

Built to Sell Radio
John Warrillow
Built to Sell Radio is a weekly podcast for business owners interested in selling a business. Each week, we ask an entrepreneur who has recently sold a business why they decided to sell their business, what they did right and what mistakes they made through the process of exiting their business. Built to Sell Radio is the ultimate insider's guide to approaching the most important financial transaction of your life.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 25, 2022 • 1h 3min
Ep 330 Anna Maste - Bootstrapping a 2-Sided Market to a 7-Figure Exit
Anna Maste built Boondockers Welcome, a kind of Airbnb for RVers, to $100,000 in Annual Recurring Revenue (ARR) when she received an offer of 3.9 times ARR. Maste was about to accept the offer when some soul searching led Maste to believe she could do much better. That kicked off a two-year journey of building the value of her business.

Mar 19, 2022 • 1h 35min
Ep 329 Sue Bryce & Craig Swanson - The 8-figure Expert
Imagine turning your expertise into an 8-figure exit. That's exactly what Sue Bryce did. Bryce built a $1 million photography studio in an industry where owners are often limited to low six-figure businesses that are dependent on them.

Mar 19, 2022 • 1h 35min
Ep 329 Sue Bryce & Craig Swanson - The 8-figure Expert
Imagine turning your expertise into an 8-figure exit. That's exactly what Sue Bryce did. Bryce built a $1 million photography studio in an industry where owners are often limited to low six-figure businesses that are dependent on them.

Mar 12, 2022 • 1h 1min
Ep 328 Built to Sell Intel - 4 Big Takeaways on Building the Value of Your Company
This week, we're back with the latest Intel edition of Built to Sell Radio. We feature four recent guests and dissect what made their companies built to sell.

Mar 4, 2022 • 1h 19min
Ep 327 Calvin Johnson - Selling for Parts
Calvin Johnson built Lykki, an office supply company, to more than $7 million in annual revenue. Johnson had two divisions, one had office kitchen supplies (e.g., coffee), and the other sold office supplies. The kitchen supplies business was more attractive to acquirers than the office supplies side, so Johnson decided to separate the divisions and sell them separately.

Mar 4, 2022 • 1h 19min
Ep 327 Calvin Johnson - Selling for Parts
Calvin Johnson built Lykki, an office supply company, to more than $7 million in annual revenue. Johnson had two divisions, one had office kitchen supplies (e.g., coffee), and the other sold office supplies. The kitchen supplies business was more attractive to acquirers than the office supplies side, so Johnson decided to separate the divisions and sell them separately.

Feb 26, 2022 • 50min
Ep 326 Robert Glazer - Inside the Mind of an Acquirer
Robert Glazer started an affiliate marketing agency called Acceleration Partners in 2007. Glazer never took outside capital and grew Acceleration to almost $28 million in sales before he sold a majority interest to Mountaingate Capital in 2020.

Feb 19, 2022 • 59min
Ep 325 Robert Glazer - Why Robert Glazer Sold His $28 Million Agency
Robert Glazer started an affiliate marketing agency called Acceleration Partners in 2007. Glazer never took outside capital and grew Acceleration to almost $28 million in sales before he sold a majority interest to Mountaingate Capital in 2020.

Feb 12, 2022 • 1h 14min
Ep 324 Sandy Hansen-Wolff - The Unexpected Exit
Sandy Hansen-Wolff was a newlywed when her husband of only a few months, Randy Hansen, was diagnosed with leukemia. The doctors told Randy that one in four patients in his position succumbed to the disease. The couple scrambled to deal with the diagnosis and what would happen to Randy's feed business, which was generating revenue of around $1 million, if he were to pass. Randy died a few months later, leaving Sandy with little more than a handwritten list of his assets, including a heavily leveraged business.

Feb 4, 2022 • 1h 9min
Ep 323 Melissa Kwan - How to Know When Your Idea Has Legs
Melissa Kwan and her co-founder built Spacio, a company that helped real estate agents win and manage leads that come from hosting open houses. Kwan built the company to roughly 100,000 agents using Spacio when a chance encounter at an industry conference led to an acquisition offer from HomeSpotter.


