Business assets have value. Understanding the value of assets on hand is important to starting a business, to conducting a business, and to dissolving a business. Ironically, many business leaders who are diligent about routinely tracking the value of hard assets, like a truck or a building, have no similar discipline in place to measure and monitor the value of the business’s intellectual assets.
Why To Value?
Many business eventualities may bring about a need to estimate the value of a company’s intellectual assets. The following are just a few examples of common business questions that may imply a need to perform a valuation on a company’s intellectual assets :
– Is now the time to sell a particular asset (or even the entire business) while its value is high?
– Is our company earning a reasonable royalty (or charging an optimal price) for an asset given current market realities?
– How much is a fair settlement amount in exchange for dropping a lawsuit for infringement of an asset?
– Should we build a new intellectual asset that the company needs, or instead seek to buy such an asset from another?
– Is now the right time to drive our current intellectual asset to end of life by introducing the next generation replacement?
– May the company leverage an intellectual asset by using it as security to borrow needed funds?
– What are the tax implications of a given transaction involving an intellectual asset, or of the fluctuation in the value of the asset over the past year?
– Is the company in compliance with all regulatory requirements that apply to a certain transaction involving an intellectual asset?
How To Value?
Several valuation models are commonly used to estimate the value of intellectual assets, whether in a business context or in a court of law (e.g., damages calculation). Furthermore, more than one model may be applicable in a given set of circumstances. The following are some of the most commonly used valuation models:
Who Can Value?
Valuation is more an exercise in accounting and/or finance than it is of law. Traditionally the purview of accounting professionals like Certified Public Accountants (CPAs), the field has more recently spawned certification programs specifically for valuation practitioners. Recommendation: When valuing intellectual assets, seek the help of a specially-trained and experienced professional. In almost all valuation scenarios, the stakes are too high to get it wrong.
(Originally posted September 4, 2012)
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