We guide founders through a structured, high-stakes transition. A sale to a professional buyer changes how a company runs. It brings new leadership, performance metrics, and a sharper focus on growth.
How CT Acquisitions Works
- $0 to sellers. The buyer in our network pays us at close. No retainer, no listing fee, no success fee, no commission — ever.
- No exclusivity contract. Walk at any time. If our buyer isn’t paying enough, hire a banker the next day. We have zero claim on you.
- No auction, no leaks. We introduce you to one or two pre-mandated buyers sequentially. Your business never gets shopped.
- Top-of-market price AND the right buyer. Our fee scales with sale price (same incentive as a banker), matched on fit — not just the highest check.
- 60–120 days, not 9–12 months. We already know our buyers’ mandates before we pick up the phone with you.
Updated April 2026
Looking for the full guide?
We’ve expanded this article into comprehensive pillar guides with specific numbers, worked examples, and updated 2026 market data:
- Private Equity in HVAC: 2026 Industry Report — How PE platforms actually operate acquired businesses post-close.
- How to Sell a Service Business — Full 2026 playbook with PE deal structures and transition dynamics.
Preparation matters. Expect intense due diligence, clear financial scrutiny, and requests for clean, verifiable statements. Earnouts, equity rollover, and non-compete terms are common. Plan for a 6–24 month handover and possible ongoing advisory work.
We help map decisions against long-term goals. That means assessing cultural fit, operational readiness, and whether the deal aligns with your vision. For a practical primer, see our concise guide at selling your small business to private.
Key Takeaways
- Due diligence is thorough — clean records speed the process.
- Deal terms often include earnouts and equity rollover.
- Expect a transition period with new performance metrics.
- Culture and leadership changes can follow closing.
- Align the sale with your long-term goals before signing.
Understanding the Private Equity Landscape
Understanding how buyers deploy capital is the first step to assessing fit and risk.
Defining the PE Model
Private equity firms raise pooled capital from pensions, insurers, and family offices. They acquire businesses, then add structure and capital. The goal is to drive measurable growth and lift returns over a defined hold period.
Firms place professional management and curated resources into portfolio companies. That includes a hands-on team, financial oversight, and targeted operational upgrades.

Strategic Goals of Investment Firms
Buyers seek stable companies where clear strategy can increase value. Targets often show steady cash flow and predictable margins.
- Capital deployment: fund expansion or add-ons.
- Performance uplift: tighten processes and reporting.
- Exit planning: prepare the company for a lucrative sale later.
“Good alignments match owners’ goals with the firm’s thesis.”
This model affects ownership, employees, and day-to-day operations. We advise owners to review fit and scenario-plan for management changes before signing.
Determining if Your Business is the Right Fit
A pragmatic review of financial statements and leadership capacity reveals true readiness.
Many firms target companies with EBITDA in the $1M–$3M range. Some investors chase smaller niches. Know where your company sits.
Buyers commonly ask for at least three years of clean, verifiable financial statements. That history drives trust and speeds diligence.

- Cash flow: Stable receipts signal capacity for growth and operational resilience.
- Management: A team that runs without the founder raises value and buyer interest.
- Earnings history: Realistic records determine the likely exit multiple.
| Readiness Factor | What Buyers Look For | Action for Owners |
|---|---|---|
| EBITDA | $1M–$3M typical target | Normalize expenses; document addbacks |
| Financial Statements | 3+ years, audited or review-ready | Clean records; reconcile accounts |
| Management Depth | Independent day-to-day leadership | Develop succession and KPIs |
“A clear earnings story and a solid team often separate interest from offers.”
What Happens When You Sell Your Business to Private Equity
An LOI marks the moment a firm moves from interest to intent.
The Letter of Intent sets the primary contours of the deal. It lists the proposed price and the basic structure of the agreement. That price remains subject to confirmatory diligence.
Once signed, we typically enter an exclusivity period. During that time the buyer completes a time-intensive diligence process. Expect requests for full transparency and fast turnarounds.

Why it matters: the LOI reduces ambiguity. It aligns valuation expectations, ownership transition plans, and basic terms. It also shows the firm is committed to move the sale forward.
- Signals intent: formalizes the firm’s path to close the deal.
- Clarifies price: gives the company a working valuation.
- Exclusivity: concentrates diligence and negotiation in a finite period.
- Aligns terms: reduces surprises as parties move toward a definitive agreement.
“A clear LOI compresses time and uncertainty, letting both sides focus on execution.”
Platform Versus Add-on Acquisition Strategies
A clear platform thesis shifts how buyers price and resource a company. That shift affects valuation, support, and post-close decisions.

Benefits of Platform Status
As a platform, a business often commands a higher valuation. Buyers see scale and optionality. Firms place direct capital behind a platform to fund rapid growth and add-ons.
- EBITDA scale: platforms often sit in the $5M–$10M range and attract strategic attention.
- Support: the firm may provide operational resources and a clear growth strategy.
- Price upside: potential buyers pay a premium for a platform that can roll up companies.
Integration Challenges
Add-on acquisition targets tend to lose autonomy. Integration centralizes systems and can shift management responsibilities.
Owners should weigh cultural fit and execution risk. Understanding integration needs early protects value in a future sale.
For a deeper read on positioning and seller choices, see platform vs add-on acquisitions.
Navigating the Due Diligence Process
A tight, methodical diligence plan shortens timelines and protects valuation. We guide founders and management through focused reviews so the deal keeps momentum.

Financial Quality of Earnings
Quality of earnings is the backbone of financial scrutiny. External consultants parse financial statements and stress-test revenue, margins, and addbacks.
Clear records reduce surprises and preserve price and valuation. Prepare reconciliations and an earnings bridge before diligence starts.
Operational and Tax Reviews
Our team runs an operational review to map processes and identify improvement levers. That helps buyers see platform fit and scale opportunities.
Tax diligence is mandatory. It shapes the most efficient structure for the final agreement and flags exposure at federal and state levels.
Legal Documentation
Legal diligence covers customer, supplier, and employment contracts. We verify terms, change-of-control clauses, and intellectual property rights.
- Tip: Organize contracts early to speed review.
- Tip: Brief your team on document requests and timelines.
“Good preparation compresses risk and keeps the deal on track.”
Structuring the Deal and Equity Rollovers
Deal structure frames how value flows between the founder, investors, and management.
An equity rollover lets an owner keep a minority stake in the company. That stake gives a second chance at upside when the firm later exits. It also keeps incentives aligned for growth.
Structure usually blends cash at close with performance-based earnouts. Earnouts bridge valuation gaps and reward future earnings. They are common when buyers and owners see different price levels.
Debt and leverage matter. Firms often layer acquisition financing to boost returns. That approach can accelerate growth, but it increases interest and tax implications. We model scenarios so owners can see downside and upside.
Standard terms include non-compete clauses and employment agreements. Those contracts protect value for the buyer and define management roles post-close. Read them closely.
“Participating in a rollover keeps financial skin in the game and aligns long-term value creation.”
For a practical guide on timing and negotiation, review our selling-your-business guide.
Impact on Company Culture and Key Employees
A change in ownership often brings new rhythms and measurement systems across the team. That shift affects daily routines, reporting, and how success is measured.
Retention and Morale
Retention of key employees becomes a top priority for the firm. Buyers typically offer equity incentives or bonus plans to keep critical talent engaged.
Clear communication from the owner reduces uncertainty. Honest updates on the sale timeline and future roles calm nerves and limit turnover.
- Performance metrics: new KPIs and reporting cadence.
- Compensation: retention bonuses or equity rollover offers.
- Contracts: updated employment agreements and non-compete terms.
| Area | Common Change | Action for Leaders |
|---|---|---|
| Reporting | More frequent dashboards and targets | Train teams; set clear expectations |
| Incentives | Equity or bonus plans to retain staff | Align plans with performance metrics |
| Legal | Revised contracts and agreement terms | Review with counsel; clarify tax and interest implications |
We help navigate cultural shifts and preserve institutional knowledge. Our goal is a smooth transition where management and employees see a clear path forward.
“Transparent leadership and aligned incentives keep teams focused during change.”
For a practical overview of the acquisition process and how firms operate, read our guide on the acquisition process.
Managing the Post-Sale Transition Period
Transition work centers on clarity: roles, metrics, and customer communication. The post-close window typically runs 6 to 24 months. This is the period for handover and execution of the agreed strategy.
We recommend a tight transition plan. It assigns owners for key tasks. It sets reporting cadence tied to the diligence findings and financial statements.
Clear communication with the team and customers preserves value. That reduces churn among employees and limits customer anxiety. It also gives buyers confidence that the company will hit targets in the purchase agreement.
- Monitor metrics: buyers track performance against diligence baselines.
- Protect continuity: retain critical staff with aligned incentives.
- Document process: update SOPs and handover notes for management.
We support development of a communication strategy that addresses employees and suppliers. That keeps operations stable while the firm implements its growth plan.
“Focus on execution during transition; price and terms only matter if the company sustains performance.”
Long-Term Outlook and the Second Exit
Most firms set a 5–7 year horizon for realizing returns through a follow-on exit. That time frame shapes early decisions about capital, staffing, and operational targets.
The second sale often delivers the largest uplift in valuation. If an owner retained equity, that rollover can convert into meaningful additional value as the company scales under new management and growth plans.
Long-term value depends on performance and strategic decisions made by the firm and its buyers. Tax, interest, and financing choices also affect net proceeds at exit.
Key considerations:
- Timeline: plan for a 5–7 year hold and track milestones.
- Retention: staying involved can influence growth and value.
- Alignment: align incentives to preserve upside at exit.
We guide owners through exit timing and scenario planning so they understand potential outcomes and can protect remaining value.
“The second exit rewards consistent performance and clear strategic execution.”
Conclusion
A thoughtful exit balances immediate liquidity with future upside for remaining stakeholders.
Prepare early: organize financials, sharpen the growth thesis, and align the team and key employees for a smooth transition. Clear structure and realistic valuation preserve value.
Expect rigor: diligence and contract work shape the final agreement. Secure financing commitments and consider tools like RWI to increase cash at close. For detailed guidance on these points, review key considerations.
We partner with owners through the entire process. Our aim is a clean deal, a stable transition, and continued growth under new ownership.
FAQ
What does a private equity buyer look for in potential targets?
How does the letter of intent (LOI) shape the deal?
What is a platform acquisition versus an add-on?
What makes a company attractive as a platform?
What common integration challenges should owners expect?
What is included in quality of earnings (QoE) reviews?
How do operational and tax reviews affect the transaction?
What legal documentation is typical in a sale?
How are deals typically structured and what is an equity rollover?
What tax factors should owners plan for?
How will a sale affect key employees and management?
What retention strategies work best?
How long does the post-sale transition usually last?
What should owners expect during the integration phase?
How do private equity firms measure success post-acquisition?
What is the typical timeline to a second exit?
How should owners prepare mentally for selling?
How can sellers protect deal value during diligence?
What roles do buyers’ strategy and thesis play in final terms?
30 N Gould St, Ste N, Sheridan, WY 82801, USA · (307) 487-7149 · Contact
