After selling her company, Create & Cultivate, to a private equity firm, founder Jacqueline Johnson opportunistically repurchased the business for a lower price. This rare maneuver demonstrates a savvy understanding of market timing and negotiation with institutional buyers.
Despite a $3B valuation with a PE firm, Anastasia Soare believes she should have sold her company to a strategic buyer (e.g., a cosmetics conglomerate) when it was valued at $1B. Strategic buyers offer existing infrastructure and operational expertise that PE firms often lack, which she needed for international expansion.
Serial acquirer Lifco improves post-acquisition performance by having sellers retain an ownership stake in their business. This goes beyond typical earn-outs, keeping the founder's expertise and incentives aligned with the parent company for long-term growth, rather than just hitting short-term targets.
To prevent the next generation of leaders from being burdened by debt, WCM's founders transfer their ownership stakes at book value—not market value. This massive personal financial sacrifice is designed to ensure the firm's long-term health and stability over founder enrichment.
Don't wait until you're completely exhausted to sell your company, as buyers will sense your desperation and gain the advantage. The ideal time to exit is when your passion for the market wanes or growth slows, allowing you to negotiate from a position of strength before burnout sets in.
Top-performing, founder-led businesses often don't want to sell control. A non-control investment strategy allows access to this exclusive deal flow, tapping into the "founder alpha" from high skin-in-the-game leaders who consistently outperform hired CEOs.
Public companies, beholden to quarterly earnings, often behave like "psychopaths," optimizing for short-term metrics at the expense of customer relationships. In contrast, founder-led or family-owned firms can invest in long-term customer value, leading to more sustainable success.
After being acquired by Woven Digital, BroBible was neglected as the parent company focused on other assets. Recognizing its untapped potential, especially with the rise of programmatic ads, the original staff banded together to buy the company back when Woven began selling its holdings.
Despite a $50 million exit from their previous company, the Everflow founders intentionally limited their initial investment to a few hundred thousand dollars and didn't take salaries for two years. They believed capital scarcity forces focus and efficiency, preventing wasteful spending while they were still figuring out the product.
Over 80% of TA's investments are proprietary deals with founders who aren't actively selling. Their strategy focuses on convincing profitable, growing businesses to partner to accelerate growth, framing the decision as "partner with us" versus "do nothing." This requires a long-term, relationship-based sourcing model.
Post-exit financial planning is too late. Jacqueline Johnson learned from her banker that founders should be interviewing and establishing relationships with firms like Goldman Sachs or UBS *during* the sale process to create a full strategy for taxes and investments beforehand.