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PE firms often focus on the value creation plan during underwriting but neglect talent assessment. Evaluating the existing team and planning for development or replacement *before* the deal closes leads to better outcomes and avoids later surprises.

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Mid-market private equity funds build internal value creation teams to support portfolio companies with critical functions like hiring. These teams leverage established processes and headhunter networks, enabling a new CEO to build an executive team far faster than they could alone.

When evaluating talent in a portfolio company, it's crucial to assess executives based on the organization's immediate, foundational needs. Focusing on aspirational, future-state capabilities can lead to neglecting critical basics, creating significant operational and financial risks.

To ensure Day 1 alignment and retain key talent, treat integration planning as a collaborative process. Share the developing integration plan with the target's leadership during due diligence. This allows them to validate assumptions, provide critical feedback, and feel like partners in building the future company, rather than having a plan imposed on them.

Companies often complain about a lack of qualified candidates. The real issue is their failure to invest in developing the potential of hires who aren't 'perfect.' Talent development is a core organizational responsibility, not a luxury.

Due diligence cannot quantify a team's crucial soft skills. When an acquirer forces change aggressively post-close, they risk an exodus of these skills and key talent, maximizing the chance of the investment failing. A partnership approach that preserves talent for at least the first year is a much safer strategy.

Most companies have a structured process for budgets and strategy but treat talent management as an afterthought. Implement a "people calendar" that systematically addresses attracting, developing, and engaging talent with the same discipline. This ensures people, your most critical asset, are managed proactively.

Delaying key hires to find the "perfect" candidate is a mistake. The best outcomes come from building a strong team around the founder early on, even if it requires calibration later. Waiting for ideal additions doesn't create better companies; early execution talent does.

Many M&A teams focus solely on closing the deal, a critical execution task. The best acquirers succeed by designing a parallel process where integration planning and value creation strategies are developed simultaneously with due diligence, ensuring post-close success.

The value creation process begins long before the deal closes. The 3-6 month due diligence period is used for weakness identification, strategic planning, and recruiting key personnel. This makes the post-acquisition 100-day plan a seamless continuation of pre-close work, rather than a fresh start.

Operating partners add maximum value when involved pre-acquisition. They should help shape the value creation plan and deal thesis from the start, rather than being brought in post-close simply to execute a plan others have created.