Features

Nursery Chains: Buying Nurseries - Group mentality

How do nursery chains go about picking a setting to buy and then bringing it into their larger group? Katy Morton speaks to some owners to find out

With nursery groups continuing to buy up existing settings, Nursery World looks at the different approaches they take when acquiring an already operational business and how they make it part of their group.

Before acquisition

The owner of Tops Day Nurseries, Cheryl Hadland, says she only buys nurseries with potential – a setting that can be expanded if there is demand, for example, or a failed nursery.

‘I like taking on failed nurseries or nurseries that are going to close as I think we can make a difference’, she explains. ‘I have taken on “requires improvement” settings. We run a training academy and can bring in our tried-and-tested policies and procedures. It would take six months to turn the nursery around though, so we can’t do too many at once. With these settings, you often just buy the building and not the business as the business isn’t worth anything.’

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