Practical Guide to Business Valuation Methods: DCF, Comps, Precedents, Startups & Best Practices
Key valuation approaches
– Discounted Cash Flow (DCF)
– What it is: Projects future cash flows and discounts them to present value using a discount rate (often WACC for the firm or required return for equity).
– Strengths: Captures intrinsic value, useful for companies with predictable cash flows and when you need to model growth scenarios.
– Limitations: Sensitive to assumptions (growth rates, margins, terminal value), requires reliable forecasts.
– Tip: Run sensitivity analysis on discount rate and terminal growth to understand value drivers.
– Comparable Company Analysis (Comps)
– What it is: Values a company relative to peer multiples (EV/EBITDA, P/E, EV/Sales).
– Strengths: Market-driven, quick, and useful when peers are truly comparable.
– Limitations: Market sentiment can distort multiples; differences in capital structure, growth, and margins require careful adjustment.
– Tip: Normalize earnings for one-off items and use median or trimmed averages to reduce outlier effects.
– Precedent Transactions
– What it is: Uses multiples paid in recent acquisitions of similar companies.
– Strengths: Reflects real transaction prices and control premiums paid by buyers.
– Limitations: Transaction data can be sparse, and deal-specific dynamics (synergies, strategic buyers) may inflate multiples.
– Tip: Match by industry, size, and geography; adjust for time-lagged market conditions.
– Asset-Based and Net Asset Value
– What it is: Values a business based on the fair market value of its assets minus liabilities.
– Strengths: Useful for asset-intensive companies, liquidation scenarios, and holding companies.
– Limitations: Undervalues going-concern value and intangible assets like brand and customer relationships.
– Tip: Use replacement cost for tangible assets and consider separate valuation for critical intangibles.
Specialized methods
– Market Capitalization and Enterprise Value
– Market cap is useful for public equity value; EV incorporates debt and cash for a fuller picture when comparing firms with different capital structures.

– Venture and Startup Valuation (VC Method, Scorecard, Berkus)
– For early-stage companies with limited revenues, methods rely on expected exit value, milestone-based scoring, or risk-adjusted factors.
– Emphasize scenario planning and dilution impact for investors.
– Real Options and Scenario Analysis
– For businesses with embedded strategic options (e.g., launch delays, expansion choices), real options capture flexibility that DCF may miss.
– Use Monte Carlo or scenario trees for complex, uncertain cash flows.
Practical best practices
– Use multiple methods: Triangulate value with DCF, comps, and precedent transactions to build confidence and explain ranges.
– Normalize and adjust: Remove non-recurring items, adjust for unusual working capital or capex patterns, and apply control or minority discounts where appropriate.
– Document assumptions: Clear, defensible inputs (growth, margins, discount rates) make valuations transparent and repeatable.
– Sensitivity testing: Highlight which assumptions drive the valuation and present high/low cases to aid decision-making.
– Tailor to purpose: Different contexts (tax, financing, sale) require different conservatism and documentation levels.
Valuation is as much art as science.
Rigorous models combined with market-based checks and transparent assumptions produce the most defensible results. Focus on the drivers—cash flow, growth, risk—and the rest becomes easier to explain and defend.