Selling a Broadcasting Business

In real buyer-seller diligence calls, broadcasting deals get priced on continuity. Buyers focus on staying on-air, keeping rights and distribution intact, and turning inventory into collected cash after the ownership change.

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From our conversations

What Buyers Look for in Broadcasting

Over half the revenue comes from monthly clients who've been renewing year after year, and the production team handles everything without the owner in the room. That kind of client loyalty and team independence is exactly what I was looking for.

Loyal Clients

Buyer impressed by client retention at a broadcasting company

The live-streaming platform can scale to handle hundreds of thousands of viewers in minutes. That technical setup took years to build and would cost a fortune to create from scratch. Getting it in one deal is a huge advantage.

Valuable Technology

Buyer reviewing streaming technology at a broadcasting company

What caught my attention was the mix of steady monthly income and production project work. The monthly clients cover the overhead, and the project work adds profit on top. That combination gives me real confidence in the cash flow.

Balanced Revenue

Buyer analyzing revenue mix at a broadcasting company

The account directors have deep relationships with the major clients, and they've been managing those accounts on their own for years. I'm not buying one person's contacts. I'm buying a team that runs the business.

Strong Team

Buyer evaluating team depth at a media production firm

They've built a distribution system that handles international licensing requirements that most competitors can't deal with. That capability is rare in broadcasting and it locks in clients who need global reach.

Unique Capabilities

Buyer reviewing international capabilities at a broadcasting company

Valuation

How Buyers Value Broadcasting Businesses

3x–8x

annual profit

Where you land in that range depends on how many clients are on monthly or annual contracts, whether your team handles accounts without you, and whether you've built technology or infrastructure that's hard to replicate.

What drives a premium

Clients who pay you regularly. Monthly or annual clients who keep renewing give buyers confidence that revenue will keep flowing after the sale.
A team that manages client relationships. When your producers and account directors handle clients without you on every call, buyers see a business they can step into.
Technology or infrastructure that's hard to copy. Custom streaming platforms, production systems, or distribution capabilities that clients depend on make your business much more valuable.
Revenue spread across multiple clients. When no single client makes up a huge chunk of your income, the business feels safer to buyers because losing one account doesn't change everything.

Common add-backs

  • Personal entertainment and networking expenses that ran through the business
  • Family members on payroll who aren't essential to operations
  • One-time equipment purchases that got expensed in a single year
  • Media costs that passed through your books but aren't your actual revenue

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The process

How the Sale Process Works for Broadcasting

4–8 months

typical timeline

Deals move faster when your team already handles client relationships and your contracts are straightforward. Taking time to organize your revenue by type (monthly clients versus project work) before you start saves a lot of back-and-forth later.

1

Pull together your financials

Gather your last 3 years of tax returns and profit and loss statements. If you can roughly separate monthly retainer income from project work and event-based revenue, that's helpful. Don't worry about making it perfect.

2

Review your client contracts

Make a list of your active contracts with how much time is left on each. Note any that have automatic renewal. Buyers want to see what client commitments come with the business.

3

Make a list of your team

Write down who manages each major client relationship, how long they've been with you, and what they do. This shows buyers the business doesn't depend entirely on you.

4

List your equipment and technology

Write down your studios, streaming infrastructure, editing equipment, and software tools with a rough sense of condition and value. If you've built custom technology, describe it briefly.

Who buys these businesses

  • Media companies looking to add broadcasting, streaming, or video production capabilities
  • Bigger agencies that want to expand into broadcasting or media production
  • First-time buyers with media experience who want a business with steady recurring income
  • Companies in related fields like digital marketing or content distribution looking to expand

Not sure where to start?

Our step-by-step guide covers everything from financials to finding the right buyer.

Complete Guide to Selling

What Buyers Ask When Buying Broadcasting

Each topic below comes from real buyer-seller conversations. Here's what they ask, what they're really evaluating, and how to prepare.

What’s Selling

What exactly are you selling: a license, facilities, or just a brand and contracts?

Buyers need to know what they are actually buying because an FCC license asset sale, an LMA-based operation, and a production company close very differently. They also check whether the revenue you show follows the assets and agreements that transfer at closing.

How to prepare

  • Diagram the structure: license holder, operator entity, plus any LMAs, JSAs, or shared services
  • List what is owned vs. leased: tower/site, transmitter, studio, STL/backhaul, call letters/brand, domains
  • Summarize the key agreements and note assignability vs. required third-party consent

Great Answer

We are selling the licensed station assets and day-to-day operations: the FCC license (Entity A), transmitter and studio equipment, call letters/brand, domains, and operating contracts. The tower site is leased through 2029, and the STL is on a redundant path. Both contracts are assignable with notice, not consent. Here is a one-page included/excluded schedule and the org chart that shows how the station runs today.

Okay

We are selling the station operations, including the license and equipment, plus a few leases and contracts. We can pull an asset list and the main agreements for review.

Gives Pause

It’s the station. We’ll sort out what’s included once we get further along.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg’s listing flow and built-in data room help you present a clear included/excluded package of assets and assignable agreements. Learn more in the guide

Financial Readiness

Walk me through your real cash flow cycle—how orders become spots, how traffic/affidavits affect billing, and when you actually see cash.

Buyers want to see that EBITDA turns into cash in a world of make-goods, credits, agency terms, and political surges that can distort AR. They are also testing whether your numbers can survive lender-level diligence, including add-backs with real support.

How to prepare

  • Provide trailing 24 months P&L plus AR aging and typical payment terms by customer type
  • Split recurring ad revenue from political and one-off spikes, and document normalization assumptions
  • Quantify make-goods/credits and explain your month-close and billing timeline
  • Build an add-backs schedule with invoices, payroll records, and statements as proof

Great Answer

We close the broadcast month in six business days. Traffic reconciles air logs to orders, affidavits go out, and billing posts within 48 hours of reconciliation. Agency AR averages 62 days, local direct averages 28 days, and political is mostly prepay, with exceptions documented by account. Here are the last 12 months of make-goods and credits as a percent of gross, plus a normalized SDE/EBITDA bridge with backup.

Okay

Agency AR runs longer than local direct, and political improves cash flow in peak months. We can share AR aging and explain how billing happens after affidavits are completed.

Gives Pause

Cash shows up when it shows up. We don’t really track how make-goods affect AR.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg’s QuickBooks integration and data room keep financials, AR support, and add-backs organized so buyers can underwrite cash conversion cleanly. Learn more in the guide

FCC & Compliance

Is there any FCC issue that could delay or block a transfer?

They are underwriting approval timing and post-close exposure because late filings, public file gaps, EAS issues, or prior enforcement can slow a transfer. They also want a repeatable compliance routine that survives staff turnover, not a process that lives in one person’s head.

How to prepare

  • Create a renewal and filings timeline, including any late items and how they were cured
  • Assemble evidence of public file and EAS logging discipline, and name the process owner
  • Summarize any complaints, investigations, fines, or consent decrees, and current status
  • List counsel and consultants and how often they review compliance

Great Answer

There are no pending actions. Our last renewal was approved on schedule, and we have had no fines in the current cycle. We run a monthly compliance checklist for public file and EAS logs, owned by the business manager, with outside FCC counsel doing a quarterly review. Here is a memo covering the last 36 months of filings, plus a few minor late items we corrected with supporting documentation.

Okay

We are not aware of issues, and outside counsel handles filings. We can share renewal history and provide what the buyer’s counsel requests.

Gives Pause

FCC has never been a problem. Our engineer handles it.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg’s permission controls let you share sensitive compliance materials only with qualified buyers under NDA. Learn more in the guide

Carriage & Retrans

What do retrans and carriage agreements look like, and when do they roll?

Retrans and carriage contracts can move valuation fast, especially when a renewal is near or a distributor is consolidating. Buyers look at renewal timing, distributor concentration, negotiation history, dispute risk, and how well you track subscriber counts and true-ups.

How to prepare

  • List each MVPD/platform agreement with renewal dates, economics, and counterparties
  • Write up the last negotiation: extensions, blackout risk, what changed, and why
  • Quantify concentration and model downside if a major distributor resets terms
  • Show subscriber reporting, rev-share statements, and your true-up process

Great Answer

Our top three MVPDs account for 71% of retrans, and the next renewal is 14 months out. Last cycle included one short extension but no blackout. Rates stepped up 9%, and we tightened audit language around subscriber reporting. We reconcile per-sub economics monthly to distributor statements and true-up quarterly. Here are the reconciliations and the renewal calendar.

Okay

Retrans is meaningful, and the major deals renew every few years. We can share renewal dates, counterparties, and the key economics.

Gives Pause

Retrans is part of the business. We deal with renewals when they come up.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg helps you share retrans and carriage materials securely while giving buyers a clear renewal calendar and concentration view. Learn more in the guide

Affiliation & Rights

How secure is your network affiliation and your programming rights?

They are checking whether programming is stable through a change of control, including approval steps, clearance obligations, and reverse-comp economics. For production and content operations, they also test rights hygiene because missing releases, music licenses, or footage ownership can create claims that block distribution and monetization.

How to prepare

  • Summarize affiliation and programming terms, renewal timing, and change-of-control requirements
  • Inventory key syndicated, sports, and music/content licenses and flag MGs and step-ups
  • Document streaming and clip rights, including platform restrictions and territory limits
  • Maintain a rights and releases log for archives, with storage location and retrieval process

Great Answer

Our affiliation runs through 2028 and includes change-of-control notice plus a defined approval process. Clearance and local content obligations are documented, and we model the reverse comp escalators in our forecast. Our syndicated and sports deals sit in a renewal calendar with MGs flagged. For locally produced content, we track releases and music licensing in a rights log, and our archive is searchable with usage permissions documented.

Okay

We have an affiliation agreement and the typical programming contracts, and we have not had problems. We can provide agreements, renewal dates, and key terms.

Gives Pause

We have always had the network and the content. We do not worry much about the details.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg’s data room lets you package affiliation, programming, and rights documents with a clear summary buyers can diligence quickly. Learn more in the guide

Ad Ops Control

Walk me through ad inventory from order to affidavit: how do you avoid missed spots and make-goods?

They want evidence you can turn avails into billed and collected revenue with low leakage. Most diligence questions here trace back to make-goods, credits, and late affidavits, plus whether delivery depends on one traffic hero or a repeatable system.

How to prepare

  • Map the workflow: order entry, copy approval, log building, preemption handling, reconciliation, affidavits, billing
  • Report make-good and credit trends and the top drivers behind them
  • Document month-close timing and how exceptions are handled
  • List your traffic, automation, and billing systems and the owner for each step

Great Answer

Orders flow through our sales and traffic system, copy is approved by ad ops, and traffic builds logs daily with a written preemption protocol. We reconcile aired versus ordered within 48 hours. Affidavits go out weekly, and billing posts after reconciliation, with month-close consistently inside a week. Make-goods averaged 1.8% of gross last year, and here are the top three causes and the fixes we put in place.

Okay

We reconcile before invoicing and have a standard traffic and billing process. Make-goods happen, and we can run a report that shows trends.

Gives Pause

Traffic handles it. If we miss spots, we make them up.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg helps you share ad-ops process maps, make-good trends, and close timing in a single diligence-ready package. Learn more in the guide

People Coverage

Who are the indispensable people on-air and off-air, and what keeps them from leaving?

They are measuring continuity risk because losing the wrong engineer, traffic lead, producer, or key talent can trigger outages, compliance misses, and advertiser churn. They also want to know whether there are backups, documented routines, and realistic retention plans that fit your market.

How to prepare

  • List critical roles with primary and backup coverage for each
  • Document after-hours escalation and company-owned access and password control
  • Summarize key employment and talent terms, plus retention risks and market pay benchmarks
  • Write a 90-day post-close continuity plan for the highest-risk roles

Great Answer

Our highest-risk roles are chief engineer, traffic manager, and lead producer. Each has a trained backup, plus SOPs for our top 20 failure modes and the political surge workflow. We run an on-call rotation, and credentials sit in a company-controlled vault. For the first 90 days post-close, we have a communication plan and targeted stay bonuses for two roles where the market is tight.

Okay

We have a solid team and a few key people we would want to retain. We can outline responsibilities and discuss retention during transition.

Gives Pause

People will stay if the buyer treats them well. A lot of it is tribal knowledge.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg’s Owner’s Guide helps you build a role-by-role transition plan so buyers see real bench strength. Learn more in the guide

Audience & Yield

How much of your audience and ad strategy depends on Nielsen (or similar), and what happens if it moves?

They are tying audience trends to pricing power and sellable inventory, since revenue can lag behind ratings shifts for a while. They also look for discipline around CPMs (Cost Per Mille), sell-out, and bonus inventory because over-bonusing can hide softness until it shows up in cash.

How to prepare

  • Show audience trends by daypart and program, tied to CPMs and sell-out
  • Track unsold inventory, bonus spots, and discounting by quarter
  • Separate levers you can pull from external drivers that vary by market
  • Build a 12-month forecast tied to known programming changes and local events

Great Answer

Nielsen drives agency pricing in three key dayparts. When ratings moved about a point up or down last year, CPMs held because we tightened packaging and reduced bonus inventory. Sell-out averaged 78% in core dayparts, and we track unsold and bonus weekly with a floor policy. Here are the daypart trend lines, what we control through news and sponsorship packaging, and what we treat as external risk.

Okay

Ratings affect agency pricing, and our overall trend is stable. We can share Nielsen reports and explain how we price and package inventory.

Gives Pause

Ratings go up and down. Sales just sells what it can.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg helps you organize the audience-to-yield story next to the financials so buyers can follow audience to cash. Learn more in the guide

Growth Engine

Where does your money really come from: local direct, agency, political, retrans, or distribution—and how do you actually win it?

They want a revenue engine they can keep running after close, which usually means repeatable sales routines, category strength, and diversified relationships. Your mix signals what is more controllable (local direct), what depends on third parties (agency desks and platform terms), and what is cyclical (political), which affects structure and multiple.

How to prepare

  • Break out revenue by stream, including retrans and digital/OTT/production where relevant
  • Show concentration by top accounts, agencies, and advertiser categories
  • Document your sales motion: CRM usage, packaging, and renewal cadence
  • Separate higher-margin products from pass-through and low-control revenue

Great Answer

Revenue is 46% local direct, 24% agency, 10% national/rep, 12% retrans, and 8% digital/OTT. Political averages 9% across a two-year cycle, and we normalize it separately. We win local direct through category ownership in auto and healthcare with a documented pipeline and quarterly renewals. On the agency side, three buyers drive volume, and relationships are multi-threaded beyond a single AE. Here are the mix, the category exposure, and our broadcast-plus-digital packaging playbook.

Okay

We are a mix of local and agency, with political upside and some growth in digital. We can provide the revenue split and review top categories and accounts.

Gives Pause

It’s mostly relationships. We do not break it out in detail.

How Rejigg helps: Rejigg helps you present a clear revenue mix and run a process with pre-vetted buyers who understand broadcast underwriting. Learn more in the guide

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Questions Broadcasting Owners Ask Us

Most broadcast stations trade on a multiple of cash flow, usually EBITDA (or SDE for smaller owner-operator stations). In practice, the multiple depends on retrans and carriage renewal timing, audience trend by daypart, and how much revenue leaks through make-goods and credits. Buyers often normalize political by cycle and adjust for near-term engineering capex, like transmitter work or tower access issues. Use Rejigg’s free valuation calculator to estimate a range, then pressure-test the contract and compliance items that move broadcast pricing.

Most buyers pull political out and look across at least one full cycle, often 24 to 48 months. They measure the off-cycle “base” business, then add a normalized political contribution that reflects what typically repeats in your market. Many buyers haircut peak-year results for preemptions, make-goods, and temporary labor or commissions that spike during election windows. The cleanest support is political revenue by year, by race level, and by channel (broadcast vs. digital), plus how quickly those dollars collect.

Often yes, especially for smaller owner-operated stations or related broadcast businesses that meet SBA size and eligibility rules. Lenders usually focus on cash flow stability, customer concentration, and whether revenue depends on contracts that will not transfer at closing. Expect questions about tower and facility leases, retrans or key programming agreements with consent requirements, and how you normalized political and maintenance capex. Rejigg’s SBA loan calculator helps you model payment coverage before you invest time with buyers who cannot finance the deal.

It depends on the deal structure and what needs FCC approval. A license assignment adds an approval window on top of diligence, financing, and purchase agreement work. Sellers also lose time when retrans, affiliation, tower, or engineering details are scattered since buyers will pause until they can underwrite the “stay on-air” risks. The fastest deals usually come from sellers who can explain cash conversion, distribution, and compliance in one call, then prove it in a tidy data room. Rejigg helps by staging access after NDAs and keeping documents organized.

No. A broker can help by packaging the deal, bringing buyers, managing NDAs, and keeping diligence moving, but fees are commonly 5 to 10% and may not pencil for every station. Many owners run a solid process themselves if they can clearly present retrans and affiliation exposure, ad-ops controls, and the engineering state of the plant. Rejigg supports that approach with pre-vetted buyers, digital NDAs, a secure data room, and offer tracking, with no seller fees. Some sellers still hire a broker for market reach or negotiation support, and that can be worth it in complex situations.

Start with financials and cash proof: trailing P&Ls, balance sheets, AR aging, and an add-backs schedule with backup. Add revenue support that matters in broadcasting, including revenue mix (local, agency, national/rep, political, retrans, digital), make-good and credit trends, and your month-close and billing workflow. Then include retrans and carriage agreements with a renewal calendar, affiliation and programming agreements, FCC filings and compliance summaries (public file and EAS practices), tower and site leases, and an engineering summary for transmitter, STL/backhaul, backups, and maintenance records. Rejigg’s data room lets you share summaries early and hold back full agreements until buyers are serious.

Working capital discussions in broadcasting often center on AR, especially agency receivables, plus payables tied to programming, production, and technical vendors. Buyers usually want enough net working capital at close so they are not funding pre-close spots or immediately paying old bills. Sellers want credit for the AR they generated and to avoid leaving excess cash behind. Many deals use a target based on a historical average and then true up after close once AR collections and payables are clear. It is worth separating political months since they can skew the target.

Many broadcast deals are asset purchases because buyers want to limit legacy liability and allocate price across equipment and intangibles. With FCC-licensed operations, you still have specific filing and assignment steps, and the asset schedule needs to match what the FCC application and purchase agreement describe. Stock deals can reduce friction for contract continuity in some cases, but buyers may push back if there is any compliance or employment liability risk. In either structure, broadcasting LOIs work best when they spell out what transfers: the license, call letters and IP, tower and facility rights, key programming and distribution contracts, and which consents are required to close.

If a major retrans or carriage renewal lands in the next 12 to 18 months, buyers often price in uncertainty or ask for protections such as escrows, price adjustments, or earnouts tied to renewal results. Concentration matters too, since losing one large MVPD or taking a rate reset can change the economics quickly. Sellers can reduce the discount by providing a clean renewal calendar, a short history of prior negotiations (including any blackout threats), and clear subscriber reporting and true-up support. Buyers mainly want to see that the risk is quantifiable for your market and footprint.

Buyers usually handle near-term engineering capex in one of three ways: discount the price, require repairs before close, or negotiate a specific credit or escrow. In broadcasting, common swing items include transmitter age and service history, backup power, STL redundancy or backhaul redundancy, an HVAC system for equipment rooms, and tower or site lease access risk. Sellers tend to get better outcomes when they provide a straightforward state-of-the-plant summary with equipment ages, maintenance records, and known failure points. Surprises after an LOI often lead to price retrades or delays.

Earnouts come up when a big part of future performance is hard to price today, such as a near-term retrans renewal, an upcoming election cycle, or a ratings transition tied to programming changes. Structures vary, but they often pay out based on post-close EBITDA, revenue targets, or a contract renewal outcome. In broadcasting, earnouts can get messy because the buyer controls staffing, programming, and rate discipline, all of which can move the metric. If you accept an earnout, define the metric tightly, set clear reporting rights, and limit changes that could shift results outside normal operations.

Buyers usually give more credit to digital revenue you control, such as direct-sold streaming sponsorships, owned-and-operated app or site inventory, or integrated content tied to the station brand. Thin-margin resold programmatic and platform-dependent rev share often gets discounted, especially if one partner drives most of the traffic or fill. Expect diligence on traffic sources, rev-share statements, fill rates, and how you reconcile measurement across systems. Digital can lift value when partner terms are stable, the audience is attributable, and revenue is diversified across more than one platform or network.

Non-competes are common, but the enforceability and scope depend on state law and the seller’s role. In broadcasting, buyers often focus on market-specific risks: soliciting key AEs, on-air talent, or major advertisers, and using relationships to divert agency or political spend. Many agreements use a defined geography tied to the market or contour and a reasonable time period, paired with non-solicits for employees and major accounts. Terms that are too broad can backfire by becoming unenforceable or dragging out negotiations, so it is worth aligning early with counsel on what is realistic in your state.

Confidentiality matters in broadcasting because rumors can rattle talent, agencies, and distribution partners. Most sellers stage disclosure by sharing high-level performance and market positioning first, then releasing ratings detail, key account lists, and contract PDFs only after a buyer is qualified and under NDA. It also helps to control what gets downloaded, especially retrans and affiliation agreements. Rejigg supports staged diligence. Buyers are pre-vetted, NDAs are signed digitally, and you can set per-document permissions so sensitive items do not circulate outside the deal team.

Many buyers want a stabilization period of at least 60 to 90 days focused on staying on-air, keeping ratings steady, and avoiding ad-ops disruption. After that, plans vary by buyer and market, and may include consolidating master control, adjusting sales leadership, changing programming, or renegotiating vendor and distribution terms. The cleanest transitions are built around routines and owners: who approves copy, who handles preemptions after hours, who owns the EAS and public file cadence, and who manages key agency relationships. Rejigg’s transition planning guide helps you document what must stay consistent.

Tax outcomes depend on your entity type and whether the deal is structured as an asset sale or stock sale. Buyers often prefer asset deals for a basis step-up, while sellers may prefer stock deals in some situations, but the right answer depends on your facts and state rules. In broadcasting, allocation can matter because equipment, tower or facility-related assets, and FCC-related intangibles can be meaningful line items. It is worth bringing a tax advisor in before you sign an LOI, since allocation language and structure choices can be hard to unwind later. Your advisor can also flag state tax and apportionment issues that vary by footprint.

Broadcasting offers often separate on certainty and risk, not headline value. Compare FCC and third-party consent conditions, timing around retrans renewals, the working capital target, escrows or credits for engineering capex, and any earnout terms tied to ratings or political-year performance. Also look at funding source (cash, SBA, seller note), diligence burden, and the buyer’s transition plan for talent and operations. Rejigg’s deal tracking and offer comparison dashboard helps you line up terms side by side so you can see where value is real versus contingent.

You can still sell, but the buyer will underwrite the LMA itself as the core asset. Expect diligence on term and renewal, termination rights, economics, and whether a sale triggers consent or renegotiation with the license holder. Buyers will also want clarity on what you control: sales relationships, staff, programming rights, branding, digital assets, and operational systems. In many markets, an LMA-backed operation can attract strong interest if assignability is clear and the station has clean ad-ops and compliance routines. A simple contract summary and a clear dependency map can keep the process from stalling.

Start by pulling together your financial records and a list of your clients and contracts. You don't need everything polished before you start. List on Rejigg where buyers are actively looking for broadcasting companies, and you'll connect with them directly. No broker required.

Most broadcasting businesses sell for 3 to 8 times their annual profit. A "multiple" just means how many years of profit a buyer is willing to pay upfront. Where you land depends on how much revenue comes from recurring clients, how strong your team is, and whether you've built technology that's hard to replicate. Try Rejigg's free valuation calculator for a starting estimate.

Most deals close in four to eight months. Having your financials organized and your client contracts ready to share speeds things up. The biggest slowdown is usually buyers wanting to verify that key clients will stay after the transition.

No. Brokers charge 5 to 10 percent of the sale price. Rejigg gives you buyer vetting, secure document sharing, and direct messaging so you can handle the process yourself. Schedule a free consultation to see how it works.

Buyers want to see clients who keep coming back, a production team that handles the work without you, and financial records that are reasonably organized. Technology or infrastructure that's hard to replicate adds real value. You don't need to be perfect. A solid business with loyal clients and a capable team is what gets buyers excited.

Most client contracts can transfer to a new owner. It's worth reviewing your agreements for any language about what happens when ownership changes. Start introducing your team to key clients as the primary contacts before the sale, and the transition will feel natural to everyone. Talk to Rejigg about transition planning.

Buyers value recurring monthly or annual revenue much more than one-off project work because it's predictable. If your business has a mix of both, showing them separately in your financials helps buyers see the full picture. Companies with a strong base of recurring clients consistently attract better offers because buyers know the revenue will be there next month.

In most cases, yes. Buyers want your producers, editors, and account directors to stay because they hold the client relationships and the production know-how. Most deals include plans to keep key people on board. Having a simple list of your team with their roles and how long they've been with you helps make the conversation smooth.