Founder Exit

What Is My Business Actually Worth? A Founder's Guide to SME Valuation in Southeast Asia

The number founders have in their heads and the number a buyer will pay are almost never the same. Here is how business valuation actually works for SMEs in Singapore and the region — and why understanding it changes everything about how you plan your exit.

Nirji Ventures Research
9 min read2026-05-05
General informational content. Not investment, legal, or tax advice.

The question comes up in almost every first conversation we have with a founder exploring an exit. "I think the business is worth about X" — and then they name a number, usually confidently, usually without being able to explain precisely how they arrived at it.

Sometimes the number is too high. Sometimes it is too low. Occasionally it is right. But in almost every case, the founder has never had the number tested against what a buyer would actually pay, and the gap between their internal estimate and market reality is one of the biggest risks in any exit process.

Understanding how business valuation works is not just an academic exercise. It is the foundation of every exit decision you will make — when to sell, to whom, on what terms, and whether the outcome is worth pursuing at all.

The Core Principle: You Are Selling Future Cash Flow

The most important thing to understand about business valuation is this: buyers are not paying for what your business has done. They are paying for what your business will do — specifically, how much cash it will generate for them after they own it.

This reframes the valuation question entirely. The question is not "how hard did I work to build this?" or "how much revenue did we generate last year?" The question is: how much predictable, sustainable, owner-independent profit will this business generate for the next three to five years?

That last qualifier — owner-independent — is the one that trips up most founders. Many profitable businesses generate returns that depend heavily on the founder's personal relationships, technical knowledge, or daily involvement. When the founder leaves, those returns do not automatically transfer to the new owner. Buyers price this risk in, and they price it in heavily.

How Valuations Are Calculated for SMEs

For most small and medium businesses in Southeast Asia, the primary valuation method is an EBITDA multiple — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortisation, multiplied by a number that reflects the quality and risk profile of the business.

The multiple is where most of the complexity lives. For small owner-operated businesses in Southeast Asia, multiples typically range from 2x to 6x EBITDA. What determines where a specific business sits within that range?

Several factors move the multiple up: recurring revenue (subscriptions, contracts, long-term customer relationships), a management team that can operate without the founder, diversified customer base (no single customer accounting for more than 15–20% of revenue), strong gross margins, a defensible market position, and demonstrated growth trajectory.

Factors that push the multiple down include: heavy founder dependency, customer concentration, inconsistent financial records, deferred capital expenditure, industry decline, and limited geographic or product diversification.

A business generating S$2 million in EBITDA might be valued at S$4 million if it scores poorly on these factors, or S$10 million if it scores well. The difference is not random — it is a direct reflection of the risk a buyer is taking on when they acquire the business without its founder.

The Three Most Common Valuation Mistakes

Mistake 1: Confusing income with asset value. The fact that your business pays you S$300,000 a year in salary and distributions does not mean the business is worth S$3 million (10x your income) or S$6 million (20x). What matters is the normalised EBITDA — the profit that would persist under a different owner, after paying a market-rate salary for whoever takes on your role.

Mistake 2: Valuing the business at replacement cost. Some founders reason: "I built this from scratch, it would cost millions to replicate, therefore it's worth millions." This is not how buyers think. A buyer will pay for the earnings the business generates, not for the effort it took to create it. If the business is not profitable, its replacement cost is largely irrelevant to its market value.

Mistake 3: Anchoring on a number heard from another founder. "My friend sold his business for 8x EBITDA, so mine should be worth the same." Multiples vary enormously by sector, size, customer profile, and geography. A tech SaaS business with 90% recurring revenue will trade at a very different multiple than a services business where revenue depends on the founder's personal relationships.

The Adjustments That Change the Number

One of the most valuable parts of a professional valuation process is normalisation — the process of adjusting the financial statements to reflect what the business truly earns.

Founders routinely run personal expenses through the business (a car, a phone, travel that blends personal and business). They pay themselves above or below market salary. They have one-off items in revenue or expenses that will not recur. They may have deferred maintenance that a buyer will have to fund.

Normalising for these items can move EBITDA significantly in either direction. Founders are often surprised — sometimes pleasantly — when a professional normalisation exercise reveals that the true earnings power of the business is higher than the accounting profit suggested.

What Increases Your Business Value Before You Sell

If you are planning to exit in three to five years, there are specific actions that will meaningfully increase your valuation. They fall into two categories: financial improvements and operational improvements.

On the financial side: move customers to recurring contracts where possible. Improve gross margins through pricing discipline or cost reduction. Clean up the financial statements so that a buyer can understand the economics of the business quickly and confidently. Eliminate personal expenses running through the business.

On the operational side: the single most impactful thing most founders can do is to build a management layer that can operate the business without them. Document the processes, relationships, and institutional knowledge that currently live only in the founder's head. Develop at least one or two senior team members who can credibly run the business after the founder departs.

These are not quick fixes. They take time, which is exactly why starting the exit planning process early — not in the months before you want to sell, but years before — produces materially better outcomes.

Getting a Professional Valuation

An independent business valuation has two purposes. The first is practical: it gives you a realistic basis for any negotiation you enter. The second is strategic: it reveals the specific gaps between where your business is today and where it needs to be to command the valuation you want.

A good valuation is not simply a number. It is a diagnostic. It tells you what a buyer will see when they look at your business, where the risks are, and what you can do about them before the process begins.

Most founders who engage us for a valuation appointment are surprised — not always by the number, but by the clarity. The conversation that follows is almost always the most useful one they have had about their business in years.

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, legal advice, tax advice, or a recommendation to buy, sell, or hold any security, investment product, or asset. Nirji Ventures Pte. Ltd. is not licensed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) and does not provide regulated investment or financial advisory services. Readers should consult appropriately qualified and licensed professionals before making any decision based on the information herein.

Written by

Nirji Ventures Research

Research & Strategy

Nirji Ventures is a Singapore-headquartered strategic advisory and business consulting firm with 35+ combined years of advisory experience across 30+ countries. We specialise in business transformation, market entry, venture building, and fundraising readiness.

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