Last updated: 2026-04-13

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What Happens to My Employees When I Sell My Business?

Your employees typically stay employed post-acquisition, but often under new ownership with different compensation structures, management, and advancement opportunities. In 85% of home services acquisitions, the majority of staff retain their jobs during the first 12 months. However, redundant roles (finance, HR, operations) are frequently eliminated, and base pay may decrease if your buyer transitions commission structures or standardizes compensation across acquired companies. Key employees critical to client relationships or specialized services often receive retention bonuses or earn-out incentives tied to their staying.

What Actually Changes for Your Team

The most significant shifts occur within three categories:

Which Employees Stay—and Which Don’t

Home services buyers prioritize retaining customer-facing staff because relationships are the asset. In HVAC, plumbing, and electrical acquisitions, technicians with established client bases are protected. Administrative staff, estimators, and back-office positions face the highest turnover risk.

PE firms typically retain 75-90% of field staff and 40-60% of office staff within the first year. Strategic buyers (larger home services companies) are more selective, keeping only those with specific expertise or client relationships that complement their existing operations.

Retention Incentives

Sophisticated buyers use three-tier retention:

Your management team should expect to stay 18-24 months if you negotiate earn-out provisions tied to retention metrics. This is common in home services deals where the founder’s presence affects valuation.

What This Means for You

Your employees’ futures directly impact your deal value and terms. Buyers discount valuations when key staff lack contracts or when your business relies heavily on your personal relationships. Before approaching acquisitions advisors like CT Acquisitions, document your team’s roles, tenure, and client relationships. A strong employee retention plan increases your asking price by 10-15% and simplifies due diligence. Plan a clear communication strategy—silence creates turnover during the sale process.

Related Question

Can I negotiate better terms for my employees as part of the sale?

Yes, but with limits. You can require retention bonuses for key staff, guarantee minimum employment periods, or request specific compensation floors as deal conditions. However, employees aren’t yours to negotiate after closing—they become the buyer’s responsibility. Focus negotiations on people critical to revenue continuity. Buyers won’t agree to blanket salary increases, but they often accept retention pools ($50K-$300K) paid if teams hit performance targets post-acquisition.


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Christoph Totter, Founder of CT Acquisitions

About the Author

Christoph Totter is the founder of CT Acquisitions, a buy-side partner headquartered in Sheridan, Wyoming. We work directly with 76+ buyers — search funders, family offices, lower middle-market PE, and strategic consolidators — including direct mandates with the largest home services consolidators that other intermediaries can’t access. The buyers pay us when a deal closes, not the seller. No retainer, no exclusivity, no contract until close. Connect on LinkedIn · Get in touch