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Instead of a complete sale, founders should consider selling a small portion of their company. This provides significant liquidity—often enough to de-risk their life—while allowing them to continue building, compounding value, and avoiding the post-exit identity crisis and capital redeployment problem.
As companies stay private longer, employees become multi-millionaires on paper but struggle financially. Providing structured secondary liquidity allows long-tenured employees to realize some wealth, buy homes, and improve their quality of life, which is crucial for retention beyond year seven or eight.
Selling 100% of a company isn't the only exit. Founders can take "multiple bites of the apple" by selling a majority stake but retaining significant shares. This allows them to benefit from future sales or an IPO under new ownership.
Contrary to the VC fear that early liquidity demotivates founders, Amanda Kahlow argues it does the opposite. Taking money off the table provides comfort and security, allowing founders to put more energy into the company and take bigger risks for a larger outcome.
After seeing his first company's value explode post-acquisition, this founder now prioritizes partial exits (recaps with equity roll) over all-cash deals. This strategy allows him to de-risk while retaining significant upside for future growth, a stark lesson from his first exit.
This strategy de-risks a founder's journey. Instead of waiting for a single, uncertain exit, founders can secure life-changing money along the way. Mike Weistrack used early secondaries to pay off debt and buy a house, reducing personal financial pressure.
Taking a small amount of money off the table via a secondary sale de-risks a founder's personal finances. This financial security empowers them to reject large acquisition offers and pursue a long-term, independent vision without the pressure of life-changing personal wealth decisions.
Contrary to the dream of retiring after an exit, data shows 92% of founders start another project, even those with nine-figure exits. The drive to build is a core part of their identity that a large financial windfall does not eliminate.
The common advice to wait for an inbound acquisition offer is often pushed by VCs whose incentives are to chase massive, fund-returning exits. This advice misaligns with founders, who may benefit from a proactive selling process that secures a life-changing, albeit smaller, outcome.
Though the company had larger exits later, the founder says the initial minority stake sale was the most meaningful. While financially the smallest, it provided personal financial security, removing the existential stress of failure and allowing him to focus on growth.
Marshall Haas sold a controlling stake in his company but retained significant equity. His goal was not just a cash payout, but to create a structure that provided ongoing cash flow, a continued advisory role, and a way to avoid the boredom and financial anxiety that often follows a complete, all-or-nothing exit.