Objective process providing level of confidence in assessing future growth potential of business entities for investment or prioritization of investment purposes
Strategic Level of Confidence Matrix
• Where the future of the business may look very different from the pastA business may wish to attract new capital, for example, for a major initiative into new markets, new products, or new distribution strategies that will dramatically alter the future prospects of the operation. When previous and current accounts are not able to allow for this, how can a reliable forecast be made?
• Where the business is highly dependant on innovation of one sort or anotherThe developers of a business that has developed some ground-breaking new technology products are approached by a multinational who wish to acquire them – however there is no trading history with these new lines. What is the value of the business?
• Where the business is uniqueThe owners of a vertically integrated food service business wish to sell. They contract the raw materials, manufacture and process, and distribute under different brands to supermarkets, food service as well as their own extensive proprietary retail chain. They are so unique there is no benchmark, so how can this business be accurately valued?
• Where there is high dependancy on one critical factor, such as a key personA company wishes to enter a new market and has identified the acquisition of a successful local business as the most attractive option. However the business owes much of its success to its founding family who wish to exit, and how will this affect future cash flows and the current valuation?
How reliable is a business valuation for a new or growing business?The Problem
When a business is being valued by a potential purchaser, seller, or investor, or when a company is assessing the merits of investing resource or capital behind an internal division or concept, a range of factors must be taken into account, and the final value determined is a product of all of these variables. Some of these variables are relatively easy to objectively value (e.g. cash, receivables, physical assets), but some are notoriously difficult to value and can be highly subjective. This difficulty can be exacerbated under a number circumstances such as:
Future growth prospects for a business can be a matter of opinionThe Process
The process of valuing a business is focused on finding a figure (or range) that can be agreed by the parties involved. At its core, it is the current value of the expected future revenues from the business, adjusted according to the risk related to these future revenues. The SLC Matrix is designed as a simple way to validate the risk level of projected future revenues and growth prospects for a business
Tangible assets can be valued with relative ease. Intangible assets, and how reliable future growth projections are, requires judgement and the SLC Matrix is designed to provide an objective overlay
Typically a business will have a Strategic Plan (whether formalized or not) which makes certain predictions based on a set of assumptions. Normal financial analysis is able to interrogate these assumptions to enable the future profit streams to be projected, discounted as appropriate, and a current value estimated. But doubt will always remain on how accurate these future projections are
The SLC Matrix does not replace conventional valuation methods but provides an overlay that enables the future growth potential of a business to be predicted on a more objective and reliable basis
The SLC Matrix provides a way to validate the future growth
potential
Strategic Plan for the business will make certain projections and assumptions
Tangible assets + intangible
assets.
The ability of a business to grow and sustain new levels of revenue (not including acquisition) is highly dependent on 7 key attributes
7 Key Drivers
Proprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
1 - Poor•Business has no appreciable proprietary assets
2 - Negative•Minor or fragile proprietary assets
3 - Neutral•Proprietary assets neutral – providing neither advantage nor disadvantage
4 - Positive•Some or all proprietary assets strong and confer business advantage
5 - Strong•Proprietary assets strong and sustainable and provide robust long term business advantage
Proprietary AssetsKey Attribute #1
Proprietary assets can be defined as any physical, intellectual, legal, human or other asset that is exclusively under the control of the business. The sustainability of future growth projections can be highly dependant on whether the business owns proprietary assets; the extent to which these are protected or able to be replicated, whether these could be lost or destroyed, and the degree to which the business depends on these.Examples include intellectual property such as trade secrets, patents, brand; legal agreements providing such things as exclusivity; ownership or control over key elements of the value chain from exclusive supply of a critical raw material, distribution monopoly; real estate in key locations; etc. Human capital may also be seen as a proprietary asset the variables being the level of control (e.g. restrictions on trade or anti-competition) and death/disability risk (which can be mitigated through insurance).
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
Rating on 1-5 Scale
Track RecordKey Attribute #2
Track record refers to the demonstrated historic capability of the business and management team to deliver consistently on new initiatives, and the level of similarity between past and future plans. A business/management team that can demonstrate the successful delivery of similar challenges and meet objectives should be rated highly as likely to possess the necessary capabilities to continue to deliver. Conversely a history of failing to achieve objectives or deliver to plan, or future expectations that may require different experience or skill sets to deliver are indicative of a low level of confidence. Judgement must be used to allow for such variables as willingness to engage new and appropriately skilled specialist resources if required; and subjective measures such as leadership drive, focus and tenacity. This measure is predicated on the simple assumption that the past delivery of business results is a strong indicator of future expectation.
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
1 - Poor•Business unable to show previous successful delivery of objectives requiring similar skills
2 - Negative• Partial track record of some success in delivery but unconvincing in relation to current plans
3 - Neutral• Track record neutral – past performance neither adds nor detracts from likelihood of future delivery
4 - Positive• Track record shows positive signs of previous delivery of similar objectives leading to moderate future confidence
5 - Strong• Strong track record in successful delivery of similar objectives
Rating on 1-5 Scale
RobustnessKey Attribute #3
Robustness refers to the level to which the business has the capacity to absorb or respond to pressure, change, or the unexpected without placing the delivery of future objectives in jeopardy. This may be measured across many dimensions including financial, human resources, technology, regulation, and competitor activity among others. In cases where the delivery of future plans have significant dependency on a small number of variables that could dramatically impact future plans (e.g. plans highly dependant on the capability of a single individual, the status quo or change of critical legislation, or the availability of additional funding not yet secured) will be scored negative/poor on this attribute according to the level of fragility and risk identified. Conversely where it can be shown that future plans have only minor exposure to such dependencies, or for example where multiple options are available reducing the relative future risk, the business should receive a positive/strong rating for robustness.
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness✓
1 - Poor• Future plans are highly dependant on a number of assumptions with few or no alternatives
2 - Negative• Some risk exists owing to the dependency on certain assumptions
3 - Neutral• The business is balanced in terms of robustness with this attribute neither strong nor weak
4 - Positive• There are few uncertainties and risks and the business is likely to cope with most eventualities
5 - Strong• The risk of any unforseen circumstance has little likelihood of negatively impacting the delivery of future plans
Rating on 1-5 Scale
ScalabilityKey Attribute #4
Scalability refers to the ease, cost, speed and reliability of using the existing business as a basis for expansion (scale). Analysis under this attribute requires the testing of a range of scale or volume increments and hinges on identifying capacity constraints within the entire value chain of the business and modelling the cost and revenue implications. It is critical not to assume scale efficiencies or a smooth growth curve without careful analysis of all variables – for example a manufacturing plant operating at 70% capacity may see scale economies deliver unit cost reduction at 25% growth, but at 50% growth the cost of additional plant (which would then be under-utilized) could result in overall increased unit cost. Businesses with capacity constraints or other impediments across the entire value chain, or those whose nature requires significant step increments to costs should receive negative/poor ratings while those with few capacity constraints and where margins are stable with growth should be ranked positive/strong..
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
1 - Poor• Significant capacity constraints, other growth impediments or large capital investments required
2 - Negative• Some capacity
constraints or other impediments including potential for capital investment
3 - Neutral• No significant impediments to scale but no clear benefit either
4 - Positive• Business scalable without major impediment and moderate benefit possible
5 - Strong• Clear scalability with demonstrable benefit to be obtained with relative certainty
Rating on 1-5 Scale
Ease of ReplicationKey Attribute #5
Unlike scalability which normally assumes the leverage of existing resources or assets to produce incremental returns, replication addresses the ease, cost, speed and other key factors in the duplication, or cloning, of a business. Many franchise models, for example, grow through the replication of businesses that have been shown to have suitable scale. Naturally there is a relationship between these two attributes. A business that would be difficult to replicate because of its unique characteristics (e.g. location, heritage, personnel, specialization) is likely to be rated neutral through poor, while one that has no such impediments and can be easily and quickly replicated many times over should be rated positive to strong. In circumstances where the future growth projections of a business do not require replication in any way the rating should be neutral as the business will be neither advantaged nor disadvantaged by this attribute.
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
1 - Poor• Growth requires replication but unique attributes make this difficult to achieve
2 - Negative• Replication is desirable as a driver of growth but will present some challenges
3 - Neutral• Replication is irrelevant as a driver of growth, or the business has no clear advantage or disadvantage in this regard
4 - Positive• There are clear positive benefits in replicating the business model and this is achievable with no major impediments
5 - Strong• Replication will be a significant growth driver and the business is strongly positioned for this to occur with expectation of success
Rating on 1-5 Scale
Risk of Being Copied
Key Attribute #6
The degree to which the business is protected from value erosion through competitive activity (copy/improve) has a bearing on the ability of the business to deliver its growth plans. Businesses that would be difficult to copy – e.g. established brand, unique location, strong customer loyalty, secret or protected intellectual property – should be rated positive or strong. Where no such uniqueness or protections apply and the landscape is relatively free for competitors to easily and quickly copy or even improve, these businesses should receive negative/poor ratings. .
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
1 - Poor• Few impediments exist to prevent competitors copying or improving the business model
2 - Negative• There is some risk of competitors being able to copy or improve on the business model
3 - Neutral• This attribute is either of low significance or the risk of being copied is neutral
4 - Positive• There is a level of comfort that it would be difficult for competitors to seriously erode value through copying
5 - Strong• The business has strong protections or uniqueness and is well insulated from the risk of being copied
Rating on 1-5 Scale
Market SustainabilityKey Attribute #7
This final measure requires analysis not of the target business, but the market in which the business operates and its future projections, and the alignment of that with the products/services the business produces. Key questions include the market size and growth, technological advancement, market trends, regulatory environment, barriers to competitor entry, time scale for ROI, etc. Businesses rated positive or strong should be able to demonstrate there will be sustainable demand for their product/service, or if a fast cycle is expected (e.g. fashion manufacturing, consumer electronics) the speed and quantum related to obtaining a satisfactory ROI is aligned with market realities. Where this cannot be demonstrated or unquantified risks are present (such as new technologies that could leapfrog the current business model or dependence on a key issue that may change (such as a regulation, tax or tariff treatment, personal relationship etc) the business should receive a negative/poor rating
The AttributeProprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
✓
1 - Poor• There is very significant risk that the market may change, negatively impacting future prosects
2 - Negative• There is a real risk that the market for the products/services could change and this may have a negative effect
3 - Neutral• The risks and
assurances related to the future market for the products/services are in balance
4 - Positive• The market outlook for the products/services is generally positive
5 - Strong• There is a robust and demonstrated market for the products/services produced with little chance this will change
Rating on 1-5 Scale
The SLC Matrix is simple but flexible, and a powerful tool if used systematicallyMethodology
1. Gather Data
Undertake research to obtain objective
data relevant to each of the 7 key
attributes
2. Adjust Attribute Weighting
Decide on the relative importance of each attribute for the particular case
On a 1-5 scale default (neutral) is 3 but each attribute
may be over- or under-weighted by
2 points
3. Apply Scoring
Score each attribute based on the data
collected, as objectively and consistently as
possible
4. Tabulate and Determine Final Rating
Complete the matrix, calculate
the total score and determine final
rating
5. Populate Summary Report
Produce summary report or additional
materials as required
The relative importance of each attribute can be adjusted on a case by case basisAttribute Weighting
Attribute 1 2 3 4 5Proprietary assets
Attribute is uni
mportant in this particular case
Attribute is relatively less i
mportant in this particular case
Default PositionAttribute neither over- or under-weighted
Attribute is relatively more i
mportant in this particular case
Strongly over-weightAttribute is critical in this particular case
Track record
Robustness
Scalability
Ease of replication
Risk of being copiedMarket sustainability
To ensure the model if flexible and can cater for a range of different scenarios, each attribute can be under- or over-weighted by 2 points above or below the median/neutral of 3
STRONGLY UNDER WEIGHT
UNDER WEIGHT
NEUTRAL OVER WEIGHT
STRONGLY OVER WEIGHT
Proprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
1. Grade the importance of each attribute on a 5-point scale 2. Arrive at score according to individual and specific circumstances
of the company or market to identify which attributes are more and less important than others in this particular case
Attribute Weighting Worksheet
Strongly Under Weight
1
Under Weight
2
Neutral
3
Over Weight
4
Strongly Over Weight
5
Allows for the 7 key attributes to be weighted on a 1-5 scale to
accommodate specific circumstances
Each key attribute is graded on a 1-5 scale as objectively as possible depending on
how important this particular attribute is for the particular circumstances
Each of the 7 key attributes is scored according to the objective analysis of the data provided and observations of the research team
Attribute Score
Attribute 1 2 3 4 5Proprietary assets
The compa
ny is strong
ly disadvantaged on this
attribute
The compa
ny is disadvantaged on this
attribute
The compa
ny is neithe
r materi
ally advantaged nor
disadvantaged on this
attribute
The compa
ny is placed at an advantage on this
attribute
The compa
ny is strong
ly advantaged
on this
attribute
Track record
Robustness
Scalability
Ease of replication
Risk of being copiedMarket sustainability
Using a 5 point scale and the guidance provided within the template, each attribute is scored with 3 representing neutral
STRONGPOOR WEAK NEUTRAL POSITIVE
Proprietary assets
Market sustainability
Ease of replication
Track record
Scalability
Risk of being copied
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Robustness
1. Based on data and observation, grade the business on the 1-5 scale according to the guidelines set out in the summary of each attribute
Attribute Score Worksheet
Poor
1
Negative
2
Neutral
3
Positive
4
Strong
5
Allows for the 7 key attributes to be scored on a 1-5 scale as objectively as
possible
Each key attribute is graded on a 1-5 scale as objectively as possible according to the guidelines laid out in the summary of each
attribute
E
1. Enter the weighting for each attribute and the score given on a 1-5 scale2. Add weighting and attribute score and total the two scores for each attribute to derive
final SLC Total
Consolidation
Attribute Weighting Score Weighting + ScoreProprietary assets 4 5 9Track record 3 2 5Robustness 3 3 6Scalability 2 3 5Ease of replication 3 3 6Risk of being copied 4 2 6Market sustainability 5 4 9
SLC Total 46
Example
Add the weighting and score for each attribute and total the sum of all measuresFinal SLC Rating
Each of the 7 attributes may be scored from 1 (low) to 5 (high) resulting in the possible spread of scores 7-35 with a mid point of 21.
Each attribute is also weighted for importance on the same basis.
The blended total therefore has a potential spread of 14 – 70 with 42 being the neutral mid point.
Poor
Negative
Neutral
Positive
Strong
Low level of confidence High level of confidence
24 or Lower 61 or Higher49-6036-4825-35
Add the weighting and score for each attribute and total the sum of all measuresAnalysis of SLC Rating
Analysis of the capability of the
business to deliver on the key attributes that are likely to determine success indicates a low
level of correlation.
The level of confidence in the business being able to successfully
deliver on its objectives is low and this is likely
to be driven by multiple factors.
Extreme caution is advised and fundamental
changes need to be undertaken or
the concept abandoned
Poor
Analysis of the capability of the
business to deliver on the key attributes that are likely to determine
success indicates a level of correlation that
is negative to some extent
The level of confidence in the business being able to successfully
deliver on its objectives is negative however
this may be mitigated if the specific factors
were addressed to a satisfactory level.
Caution is advised and a number of issues should be addressed before
proceeding
NegativeAnalysis of the capability of the business to deliver on the key attributes that
are likely to determine success indicates neither
strong positive or negative correlation
Level of confidence in the business successfully
delivering on its objectives is neutral indicating the absence of significant
negative factors, but also the possible lack of any
compelling positive factors.
Less caution is required with
reasonable levels of confidence being
justified . Efforts can focus on identifying and building greater
confidence in the positive attributes
Neutral
Analysis of the capability of the
business to deliver on the key attributes that are likely to determine
success indicates a positive level of
correlation
The level of confidence in the business being able to successfully
deliver on its objectives is positive.
There is clear reason for confidence
although it would be wise to guard
against over-confidence
Positive
Analysis of the capability of the
business to deliver on the key attributes that are likely to determine success indicates a very high level of correlation
The level of confidence in the business being able to successfully
deliver on its objectives is very strong and
compelling.
There is good reason to have
significant confidence in the
likelihood the objectives will be
met
Strong
About the Author
David Christensen resides in Melbourne, Australia and has an extensive career as a Management Consultant and Senior Executive within multinational corporations spanning the Asia Pacific region.
Specializing in corporate strategy, capital raising and market entry projects, he has undertaken assignments that have included working in China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Japan, South Korea, India, Singapore, Thailand, and the Russian Federation as well as Australasia.
He was a Partner with Gravitas Partnership based in Hong Kong and his corporate experience has included regional senior executive roles within American Express, Mercer, and AXA Asia Pacific.
He can be contacted by email at [email protected] and an unlocked version of this presentation will be emailed upon request.
Acknowledgment of UseThe SLC Matrix may be used without restriction provided appropriate acknowledgement is made and an unlocked version of the document provided upon request
The concepts and content contained in the SLC approach may be freely used or adapted for use without restriction or prior approval provided appropriate acknowledgment if given to the author.
In undertaking valuation exercises or analysing the future potential of business entities for a variety of reasons, no two situations are exactly the same as there are so many differing variables.
However the common lack of any form of systematic framework or methodology for assessing the future potential of a business can often place too much emphasis on historic data, or to use pure financial data as the primary criteria – neither of which may give a full picture.
Use of the SLC Matrix, or developing a more focused approach using SLC as a base, will in many cases assist those involved in being able to see more clearly out of the front window of the vehicle they are driving, rather than attempting to drive forward, while looking in the rear view mirror!
Please contact the author if you have any further questions or comments.
An unlocked version of this PowerPoint document will be provided upon request.