Selling to private equity is not the right decision for every business or every founder — and the moment you engage, the process acquires its own momentum.
Where this fits
Demand → Pricing → Cash → EBITDA → Network → Visibility → Value
What this means in practice: the earnings number used to value the business. The higher and more defensible it is, the more you receive — and the more control you have over how the deal is structured.
Selling to private equity is not the right move for every business. And it is not the right move at every point in time. The fact that someone wants to buy it does not mean now is the right time to sell, or that PE is the right buyer.
This is one of the most significant decisions most business owners will ever make. It deserves more careful thought than it usually gets — particularly in the early stages, when the conversation feels exploratory and low-stakes, and when the seller is most vulnerable to moving quickly.
The goal of this page is to give you an honest way to think through the decision — before the process develops its own momentum.
Run the diagnostic to understand your business position before deciding →
The question of whether to sell to private equity is actually three separate questions, each of which deserves a clear answer before you engage.
Not financially — though that matters — but operationally and psychologically. Have you built something you are ready to hand over? Or are you selling because you are tired, and would you actually be better off addressing what is making you tired rather than selling the asset that generates your wealth?
A business sold at the peak of its earnings trajectory achieves a different outcome to one sold during a period of uncertainty. A business that has not been through a preparation process will achieve less than one that has. Timing is within your control more than most founders realise.
A trade buyer might offer a higher strategic premium. A management buyout might allow continuity. A partial sale might give you liquidity while keeping you involved in the upside. Each has different implications for the outcome and for your ongoing role. PE is one option, not the only one.
What this means for you:
Most founders don’t see this clearly until they’re already in a process.
If you want to talk it through properly before that, we can do that.
→ Discuss your situationBuilt by an operator who has scaled and exited businesses across private equity, listed and private environments. View track record →
Built on real operating and private equity metrics — not generic multiples.
Used by founders and operators preparing for growth, capital or exit.
Start valuation →Do you know what actually drives your valuation?
What they say:
Liquidity event
What it means:
The transaction in which you convert your equity in the business to cash. This sounds simple but the structure — cash at completion, deferred payments, earn-out components — determines when and how much you actually receive.
In plain terms: A liquidity event is just the moment when your ownership stake converts to cash. The question is how much of that cash arrives on completion day, how much is deferred, and how much is conditional on future performance. Most PE transactions have at least some element of each.
What they say:
Partial sale
What it means:
Selling a portion of your equity to a PE buyer while retaining a stake. This gives you liquidity now and the opportunity to participate in the upside if the buyer grows the business and achieves a higher exit multiple in five to seven years.
What they say:
Full exit
What it means:
Selling 100 percent of your equity, with or without a requirement to remain employed for a transition period. Full exits give you certainty but no further upside from the business's performance post-acquisition.
What they say:
Rollover equity
What it means:
Reinvesting a portion of your sale proceeds into the new ownership structure. You are co-investing with the PE buyer. If the exit in five to seven years is successful, the rollover portion can be worth more than the initial cash amount. If it is not, it is worth less.
In plain terms: Rollover equity means instead of receiving all your money on day one, you put some of it back into the new company alongside the PE firm. If the firm achieves a good exit — typically 5 to 10 years later — your rollover stake can multiply significantly. If the business underperforms or the exit conditions are unfavourable, it is worth less than what you put in.
What they say:
Preferred return
What it means:
The minimum return PE investors receive before proceeds are shared more broadly. Understanding the capital structure of the entity you are rolling into — and what returns you need the business to achieve for your rollover to pay off — is important due diligence.
What this means in practice: a thorough investigation of every claim you make. It is not designed to find reasons not to buy. It is designed to validate the price. Understanding what it involves — before it starts — reduces the likelihood of surprises.
What they say:
Control rights
What it means:
The governance mechanisms the PE buyer retains post-acquisition. Even in a partial sale where you retain equity, the buyer typically controls material decisions — capex, acquisitions, changes to remuneration, and ultimately the exit timing and method.
This is usually where things get misread.
The decision to sell gets conflated with the decision to engage. They are different decisions with different consequences. If you want to think through which one you are actually making, that is worth a conversation before momentum takes over.
→ Discuss your situationMost founders misjudge valuation. Get clarity in minutes using a structured commercial model built from 25 years of P&L accountability across industrial and distribution businesses.
Start valuation →The decision to sell — or not to sell — is one of the most significant you will make. If you want an independent view before you get drawn into a process with its own momentum, it's worth a conversation.
→ Discuss your situationA founder-led building materials business received a strong approach from a PE firm at a valuation that felt generous. The founder had been running the business for twenty-two years, was fifty-seven years old, and the timing felt right. He was tired of the operational burden and wanted liquidity.
What this means in practice: understanding what the business is actually worth — before any buyer tells you — determines whether the offer you receive is something you can rationally accept or negotiate from.
He engaged quickly, moved through a fast process, and completed the transaction. Eighteen months later, the business had undergone three management changes, had acquired two competitors he felt were poor cultural fits, and was being run toward an exit he had no say in.
A platform business in a fragmented market with strong customer relationships and an owner who was ready to move on. The urgency created by the founder's readiness to sell — and his desire to close quickly — meant the process moved fast and terms were not scrutinised as carefully as they might have been.
He was still employed — with a two-year retention agreement — but his role had been redefined, his customer relationships were now owned by the new structure, and the earn-out targets that constituted 30% of his consideration were looking unlikely to be met. What he actually wanted was liquidity and a business that was less dependent on him. The second objective could have been achieved without selling. The first required a sale.
What this means for you:
Is the business earning what it should be? If there is margin trapped in the business through pricing that has not been reviewed, that value is yours to capture before a sale. Capturing it yourself is better than having it identified by a buyer and used to justify a lower price.
How resilient is the revenue if you step back? A business whose revenue depends on you being present is not ready for sale — it is ready for you to do the work to reduce that dependency before you sell. That work also creates options you do not currently have.
What happens to the customer base if you are not there to manage those relationships? Understanding this clearly — before a buyer does — gives you an honest view of the business's standalone value.
Can you articulate clearly what the overhead of the business is and why it is there? If the answer is murky, a buyer will discount accordingly. If the answer is clear, it removes risk from their model.
Before engaging with any approach — or deciding proactively to go to market — there are a small number of questions worth sitting with honestly.
Liquidity? A clean exit? Retained involvement in the upside? The ability to step back from operational burden while retaining some stake? The answer shapes which buyers, which structures, and which processes are appropriate.
For many founders, the answer reveals that what they want is not a sale — it is some relief from a specific burden. If that burden is owner dependency, addressing it creates options. If it is financial risk, a partial sale may be more appropriate than a full exit.
The governance changes. The reporting requirements change. The relationship with your team changes. Some founders find this liberating. Others find it deeply uncomfortable. Knowing which you are likely to be is worth understanding before you commit.
What this means for you:
Possibly. Trade buyers — competitors or adjacent businesses — sometimes offer strategic premiums that PE cannot match. Family offices offer different timelines and governance. Management buyouts preserve culture and continuity. The right buyer depends on what you actually want from the transaction, not just the headline price.
If you have sold 100 percent of your equity, you have limited recourse beyond your representations in the sale agreement. If you retained equity or have earn-out provisions, you may have contractual mechanisms but limited operational influence. Understanding the governance arrangements before you sign is the only way to protect yourself.
Almost never. A first offer reflects what the buyer is prepared to pay before they have competition. It is almost always below what a structured process with multiple interested parties would achieve. The exception is a genuinely distressed situation where speed has real value. Outside of that, a first offer is a starting point.
From initial approach to completion, six to twelve months is typical for a straightforward mid-market transaction. Longer if there are issues that require resolution, structural complexity, or multiple parties involved. The time between first conversation and signed heads of agreement is often underestimated by sellers.
Yes, until you sign binding documents. But each stage of the process has momentum, costs, and relationship dynamics that make withdrawal progressively harder. Deciding clearly on direction before you invest significantly in a process is better than withdrawing later.
Understand your own position first. Know your normalised EBITDA, understand your working capital position, and have an independent view on what the business is worth. Then run the diagnostic to identify where the gaps are. Respond to the buyer only after you have your own frame of reference.
What this means in practice: the cash the business needs to operate day-to-day. PE buyers manage this tightly post-acquisition. If the business has operated with loose debtor management or heavy inventory, that changes after the deal.
In a full exit, you sell 100 percent of your equity and receive payment — typically a mix of cash at completion, deferred consideration, and earn-out. In a partial sale, you sell a majority stake but retain equity, participating in the upside if the business grows. The right structure depends on your objectives.
Look at their track record with businesses similar to yours — sector, size, and management model. Talk to founders of businesses they have previously acquired. Understand their typical hold period, their approach to management, and what their post-acquisition operating model looks like. Their incentives and yours need to be genuinely aligned.
If you want to work this through yourself
→ Run the diagnosticIf you’d rather get a clear view quickly
→ Discuss your situationIf you’re already being approached or thinking about a sale
→ Before You Say YesWhat are the main differences between selling to PE versus a trade buyer?
A PE buyer acquires to grow and exit within five to seven years. A trade buyer acquires to consolidate operations. PE deals often involve the founder retaining equity and remaining involved. Trade deals are more often clean exits. The right buyer type depends on what you want from the transaction.
What is rollover equity and should I take it?
Rollover equity means reinvesting a portion of your sale proceeds into the new ownership structure. If the PE exit in five to seven years is successful, the rollover can produce a significant second return. The risk is that you have no control over the exit and the value depends on decisions made after you sell.
How long does a PE sale process take?
Six to twelve months from initial approach to completion for a straightforward transaction. Longer if there are structural issues, multiple parties, or regulatory considerations. The period between first conversation and signed heads of agreement is often underestimated.
What happens to my team after a PE acquisition?
It depends on the buyer and the deal. Most PE buyers want to retain key people — the management team is part of what they are acquiring. Changes typically happen at the senior level over time as the buyer reshapes the organisation toward their growth thesis.
Should I take the first offer?
Almost never. A first offer reflects what the buyer is prepared to pay without competition. It is the starting point for a negotiation, not a fair assessment of value. The exception is a situation where speed has genuine strategic value for you — which is rare.
Built by an operator who has scaled and exited businesses across private equity, listed and private environments. View track record →
Built on real operating and private equity metrics — not generic multiples.
Used by founders and operators preparing for growth, capital or exit.
Start valuation →See also: Sell-Side Readiness · Business Diagnostic
This perspective is based on operating and scaling businesses across manufacturing, distribution and industrial sectors, including private equity-backed environments.