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The Broker's Role

A business broker guides an owner through the entire process of selling a business, valuing it, marketing it confidentially, finding and screening buyers, negotiating the deal, and managing it through due diligence and closing. Think of a broker as the project manager and advocate for your sale: they handle the complex, time-consuming work of selling so you can keep running your business, while working to maximize your price and get the deal closed.

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Valuation and Pricing

It starts with an accurate valuation. The broker analyzes your financials, calculates your true earnings with proper add-backs, and determines a realistic, defensible asking price based on market data and comparable sales. Correct pricing is the single biggest factor in whether a business sells — and a good broker prices to sell, not to flatter.

Confidential Marketing

The broker prepares a professional marketing package and markets the business confidentially — a blind profile that attracts buyers without revealing the business's identity, listings on the marketplaces where buyers search, outreach to their buyer network, and NDAs before details are shared. See how brokers market businesses.

Finding and Screening Buyers

A broker brings a pool of buyers and, crucially, qualifies them — filtering for financial capacity, financing readiness, experience, and genuine intent before granting access to sensitive information. This protects your confidentiality and your time, and ensures you're dealing with buyers who can actually close, not tire-kickers or competitors fishing for information.

Negotiation and Deal Structuring

The broker negotiates on your behalf — price, terms, structure, seller financing, transition — acting as a buffer that keeps emotion out and maintains your leverage. Skilled negotiation and deal structuring often add far more value than the broker's fee, and preserve your relationship with the buyer you'll work with during transition.

Managing the Deal to Closing

Finally, the broker coordinates the deal through due diligence, financing, and closing — managing document flow, keeping buyer, lender, attorneys, and escrow moving in sync, and solving the problems that arise. Many deals fall apart in this stretch; an experienced broker's job is to hold them together. That end-to-end management is a core reason owners use a broker rather than going it alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a business broker do?

A business broker guides an owner through selling a business: valuing it accurately, marketing it confidentially, finding and screening qualified buyers, negotiating the deal on the seller's behalf, and managing it through due diligence, financing, and closing. They handle the complex, time-consuming work of selling so the owner can keep running the business.

Do business brokers just list the business?

No, listing is a small part. A broker also values the business, prepares professional marketing materials, markets confidentially, screens buyers for capacity and seriousness, negotiates price and terms, and manages the entire deal through due diligence and closing, holding it together when problems arise.

How does a broker help sell a business?

By pricing it correctly, marketing it confidentially to qualified buyers, screening out unqualified inquiries, negotiating skillfully on the seller's behalf, and coordinating the deal through closing. This typically produces a higher, more certain sale while protecting confidentiality and freeing the owner to keep running the business.

Is a business broker the same as a real estate agent?

No. A business broker specializes in selling businesses, which involves valuation of earnings, confidential marketing, buyer qualification, deal structuring, financing, and business-specific escrow and legal issues. Real estate agents sell property. Some brokers handle both, but selling a business is a distinct discipline.

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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