Leverage the cash flow, operational playbooks, and market insights from a technology services business to fund and execute a software acquisition strategy, as demonstrated by Terum Capital's origins.
Permira differentiates in the crowded tech private equity space by targeting category-leading software companies. Their strategy focuses on doubling down on product investment to accelerate growth, rather than milking the business for short-term margin expansion.
Large companies rarely make cold acquisition offers. The typical path is a gradual process starting with a partnership or a small investment. This allows the acquirer to conduct due diligence from the inside, understand the startup's value, and build relationships before escalating to a full buyout.
Unlike pure SaaS investors, a HoldCo can view technology services revenue not as a low-multiple distraction but as a strategic advantage that provides deep customer intimacy, market intelligence, and a pathway to developing higher-margin IP.
Instead of relying on VC funding, Lemlist operates a self-sustaining growth model. By maintaining a high EBITDA margin (always above 20%), the company generates significant positive cash flow, which it then strategically deploys to acquire companies like Clapp as a form of reinvestment.
For fragmented, tech-averse industries, GC funds startups to first build an AI automation platform. Then, instead of a difficult sales process, the startup acquires traditional service businesses, implementing its own AI to dramatically boost their margins, providing immediate distribution and data.
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.
When acquiring a business, don't rely on a single outcome like achieving a growth target. Instead, seek assets that offer multiple ways to win. Even if the primary goal is missed, the acquired data, technology, or talent could create significant value for other business units, providing built-in insurance for the deal.
Enterprises are comfortable buying services. Sell a service engagement first, powered by your technology on the back end, to get your foot in the door. This builds trust and bypasses procurement hurdles associated with new software. Later, you can transition them to a SaaS product model.
Recent acquisitions of slow-growth public SaaS companies are not just value grabs but turnaround plays. Acquirers believe these companies' distribution can be revitalized by injecting AI-native products, creating a path back to high growth and higher multiples.
In a fast-moving field like cybersecurity, it's impossible to build everything in-house. By treating M&A as an extension of the R&D department, a large company can leverage the venture-backed ecosystem to acquire innovative teams and products that are already validated.