Valuation of a Company: Build a DCF + Multiples Model From MYOB Financials | ModelReef
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Published March 19, 2026 in For Teams

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  • Quick Summary
  • Introduction This
  • Simple Framework
  • Step-by-Step Implementation
  • Real-World Examples
  • Common Mistakes
  • FAQs
  • Next Steps
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Valuation of a Company: Build a DCF + Multiples Model From MYOB Financials

  • Updated March 2026
  • 11โ€“15 minute read
  • Using MYOB with Model Reef
  • DCF modelling
  • Finance advisory workflows
  • SME valuation

๐Ÿงพ Quick Summary

  • Valuation of a company becomes far easier when you treat MYOB as the source of actuals and use a modelling layer (like Model Reef) for drivers, forecasts, and valuation outputs.
  • Most valuations rely on two approaches: DCF (cash-flow based) and multiples (market comparable), which are complementary business valuation methods.
  • The workflow is: extract MYOB financials โ†’ normalise earnings โ†’ build a driver-based forecast โ†’ compute free cash flows โ†’ discount at an appropriate rate โ†’ run sensitivity scenarios.
  • Multiples help sanity-check a DCF; DCF helps explain value drivers beyond “a multiple on profit.”
  • High-confidence company valuation methods depend on working capital, capex, and growth assumptions – not just last year’s profit.
  • Model Reef helps by making assumptions explicit, running scenarios quickly, and producing consistent outputs without spreadsheet fragility.
  • Common traps: skipping normalisation, double-counting growth, ignoring working capital swings, and using a single “magic” discount rate with no sensitivity.
  • The best outcome isn’t a single number – it’s a value range with clear drivers and scenario logic.
  • If you’re short on time, remember this: clean actuals + clear drivers + scenario sensitivity = a defensible business valuation narrative.

๐Ÿ“Œ Introduction: Why This Topic Matters

Whether you’re preparing for fundraising, a sale, partner buy-in, or strategic planning, the valuation of a company is ultimately a structured story about future cash flows and risk. In MYOB-based businesses, the challenge is rarely “getting numbers” – it’s turning historical financials into a defensible forward view with clear assumptions. That’s why teams increasingly separate responsibilities: MYOB holds the truth of past performance, while a modelling platform turns that data into forecasts, scenarios, and valuation outputs. Model Reef fits neatly into this workflow by helping you build driver-based forecasts and then apply business valuation methods like DCF and multiples without reinventing the spreadsheet each time. If you’re also strengthening your broader planning cadence, MYOB budgeting and forecasting gives the ecosystem overview that supports valuation work with better forecasting discipline.

๐Ÿง  A Simple Framework You Can Use

Use the “Clean โ†’ Forecast โ†’ Value โ†’ Stress-Test” framework. Clean means extracting MYOB actuals and normalising them (remove one-offs, adjust owner salaries, separate discretionary expenses). Forecast means building a driver-based outlook that links revenue, margin, headcount, and reinvestment to a coherent operating plan. Value means applying two lenses: DCF (intrinsic value from cash flows) and multiples (market checks), both standard company valuation methods. Stress-Test means sensitivity: growth, margins, working capital, and discount rate – so the valuation becomes a range with clear drivers. If you want to compare how the workflow looks in another ledger environment, How to calculate business valuation from Xero reports in Model Reef (DCF + multiples) is a useful parallel for the same modelling approach.

๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Step-by-Step Implementation

Step 1 – Extract MYOB Financials and Define the Valuation Scope

Start by defining the scope: which entity, which period, and which valuation purpose (sale, capital raise, internal planning). Export the MYOB P&L, balance sheet, and cash flow (if available), plus any supporting detail (AR/AP ageing, inventory reports, fixed asset schedules). Decide the time granularity (monthly or annual) and the forecast horizon (commonly 3-5 years for a DCF, plus a terminal value). This stage is also where you confirm what “normal” looks like for the business – seasonality, non-recurring expenses, and owner adjustments. If you want this workflow to be repeatable and auditable, define how data moves from MYOB into your model in a consistent way; using an Integrations pattern reduces manual rework and makes monthly refreshes predictable.

Step 2 – Normalise Earnings So the Model Reflects Sustainable Performance

A defensible valuation of a business depends on normalised earnings. Remove one-off costs (legal disputes, unusual marketing spikes), adjust owner compensation to market rates, and separate discretionary items that wouldn’t transfer to a new owner. Reclassify misposted items where necessary so margins are meaningful. This step often changes the valuation story more than any formula, because it clarifies what the business can sustainably generate. Document each adjustment and keep it transparent – buyers and stakeholders trust a valuation they can follow. In Model Reef, this is where structured assumptions and versioning help: you can keep a clean “as-reported” view and a “normalised” view without losing traceability. For teams that want more automation and robust data refresh cycles, Deep Integrations can further reduce manual handling and keep valuation models current as actuals update.

Step 3 – Build a Driver-Based Forecast That Supports Valuation Logic

The DCF is only as credible as the forecast behind it. Build drivers that match how the business operates: customer growth, retention, average revenue per customer, utilisation, unit volumes, pricing, and cost structure. Then connect reinvestment: capex, working capital, and hiring plans. This is where the difference between budget and forecast matters – valuation should reflect your best estimate (forecast), not your aspirational target (budget). If your team needs a practical grounding in that separation, the difference between budget and forecast-examples using MYOB actuals in Model Reef is worth aligning on before you debate discount rates. The goal is a forecast you can defend in plain language: what drives growth, what constrains it, and what must be invested to achieve it.

Step 4 – Model Free Cash Flows and Working Capital With Operational Realism

DCF value comes from free cash flow, not accounting profit. Translate your forecast into cash by modelling taxes, capex, and changes in working capital (AR, AP, inventory). Working capital is often where valuations go wrong – fast growth can consume cash even when profits look healthy. If your business carries inventory or has material working capital swings, treat this step as non-negotiable. Build simple drivers: days sales outstanding, days payable, inventory turns, and link them to revenue and COGS. If you want a MYOB-specific lens on inventory and working capital forecasting, Inventory forecasting – forecast stock + working capital using MYOB inventory reports complements this valuation workflow. This step turns a “paper valuation” into an operationally grounded value range.

Step 5 – Value the Business (DCF + Multiples), Then Stress-Test the Range

Calculate the DCF by discounting forecast free cash flows and adding a terminal value (via exit multiple or perpetuity growth). Then validate the result with multiples – revenue, EBITDA, or EBIT – based on what’s relevant for your industry and size. Use sensitivities to produce a range, not a single point estimate: discount rate, margin, growth, and working capital assumptions should each have scenarios. This is where Model Reef adds practical value: you can toggle scenarios, track versions, and generate outputs without brittle spreadsheet complexity. Your final deliverable should include drivers, assumptions, and a clear narrative for stakeholders. If you want to understand how the workflow looks in practice (including outputs), see it in action is a fast way to see the DCF + scenario process end-to-end.

๐Ÿ’ผ Real-World Examples

An owner-managed distribution business is preparing for a partial sale. MYOB shows strong profit growth, but cash is tight due to expanding inventory and slower customer payments. The team normalises earnings (removing one-off legal costs), builds a driver-based forecast (growth linked to product lines and sales headcount), and models working capital explicitly (inventory turns, debtor days). The DCF initially looks high until the cash conversion cycle is incorporated – then the valuation becomes a realistic range with clear levers: improve receivables, tighten inventory, or slow growth. This produces a defensible business valuation story for buyers and lenders. For a plain-language grounding before you build the model, Valuation meaning-how to value a small business using FreshBooks financials helps align stakeholders on what “value” is actually measuring.

โš ๏ธ Common Mistakes to Avoid

One mistake is treating the valuation of a company as a formula exercise while ignoring the forecast logic behind it. Another is skipping normalisation – one-off expenses and owner adjustments can materially distort value. Teams also commonly ignore working capital, which can turn “profitable growth” into cash stress and misstate free cash flow. A fourth trap is choosing a discount rate with no sensitivity – valuation should be a range with driver-led scenarios. Finally, people rely on a single multiple without context; multiples are a check, not the whole story. The fix is a disciplined workflow: clean actuals, build drivers, model cash realistically, and stress-test assumptions so stakeholders understand what truly moves value.

โ“ FAQs

The best answer is usually both. DCF is an intrinsic approach that values cash flows and is strong for explaining value drivers; multiples are a market-based check that helps validate whether your DCF range is realistic. These are complementary business valuation methods , not competitors. If the two approaches diverge, it's a signal to revisit assumptions (growth, margins, reinvestment, or risk). You'll get the most confidence when you can explain the valuation range in drivers, not just formulas.

Often yes for a DCF, but the forecast doesn't need to be overly detailed. A defensible valuation of a business requires a horizon long enough to reflect how the business matures, plus a terminal value that captures the "beyond forecast" period. The key is plausibility: your drivers should match capacity, market reality, and reinvestment needs. If you're early-stage or highly uncertain, scenarios matter even more than precision. Start with a simple driver model and add sophistication only where it changes decisions.

You can start from MYOB reports, but you still need a modelling layer to normalise earnings, build a forecast, and convert profit to cash flows. MYOB provides historical truth; valuation requires assumptions, scenarios, and sensitivity - core requirements of company valuation methods like DCF. Model Reef can help by structuring assumptions and producing consistent outputs without spreadsheet fragility. If you're new to this, begin with a clean export, map categories, and build a driver-based forecast before you touch discount rates.

The biggest levers are cash flow drivers: sustainable margins, growth, reinvestment (capex and working capital), and the discount rate (risk). Small changes in these inputs can materially shift value, which is why sensitivity analysis is essential. A strong business valuation explains which drivers matter most and why. If stakeholders only see a single valuation number, they'll debate the number; if they see a range with drivers, they'll discuss decisions. The next step is to build scenarios that stakeholders can act on.

๐Ÿš€ Next Steps

If you’re building a valuation of a company from MYOB data, your next move is to make the workflow repeatable: standardise exports, document normalisation adjustments, and build a driver-based forecast that updates as actuals change. Then produce a valuation range (DCF + multiples) with sensitivities so stakeholders understand what moves value and where risk sits.

If you want another reference implementation outside MYOB, Valuation from FreshBooks reports -build a DCF or multiples model in Model Reef shows the same valuation logic applied in a different accounting context. From there, mature the process: introduce scenario governance, add working-capital discipline, and turn valuation into an ongoing strategic tool – not a one-off spreadsheet project.

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