The strategy involves acquiring multiple small, local businesses (e.g., laundromats) and applying principles like operational efficiency and economies of scale, mirroring the playbook of large private equity firms but at an accessible level for individual entrepreneurs.
Acquiring smaller companies at a 5-6x EBITDA multiple and integrating them to reach a larger scale allows you to sell the combined entity at a 10-12x multiple. This multiple expansion is a powerful, often overlooked financial driver of M&A strategies, creating value almost overnight.
Franchising has evolved beyond a mom-and-pop model into a sophisticated asset class. Private equity firms and former investment bankers are now actively acquiring and rolling up large franchise portfolios, signaling a shift towards treating them as major institutional investments.
New private equity managers often define their strategy too broadly. The winning approach is to first dominate a narrow swim lane, like 'buy-and-builds of blue collar services,' to build credibility. They can then earn the right to expand into adjacent markets in later funds.
Bending Spoons' M&A strategy came from realizing that creating a startup from scratch (zero-to-one) is heavily luck-dependent. In contrast, scaling an existing business (one-to-N) relies on functional skills like engineering and marketing that can be systematically mastered and applied across acquisitions.
Unlike PE firms that flip companies, Bending Spoons acquires digital businesses to own permanently. Their model focuses on deep operational overhauls—rebuilding software, redesigning UI, and restructuring organizations—rather than making shallow management changes, creating long-term value through operational excellence.
The market for buying and selling small businesses is currently opaque and inaccessible to the average person. In the future, these businesses will become more commoditized and tradable, much like how real estate investing and flipping have been democratized over time.
Unlike venture-backed startups that chase lightning in a bottle (often ending in zero), private equity offers a different path. Operators can buy established, cash-flowing businesses and apply their growth skills in a less risky environment with shorter time horizons and a higher probability of a positive financial outcome.
Former investment banker Cal Gulapali built a portfolio of 120 franchise units across eight different brands in seven years. He acts as the skilled operator, using capital from private equity and family offices to fund acquisitions while retaining 30-60% equity, showcasing a modern playbook for rapid scale.
Unlike venture capital, which relies on a few famous home runs, private equity success is built on a different model. It involves consistently executing "blocking and tackling" to achieve 3-4x returns on obscure industrial or service businesses that the public has never heard of.
Contrary to the popular search fund model of targeting $1M+ EBITDA businesses, a less risky path is to start with smaller companies ($100k-$250k earnings). This lowers complexity, reduces the potential for catastrophic failure, and provides invaluable hands-on experience for first-time acquirers.