The Friendly Guide to a Two Year Business Exit That Does Not Destroy You

Thinking of selling your business in the next year or two? Your grand Business exit?

Here is the uncomfortable truth:
You do not start selling when you call the broker. You start selling 18 to 24 months before you sign anything. Most advisors now recommend at least a two year runway to prepare, and the businesses that do this properly avoid rushed decisions that can shave 20 to 40 percent off the final price.

In other words, you cannot rock up to market on a Monday, hand over your numbers on Tuesday, and expect a premium valuation on Friday. You need time to clean the books, reduce owner dependence, and yes, put some strategic lipstick on your pig so buyers see the best version of what you have built. Business exit does not happen instantly.


Why the real sale starts two years before you exit

Buyers are not just buying your history. They are buying confidence in the future. That confidence comes from three things that simply cannot be rebuilt in a few weeks:

  1. Clean, credible financials
    Poor record keeping and blurred personal versus business expenses are some of the biggest red flags for buyers. They want clear, standardised financials for several years, with proper separation of personal perks and unofficial cash.
  2. Low owner dependency
    One of the top deal killers is a business that only runs if the owner is in the building. Research shows founder dependent companies often sell at 30 to 50 percent lower multiples than similar businesses with strong teams and systems.
  3. Operational โ€œlipstickโ€ that actually adds value
    This is not about hiding flaws. It is about tightening pricing discipline, removing low margin products, formalizing key contracts, and documenting processes so the business looks and behaves like a transferable asset, not a job disguised as a company.

Get these three right over 18 to 24 months and suddenly buyers are competing for you, not picking you apart.


The hidden psychology that quietly kills deals

Here is the part no spreadsheet captures. For most owners, the business is not โ€œjust a businessโ€. It is identity, community, and proof that the last 10, 20, or 30 years meant something, Business exit is thus not as simple as one thinks.

Studies on exits consistently show:

  • Loss of identity
    Many owners experience something close to an identity crisis after selling. If your sense of self is โ€œI am the businessโ€, the idea of letting go can feel like losing a piece of yourself.
  • Loss of control
    Owners are used to calling the shots. The sale process flips that. Lawyers, buyers, bankers, and due diligence checklists take over. That loss of control triggers stress, anxiety, and sometimes anger, which can spill into negotiations.
  • Guilt and loyalty pressure
    Many feel guilty about staff, customers, suppliers, and even family. That guilt can morph into unreasonable expectations of the buyer or last minute demands that derail trust.
  • Deal fatigue and subconscious sabotage
    The longer a deal drags, the more exhausted and reactive people become. Owners under emotional strain can start missing deadlines, reopening settled points, or โ€œtestingโ€ the buyer, which often leads to the very collapse they fear.

From the outside it looks like the owner is being โ€œdifficultโ€. On the inside, it is often grief, fear, and loss of identity playing out in real time.


How owners subconsciously sabotage their own sale

If any of this sounds familiar, you are not alone. Self sabotage usually does not look like burning the contract. It looks like small patterns that add up:

  • Insisting on being involved in every tiny decision during due diligence
  • Withholding information out of โ€œprotectivenessโ€, which reads as secrecy
  • Moving the goalposts after agreements in principle are reached
  • Demanding a price that reflects emotional value, not market value
  • Dragging out responses until the buyer loses momentum or trust

The irony is painful. The same intensity and control that built the business can quietly destroy the deal. This is why planning your business exit in advance matters.


Practical ways to avoid self sabotage

Here are concrete steps you can start now, especially if you are 2 to 5 years away from selling.

1. Design your next chapter before you sell

Do not wait until after the sale to figure out who you are without the business. Work with a coach, advisor, or even a trusted peer to answer:

  • What will I be proud of next
  • How will I use my time and skills after the exit
  • Where will I find community when I am no longer โ€œthe bossโ€

When your identity has somewhere to land, you are less likely to cling to the company at the last minute. (Morgan Stanley)

2. Reduce owner dependency on purpose

Treat โ€œthey do not need meโ€ as a success metric, not a threat. Over 12 to 24 months:

  • Build and empower a second line of leaders
  • Transfer key customer relationships away from you
  • Document processes and create real SOPs
  • Step back from being the only rainmaker

The less the business needs you daily, the more buyers will pay you and the easier it will be emotionally to let go.

3. Clean up the story in your numbers

For at least two full financial years before you sell:

  • Separate personal and business expenses
  • Fix any โ€œcreativeโ€ accounting or side cash practices
  • Resolve obvious legal and compliance issues early
  • Aim for consistent, understandable reporting

You cannot ask buyers to take you seriously if your numbers look like a puzzle only you can solve.

4. Put emotional guardrails around the deal process

Before you go to market, decide:

  • What is our real โ€œwalk awayโ€ line
  • Who is allowed to speak to the buyer and advisors
  • What response times we will commit to
  • How we will handle disagreements internally

This reduces deal fatigue and keeps you from reacting out of fear in the heat of the moment. (Benjamin Ross Group)

5. Do not do it alone

Selling a business is part M&A transaction, part psychological transition. You need help with both.


Where Purple Turtle Capital fits in

At Purple Turtle Capital, we work specifically with owner led, small and mid sized businesses that want to fix, grow, scale, or exit without losing who they are in the process. We know the pain of a business exit when done late without planning.

Our approach is built around three promises to owners:

  1. Small business friendly, always
    We speak plain English, not investment banker jargon. We know what it feels like when your name is on the lease, your family is on the payroll, and your staff feel like a second family.
  2. Two year runway, not two week panic
    We help owners build a practical, staged plan over 18 to 24 months to:
    • Reduce owner dependency
    • Tighten financial and operational โ€œlipstickโ€ that actually adds value
    • De risk the business for buyers, while de stressing the exit for you
  3. Psychology first, paperwork second
    We expect the emotional rollercoaster. That means we plan for it, name it, and walk through it with you so you do not unconsciously blow up the deal right before the finish line.

If you think you might want to sell in the next few years, that is not โ€œtoo earlyโ€. That is the perfect time to start.

Your future buyer wants a strong, independent, well prepared company.
You want a clean exit, a fair price, and a next chapter you are excited about.

The work you do in the next 24 months is where all of that is decided. Contacting Purple Turtle Capital is your 1st step CONTACT US HERE