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Why Documentation Matters

Selling a business requires a substantial package of financial, legal, and operational documents, and having them organized early speeds the sale, builds buyer confidence, and protects your price. Buyers verify everything in due diligence, so the cleaner and more complete your documentation, the smoother the process. Gathering these while you prepare to sell is time well spent.

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Financial Documents

These are the backbone of your valuation and the first thing buyers examine.

Operational Documents

Strong operational documentation also demonstrates the business is systematized and transferable — which raises value.

The Marketing Package

Your broker will assemble a confidential marketing package from these documents: a blind profile (a teaser with no identifying details) to attract buyers, and a detailed confidential information memorandum (CIM) shared with screened buyers under an NDA. This professional presentation is how the business is marketed while protecting your confidentiality.

Getting Organized

Assemble everything into an organized digital package before going to market, and keep it ready for buyer due diligence. Missing or disorganized documents slow the process, raise buyer concerns, and can lower your price. If your records are incomplete, cleaning them up is one of the highest-return parts of preparing to sell. A good broker gives you a tailored checklist. See the steps to selling.

Frequently Asked Questions

What documents do I need to sell my business?

You'll need financial documents (three years of tax returns, P&Ls, balance sheets, an add-back schedule, AR/AP aging, a debt schedule, and bank statements), legal and corporate documents (entity records, the lease, key contracts, licenses, insurance, and any litigation or IP records), and operational documents (employee roster, equipment list, customer information, and SOPs).

How many years of financials do I need to sell my business?

Typically three years of business tax returns and financial statements, plus year-to-date figures. Three years shows the trend buyers and lenders want to see, and the numbers should reconcile with your tax returns to build credibility and support financing.

What is a confidential information memorandum (CIM)?

A CIM is a detailed marketing document about your business, its operations, financials, and opportunity, shared with screened buyers after they sign a non-disclosure agreement. It's paired with a blind profile (a teaser with no identifying details) used to attract buyers while protecting your confidentiality.

Why does document organization matter when selling?

Because buyers verify everything in due diligence. Clean, complete, well-organized documents speed the sale, build buyer confidence, and protect your price, while missing or disorganized records slow the process, raise concerns, and can lower your value or derail the deal.

Martin Navarro, Business Broker and M&A Advisor in Los Angeles
Martin Navarro · Business Broker & M&A Advisor

Martin Navarro advises business owners across Los Angeles, Ventura, and Southern California on selling, buying, and valuing privately held companies. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran with dual CSUN degrees in Business Management and Accounting, he brings hands-on transaction experience and a straight-talking, numbers-first approach to every engagement. Bilingual in English and Spanish.

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