You’ve found a business you love. You’ve pictured yourself running it. Maybe you’ve even mentally rearranged the office furniture. Now comes the hard part: convincing the seller that you are the buyer who will actually get the deal done.
A winning offer isn’t just about dollars; it’s about structure, credibility, and trust. And remember — the offer is not the finish line. It’s the beginning of a two-way interview. You’re sizing up the seller and their business, and they’re sizing up you. Done right, your offer says: “I’m serious, I’m ready, and I’m not going to waste your time.”
First things first: what type of offer are you putting on the table?
Think of an LOI like dating before marriage. It’s non-binding, sets expectations, and gives you exclusive time to get to know the business without fully committing. Sellers like it because it shows you’re serious. Buyers like it because it gives wiggle room. Everyone likes wiggle room.
This is the “let’s skip the courtship and just move in together” approach. It’s more formal, often includes deposits and binding terms, and says you’re ready to move fast.
If it’s a straightforward, smaller deal, an Offer to Purchase may get you to the altar quicker. For bigger, more complex deals, the LOI is safer. In short: don’t propose on the first date unless you’re really sure.
Want to show you’re serious? Put some skin in the game. Escrow is where your earnest money hangs out until closing, kind of like a Switzerland for deposits.
Contingencies are like prenups. They protect you, but if you load them up with too many demands, you might scare your future partner away.
From a seller’s point of view, contingencies are red flags if there are too many. They worry you’re going to drag them through six months of “maybes” and then ghost.
Remember: contingencies are the stage where the two-way interview really happens. You’re testing the seller’s story; they’re testing whether you’re the kind of buyer who follows through or the kind who “forgets their wallet” at dinner.
The financial structure of your offer is like the engine in a car — sellers want to know it’s going to run, not break down halfway home.
The golden goose. Sellers love them. Buyers rarely have them. If you can, great — but most buyers can’t write a check that big without fainting.
This is the bread and butter of small and mid-market deals. SBA says yes if you bring enough equity and paperwork. Sellers like it because it feels credible. (For a deeper dive on SBA loans, seller financing, and other funding options, see our article: “Financing a Business Acquisition: SBA, Seller Financing & More.”)
Usually 10–20%. It says, “I believe in this business so much, I’ll help you buy it.” Sellers feel good about that — as long as the terms aren’t insulting.
These are the “let’s split the difference” options — tying payment to future performance. Great when used right, a nightmare when used wrong. Proceed with caution (and a good lawyer).
Here’s the big one most buyers miss: know what you qualify for before you make an offer. If you’ve never talked to a bank, don’t write an offer that depends on one. Sellers (and brokers) can smell an unfundable offer a mile away. Pre-qualification makes you look serious, not delusional.
The best offers combine cash, clean terms, and believable financing. Translation: if your deal structure looks like a Jenga tower about to topple, the seller will go with the other guy.
Above all, remember this: the offer is the start of the conversation, not the end. This is the stage where you and the seller are feeling each other out, like an awkward first date. The stronger and cleaner your offer, the more likely they’ll want a second date — and eventually, to hand you the keys.
Sellers don’t just accept the highest offer. They accept the offer that looks the most doable. The one with fewer loose ends, stronger financing, and a buyer who looks like they can actually close.
Write your offer like you mean it. Show the seller you’re ready, bankable, and trustworthy. And don’t forget — this isn’t just about them picking you. It’s about you picking them, too.
At EDGE Business Advisors, we’ve seen hundreds of offers cross the table. The winners are always the ones that balance structure with credibility — and just a dash of confidence. If you’re ready to put an offer on a business, let us help you write one that actually gets accepted.
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