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BY JACOB BERRY CONTRIBUTOR
If you’ ve ever thought about selling your dealership“ someday,” here’ s a wake-up call— someday comes faster than you think.
In a recent Dealership Fixit Podcast episode, I sat down with Courtney Bernhard from Performance Brokerage Services, one of the leading firms handling dealership buy-sells across powersports, automotive, and marine. Bernhard’ s team has managed hundreds of transactions across Harley-Davidson and metric stores nationwide, and her insights cut right to the reality of what owners get wrong when it’ s time to sell.
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Whether you’ re 24 months from retirement or just curious about what your store’ s worth, this conversation delivers a reality check that every owner should hear.
THE MARKET HAS SHIFTED AND THE BALANCE HAS FLIPPED
For the first time in decades, there are more sellers than buyers in the powersports space.
Bernhard explained that her firm is seeing an aging dealer body with fewer succession plans in place. Kids who once planned to take over are choosing different careers, and after years of heavy post- Covid workload and economic uncertainty, many owners are simply tired.
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Meanwhile, automotive dealers, once eager to diversify into powersports, are now stepping back.“ They’ re used to one OEM, massive revenue, and predictable margins,” Bernhard said.“ Powersports looks a lot different. Ten franchises under one roof, smaller markets, and a lot more complexity.”
That doesn’ t mean there’ s no demand, it just means buyers are more selective than ever.
THE BIGGEST DEAL KILLERS AREN’ T WHAT YOU THINK
You’ d expect the biggest dealbreakers to be about profits or floorplan issues. But Bernhard says the“ silent killers” are almost always organizational, not financial.
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At the top of the list:
1. Messy financials.“ I can tell within seconds if a dealer is in a 20 Group,” she said.“ The clean ones always are.” Lenders lose confidence fast when P & Ls are disorganized or full of unverified add-backs.
2. Personal expenses on the books. Owners often run personal vehicles, boats, and even vacations through the business. Once it’ s time to sell, those expenses can’ t be justified to a bank.
3. No succession or estate plan. Bernhard has handled multiple cases where an owner passed unexpectedly, with no clear paperwork, frozen floorplans, and employees unable to access funds.“ The family is grieving, the OEM is demanding documents, and the business can’ t even order product,” she said.
4. Outdated parts and obsolescence. That back room you’ ve been meaning to clean? It’ s now a liability.“ Every obsolete item gets counted and charged against you,” she said.“ It’ s costing you money twice, once when you bought it and again when you sell.”
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