acquisition entrepreneurship. Check out the authors website for more helpful blog posts and spreadsheets. Considering paying for his advisory service (it’s between them and Acquira, but the latter focuses more on home service businesses and I’m looking more at health, analytics, and others)
Profile Image for Diego Cerezo.
115 reviews11 followers
July 12, 2021
Book in a sentence: shows how to do entrepreneurship through acquisitions, in which instead of you starting a startup, you buy existing and profitable companies.

Lesson learned: the kind of entrepreneurship I've most identified with and want to pursue wholeheartedly.
Profile Image for Abhi Yerra.
235 reviews4 followers
November 8, 2022
Most products that we use on a daily basis were companies that were bought by others. McDonalds, Google Docs, Tesla, I’d argue the second time that Steve Jobs came back to Apple. None of these were the founders. They were the people who took a product market fit business and turned them into large scale businesses.

This book I’d argue is one of the best end to end books on how to be private equity/acquisition buyer of one. It goes through vetting different companies to but and how to actually execute the purchase the company. Highly recommend if you want to get into the private equity game as an individual.
Profile Image for Héctor Pastor.
23 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2022
A hands-on, very pragmatic book about acquiring a small business.

Not too little but not too much information, just the right amount.
Profile Image for Ed Barton.
1,302 reviews
August 5, 2022
A Great Optiom

Better than start up, the buy then build approach is a great option for the entrepreneur minded who want to reduce risk and get a head start with building a business. You’ll get a good overview of the process and the key steps and pitfalls. A must read to get started before you decide to start from scratch.
Profile Image for Jeff Evans.
7 reviews
June 3, 2021
A "Must Read" for Entrepreneurs

Walker Deibel has written the most valuable book about the challenges and rewards of owning your own highly successful business. When read in conjunction with the available Audio Narration Walter's message is clear and easily understood...it is far better to Buy Then Build a business than to startup a new one.
Profile Image for Richard Mowrey.
Author 10 books7 followers
July 27, 2019
This is an excellent book for all "would be" new business owners. The strategy outlined is spot on and is the type of advice I personally have given dozens of people over the years. The author, Walker Deibel, delivers on his promise to help "outsmart the startup game"!
14 reviews
December 28, 2020
Very little info (one short paragraph...) about the search fund model - instead assumes the buyer funds the acquisition using an SBA loan which requires a guarantee against your personal assets.
August 17, 2022
Inspirador y una buena guia sobre el proceso específico de como adquirir un negocio pequeño. Muchos conceptos y experiencias valiosas (SDE, multiplos, mentalidad comprador, contruir memo con lo que se busca, etc) y también conceptos mas basicos pero que siempre vale la pena repasar.

—————-

* p32. Riesgo asimétrico de posibilidad de exito entre entre startups (10%), VC backed startup (25%) y adquisición de emprendimientos (98% segun tasa de default de SBA)
* P46. Para emprender, antes de encontrar la compañia. Es importante tener claro los 3 atributos necesarios para manejar la empresa. Attitude, Aptitude and Action.
* P66. 4 cuadrantes de tipos de negocio que existen que es necesario identificar, enternable profitable, turnaround, high growt and platfom.
* P86. La razon por la que solo el 10% tiene exito. Es porque saben lo que quieren. Tipo de industria (producto, distribución o servicio), tipo de crecimiento, el tamaño de SDE y limitantes.
* P105. 2 alternativas para hacer el approach para la busqueda de comprar una empresa. Hablar directamente con la persona y decirle que utilice el servicio de un broker dado para trabajar la valorización, el que luego me dará preferencia. Ir a traves de un itermediario (broker) con un mandato específico para dar mas peofesionalismo.
* P121. Quiet light brokerage article on buythenbuild.com
* P136. Listado temas offering memoramdum. Asking price, name, lugar, producto o servicio ofrecido, numero empleados, rol de cada uno y sueldo, analisis clientes y concentración, razon de venta, plan de crecimiento mirando para adelante. A parte de info financiera.
* P180. Actitud correcta de humildad y de “venderse” frente al vendedor. Generar vinculo, credibilidad, meta en comun. Importancia de identificar las fortaliezas del vendedor para evaluar lo transferible del negocio
* P188. Importancia de reflexiones luego de primera reunion con el vendedor. Importante actuar, y orientarse al proceso para realmente entender que es lo que está buscando. Entender las tres As, evaluar las habilidades, saber el nivel de involucramiento y dia a dia que quieren, tamaño de SDE, etc.
* P192. Usar 5 fuerzas de porter para entender las particularidades del negocio y generar un business plan.
* P204. Para generar la estrategia usar el concepto del hedhegog. Intersección entre Pasion, aptitud y rentabilidad.
* P206. Business plan version resumida de Guy Kawasaki. “The only 10 slides you need in a pitch”
* P212. Libros sobre unicorn toolbox. Exponential organizations. Como apalancar tech modernas en industrias tradicionales. Libro sobre product subscription. Built to sell y automatic customer.
* P220. Compra de activos vs compra de acciones. Mejor para comenzar fresco en una nueva entidad
Profile Image for Esteban Roche.
65 reviews
February 7, 2023
No recuerdo quién me recomendó el libro, solamente por la idea general que transmite la portada me interesó el tema y lo compré. No fue una muy buena compra.

Para opinar sobre si las consideraciones ideales hechas por el autor están cerca de la realidad necesitaría realizar mi propia investigación en temas prestatarios en México porque en el argumento del libro no solamente se parte de idealizar un entorno económico específico si no además en Estados Unidos donde como todos sabemos se cuenta con una mejor regulación que en México; pero claro está que la postura que tenga el gobierno en poder sobre el papel del ciudadano promedio en la economía nacional tiene un impacto en las variables a considerar por la Pyme.

A partir de conocimientos obtenidos en otros libros ahora entiendo que existen amplios catálogos de libros de negocios que simplifican las circunstancias económicas de las empresas estudiadas y proveen de información al lector que puede ser mal interpretada o no comparada con otras variables. Es difícil saber lo que no sabemos (y empieza a ser peligroso económicamente si nuestro medio o filtro de información tiene incentivos para mostrar un panorama muy positivo y nos incita a "tomar acci��n"). Sin duda no me dio buena espina cuando en el segundo capítulo mencionan a Elon Musk como un ejemplo positivo de empresario sin analizarlo al menos con un poco más de profundidad. Debido a que ya había empezado el libro tuve que al menos hojear el resto de capítulos.
Profile Image for Fay Wu.
29 reviews2 followers
December 4, 2019
Well defended arguments to buy businesses

Walker does a very good job in the first half of the book laying out the arguments that being an entrepreneur and especially when buying a company rather than starting from scratch is the more profitable and bears a higher likelihood of success.

The second half of the book drills down to details what one needs to be mindful of throughout the acquisition process, from negotiation to looking at the balance sheet and checking cash flow. The accounting line items like accounts payable and accounting receivable and inventory.

What I liked about the book is more like the practical examples of how one applies for the SBA loan (like you need personal guarantee and you wouldn’t be able to get home line of credit afterwards) but the downside is that it is scarce in the real world examples of people who have conducted successful small business acquisitions and a profile of those buyers/sellers as well the businesses themselves. Walker made his first step into acquisition entrepreneurship through buying his own parents’ business, thereby peeking into the buyers and sellers’ sides simultaneously. This is probably not typical of others who are starting out. What I would have liked to see would have been more examples of people who have done search funds and what those are.
40 reviews3 followers
May 7, 2020
This was an all-encompassing "how-to" tutorial on acquiring a business. The author did a good job of articulating his over-arching premise/hypothesis: the statistics show it is generally more lucrative to buy an existing business than to start your own. Many traditional entrepreneurs fail, and with the baby-boomer population nearing retirement (many without a true succession plan), there is great opportunity to acquire durable/successful business at fair prices, be your own CEO, add value through your skillset, and grow/exit the business at attractive returns.

The author does cover all the basis from internalizing your skillset/interests, sourcing deals, raising capital, understanding financials, negotiations, the transaction process, and transitioning into the CEO and integrating your new team.

I would have rated it higher if there were fewer typos, and if it didn't read as much as a checklist (though that is likely appropriate). I do find the subject quite intriguing (which is why I read the book), and having gone through an acquisition and multiple tuck-ins, it was nice to take a step back and truly codify the process. Again, this was a great how-to on the process and roadmap for the acquisition entrepreneur, which I believe will be quite relevant given the current state of our economy.
Profile Image for Ermicioi.
61 reviews
May 17, 2023
Great overview on buying businesses (and also in cultivating the acquisition entrepreneurship mindset). Still, many details presented by the author shouldn't be taken at face value; one should do its own research with trusted sources because many things can change since this was written (legal, finance, etc.). Moreover, this book doesn't get very deep into the nuts and bolts of valuing companies, but this shouldn't justify a lower rating (as given by other readers). There are entire books that address this topic, and even if the author had used 100 pages to address solely the DCF model (just as an example) you may still find people that have opposite opinions and discard its advice

Anyway, the greatest conclusion of this book is that buying a business isn't as intimidating as it sounds as long as one knows what he does (which is learnable, but requires time and experience). You shouldn't read this book and go out there the next week to buy a business. Either you're a professional with enough experience to do that or you don't. If you're not, you welcome troubles down the line. So be careful.
Profile Image for Jonathan Birnbaum.
102 reviews9 followers
February 19, 2020
Walker makes a compelling case to go off and buy a small business, especially compared to starting one from scratch. 7000+ baby boomers are retiring daily, and many of them have small businesses that need a new owner, and have growth potential. Buy at a low multiple, use debt, and grow.

After making the case, he then walks through how to go ahead and do it. He hits the major steps, from getting debt, thinking about due diligence, closing and transitioning, while avoiding gory detail.

I am growing quite interested in this path and really liked this guide. It suffered from some poor editing/grammar, and could have used a few detailed cases from his experience (rather than just saying he did it 6 times).

Reads more like a chronological guide of how-to so only fit for someone seriously considering the strategy or deeply curious about small business acquisition.
Profile Image for Allison.
423 reviews1 follower
March 15, 2024
As someone currently going on the acquisition journey, this book has been hugely helpful. I learned a bunch of what he writes about from working with a broker and evaluating many businesses, but I wish I'd known about this book before I started the process - it would've eased some of the learning curve.

One part that has been super important has been identifying my target deal. With so many businesses, and being a Maximizer (from Strengthsfinder), I tend to see how anything "could" work or be a good possibility. But there are simply too many businesses to evaluate if I look at everything, so holding close to my target makes the decisions about which to look at more closely a little more manageable.

I'm glad to have peeked into the future - past the furthest stage I've made (due diligence). I can't wait to put the rest of the stages into action!
12 reviews
August 3, 2023
This was a fantastic read that offers great insight into an often-overlooked form of entrepreneurship. I really enjoyed learning about Walker's process and the many fascinating statistics he brings to prove why acquisition is normally the way to go. The best part of the book for me was when he discussed the mindset needed for entrepreneurship in general. While he constantly tells readers not to make excuses, I do feel I am a little young to get into this quite yet (sorry for the excuse). However, this is something I would love to do a little down the line. I took away a lot of general info to help my current business and will definitely revisit this book a few times in the near future.

Favorite quote/stat: Only 4% of American businesses ever surpass 1mil in annual revenue.
Profile Image for Sahil.
23 reviews
February 16, 2024
Buy Then Build is a great introductory book covering the small-market deal acquisition cycle from start to finish. Not a light read per-se, it took some time to work through this one, stealing chapters bouncing from weekend trip to weekend trip. This book definitely made me look at small business ownership through a different lens and reaffirmed that there is quite a bit of truth to small businesses being the backbone of America's economy.

The book does have its limitations; for instance, it is not going to give the level of detail one would need to perform complete financial or operational due diligence but it does cover all the key elements of an acquisition at a high enough level to be useful. Overall, this was quite an interesting read and one I'd recommend.
January 25, 2021
As someone that has started several businesses, the concepts in this book opened my eyes to how getting into new businesses can be so much easier by skipping all the startup steps and reducing overall risk. I can add capabilities to my existing businesses or leverage my skill set and complement it using other peoples in the business that I would acquire. After reading this, I can never go back to the idea of starting a business from scratch unless absolutely necessary. This book goes hand-in-hand with the Who Not How concept by Dan Sullivan. I listened to this book through my local library on hoopla.
126 reviews
November 20, 2023
This book does the best job I’ve ever e ever seen at explaining the process of buying a business in the SMB market. It details why most attempts fall apart and outlines a process to make yourself stand out as a buyer. It is quick to point out that action is the only thing that moves you into business ownership. There will be times when things fall apart and fear crops up. Following this process closely will still put you ahead of most buyers when you have the right advisors. Get clear, get moving, and stick to your goals and things will generally work out if you remain focused on the most important objectives to get the deal closed.
Profile Image for William Nelson.
64 reviews1 follower
October 4, 2020
Disclaimer: don’t read it if you aren’t ready to buy a business, it’ll get you looking. I had to stop reading it halfway through because I was starting to seriously think about buying another business and then build it. I can envision myself doing this one day, either to grow my current company through acquisition of another company, or to start fresh and run a different company once I retired from my day-job. Very good read. Will be picking it up again and reading it when I’m ready to make the jump.
Profile Image for Pai Buabthong.
21 reviews
February 26, 2021
Great overview on the business acquisition process. Deibel goes into details on how the process work, mostly focusing on due diligence and deals. This is everything you need to know if you're considering acquiring a business. Some of these techniques are only applicable to US-based business (like SBA loans). However, the basic idea should translate to other markets as well.

The only thing that could be more written on is the "Built" part of the "Buy then Built". Only a small section towards the end focuses on how to grow the business you just bought.
Profile Image for Troy Blaylock.
22 reviews2 followers
February 8, 2023
An entrepreneur is some who assumes all risk for an asset as an entity. If the goal for entrepreneurship is to mitigate all risk associated with a venture, then the fastest and least riskiest path is to acquire resources that generate sustainable revenue by injecting the least amount of personal capital, not to build from scratch. It applies a lot of PE methodologies to startup entrepreneurship. That is the thesis of this book in a nutshell.

A very interesting perspective indeed. I will have to delisted to this book.
137 reviews
November 10, 2018
Great book - incredibly comprehensive guide on acquisition entrepreneurship from why it can be much more lucrative than doing a startup to a full soup to nuts guide on how to find, acquire and run an acquisition. The author’s overview on business strategy and key principles like Porter’s Five Forces and disruption is one of the clearest, most useful business summaries I have ever read. This book is worth reading for that section alone.
10 reviews
July 8, 2020
Great book on understanding how to acquire a business. if you are looking to buy a business and have zero experience or don't know where to start, this book will break it down for you and give you the confidence needed to go through the process.
The only reason I am not giving it a 5 star is because I have not yet implemented what I read, I just happened to have the opportunity to be a partner in a business so I am implementing what i read in the following book: "Traction" by Gino Wickman.
Profile Image for Austin Carroll Keeley.
150 reviews2 followers
September 9, 2022
A readable and concise introduction to self-funded ETA by an entrepreneur with significant success in the field. While highly readable, the book is intended as a cursory introduction and does not delve into the minutiae of the process. Recommended to those who want to learn more about ETA and use this book as an entry point, but if you've read Rick & Royce or Jan Simon, you no longer need to read this book.
Profile Image for Hans De Leenheer.
26 reviews8 followers
September 20, 2022
It’s a really specific book for a very specific type of person and a very specific type of acquisitions.

This book explains how you go about buying any CASHFLOW POSITIVE business for little (own) money (using the bank for the rest). It doesn’t really go enough in detail about how to run/pivot after the acquisition, just focusses a lot/predominantly on the search for what you want to buy. It’s about the buying, not the building.
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