In Tasmania, most businesses are small — typically employing fewer than 10 people. In these businesses, a significant portion of the sale price often relates to personal goodwill rather than physical assets. This goodwill exists because the owner has built long-standing relationships with customers, suppliers and the broader community.
Consider a small accounting practice where the principal accountant manages every client personally. Clients trust that individual, not just the firm name. When that business is sold, the challenge is not transferring the desks, computers or client files — it’s transferring the trust and relationships behind them.
This is where risk enters the negotiation.
Sellers are usually confident that customers will remain loyal after settlement. Buyers, however, focus on the possibility that clients may leave once ownership changes. From a buyer’s perspective, they are being asked to pay upfront for goodwill that may or may not transfer successfully.
Goodwill in small businesses is often highly personal. It is tied to:
If customers leave, the goodwill — and the value paid for it — can quickly diminish.
This difference in perception creates tension: the seller sees security, the buyer sees uncertainty.
One effective way to manage this issue is through an Earn-Out Strategy. An earn-out aligns the interests of both parties by sharing the risk of future performance.
Under this structure:
This structure ensures:
Assume a business generates $1,000,000 in annual sales revenue and is offered for $350,000, made up of:
A possible structure could be:
The deferred payment would only be made if the business achieves at least $1,000,000 in revenue in the next year.
The logic is practical: it is unlikely that a quarter of the customers would leave immediately upon change of ownership. Therefore, paying 75% of the goodwill upfront is a reasonable compromise, with the balance tied to proven performance.
An earn-out:
It also ensures the seller remains a supportive ambassador of the business, rather than walking away immediately after settlement.
For an earn-out to succeed, the agreement should clearly define:
Clear documentation avoids future disputes.
In small business sales, transferring personal goodwill is often the biggest hurdle. A carefully structured earn-out strategy provides a practical solution by balancing confidence with caution and aligning both parties toward the same goal — maintaining the business’s ongoing success.
Keywords: Business acquisition finance, Business purchase loan, Business loans Australia, Commercial finance broker, Buy a business