When you decide to sell your business, you’ll need to provide enough information for a potential buyer to make a decision, without too much sensitive information about sales, profit, customers, business processes and know how. Potential buyers will want to see this information but as the business owner, you may want to limit what buyers can see to prevent that information from going any further.

Having a potential buyer sign a confidentiality agreement, or non-disclosure agreement (NDA), gives you some protection. If they do breach confidentiality you’ve a better chance of taking legal action and seeking damages with a signed document from them promising not to breach confidentiality.

Although keeping elements of your business secret is essential, you do need to balance it with the buyer wanting to complete robust due diligence and find out what makes your business tick. One way to limit who gets your information is to disclose only parts to general queries, and then only full disclosure to a person you’ve qualified as serious.

When you’re selling your business, you’ll probably use your solicitor to draft this confidentiality agreement for interested parties that suits your business. In some cases, you may also get your employees to sign as well, especially if they are involved in the sale process. Get legal advice to make sure all the boxes are ticked and that the agreement contains everything it should.

Benefits of a confidentiality agreement

A confidentiality agreement helps protect sensitive business information, maintain privacy during the sale process, and checks that potential buyers are committed to safeguarding your intellectual property and financial details.

Some of the key advantages include:

  • Keeping news of the potential change of ownership from being released to customers. You want the business to continue as usual
  • Selling a business can be unsettling for employees, some who may wonder about the security of their jobs, others may consider it an opportune time to leave. You’ll want to retain any key employees in positions of trust.
  • It helps protect the financial and intellectual property rights of the business. If a potential buyer decides against the purchase, the agreements reduce the likelihood they will reveal any information they learned while conducting their due diligence.
  • Potential buyers will feel more secure knowing that the information is protected, so when ownership changes hands, any sensitive information that is now owned by them isn’t public knowledge.
  • Potential buyers who are serious will expect to sign an NDA as a measure of your professionalism.
  • A potential buyer who refuses to sign an NDA is either not really interested in buying the business, or they are inexperienced in how the process works. It’s a useful test.

Aside from the agreement itself, it’s also important to keep confidential your intention to sell your business until you’re ready. If word leaks out prematurely, customers may alter their buying behavior or speculate as to why.

Pre-qualify potential buyers

Before placing the NDA in front of a potential buyer, you can save yourself a lot of time by making sure they’re a genuinely interested party with the means to purchase. An effective way to pre-qualify prospects is to describe your business and response requirements in a way that helps unqualified buyers opt themselves out. In every advert ask potential buyers to provide the following information:

  • What they’re looking for in a business purchase.
  • Their purchase timeline.
  • If they have the means to buy your business.
  • Their related business experience.

It’s almost like a job interview. People that are genuine will not have an issue providing you with this information. Ultimately, you’re trying to find a person that not only will be able to afford your business, but one that fits with the culture of your business.

Creating the NDA

Most agreements are quite standard. The potential buyers agree:

  • Not to contact the business’s employees, customers or suppliers.
  • That any information provided about the business is confidential.
  • Not to divulge that information to anyone else, including the fact that the business is for sale.
  • To return all business records and data to the business owner after it has been reviewed.
  • Not to make copies of that information.
  • That it’s their responsibility to make an independent verification of the information provided.
  • To allow the business owner to obtain financial and credit information about them, so they can verify they’re capable of purchasing the business.

Your solicitor will draft an agreement that lays out these terms in more formal, legal language. However, you can download free sample NDA templates with an internet search that include most of the necessary information.

Next steps

  • Work with a legal professional to draft a tailored confidentiality agreement (NDA) that suits the specifics of your business for full protection.
  • Screen interested buyers by requesting essential details about their intentions, financial capacity, and business experience to save time and focus on serious prospects.
  • Disclose only necessary information to qualified buyers and make sure they understand the terms of confidentiality before revealing sensitive business details.
  • Make sure the confidentiality agreement is signed by all relevant parties, including employees, and be prepared to take legal action if a breach occurs during the sale process.

Selling your business is possibly your end goal and a very exciting time. The last thing you want is for sensitive information to leak, causing damage to your business and unrest amongst your staff. A confidentiality agreement helps reduce the chance this will happen while protecting potential buyers who are assessing your business.

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