The live events and entertainment infrastructure industry covers the businesses that produce, support, and deliver real-world human experiences — event production agencies, festival operators, audio-visual and staging providers, event staffing companies, venue management businesses, ticketing and event technology platforms, and artist management and booking infrastructure. The sector has become one of the most active M&A categories in the services economy, with private equity-backed consolidators driving the majority of dealmaking and a fragmented base of founder-owned operators across every sub-segment.
Beyond cyclical demand, a structural argument supports the durability of the live experiences economy. As artificial intelligence automates information, content creation, software development, and administrative work, the abundance of digital output makes its opposite — real human connection, live experiences, community, shared moments — increasingly valuable. Categories that require physical presence and real-time human interaction cannot be automated or replicated at scale. Premium pricing for live experiences has continued to expand even as digital content prices compress.
Corporate marketing reflects the same dynamic. Brands are reallocating budget from traditional digital and broadcast advertising toward experiential and event marketing because experiential delivers measurable engagement and direct customer relationships. Younger consumers consistently demonstrate higher willingness to spend on experiences relative to physical goods. The structural reallocation of value toward human experience supports durable demand growth across the live events vertical for the next decade — and it shapes the buyer thesis driving PE and strategic acquirers.
Full-service production agencies producing corporate events, brand activations, product launches, conferences, and immersive experiences for Fortune 1000 and growth-stage brands. Revenue is project-based with significant repeat client and MSA components. Ranges from boutique creative shops to scaled national operators producing thousands of events annually.
2026 Environment
Several structural themes shape the 2026 environment. PE consolidation is accelerating — recent industry data suggests roughly 57.5% of 2025 events sector acquisitions involved PE-backed buyers. Recent transactions illustrate the pace: Pinnacle completed its third acquisition in less than five years; Nth Degree acquired global event agency INVNT with PE backing; Range Sports acquired culture-forward event marketing and entertainment agency Superfly; major holding companies have made strategic acquisitions to build end-to-end experiential platforms.
Operational pressure is real for boutique operators. Inflation has driven up labor, equipment, and operational costs, and many event services businesses have limited ability to pass those costs through to clients. Talent shortages in production, AV, security, crew, and catering reinforce the pressure on smaller operators — and favor consolidation, as larger platforms with established recruitment, training, and career pathways have material operational advantages.
Major event cycles create demand tailwinds. The 2026 FIFA World Cup hosted across North America, the 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, ongoing major sporting event activity, and continued recovery in corporate experiential marketing spend are creating sustained demand for live experiences capability. Brands increasingly want integrated partners that handle creative strategy, production, AV and staging, fabrication, talent, and measurement under one roof — the consolidator thesis is partially about building end-to-end capability platforms. Technology and measurement matter more than ever, including hybrid and virtual event production layered onto live event services.
For founder-owned operators considering transactions in 2026, the environment is genuinely favorable but selective. Quality operators with diversified clients, recurring revenue characteristics, talent depth, and modern capability command premium attention; commoditized operators face tougher receptions.
Valuation varies significantly by sub-segment, business model, and company-specific factors. Three methods appear consistently. EBITDA multiple is primary for serious M&A — SDE for owner-operated businesses under ~$1M earnings, EBITDA for $1M+ businesses. Revenue multiple is used as triangulation, most commonly for ticketing and event tech where SaaS-style metrics dominate. Asset-adjusted methodology combines an earnings multiple with separate consideration of the asset base in asset-intensive sub-segments (AV, staging, fabrication, venue ownership).
The ranges below reflect typical 2025–2026 lower middle market data. They are starting points, not conclusions — company-specific factors typically move multiples 1.0x–3.0x in either direction within any sub-segment. The size premium is real: the same business at $2M vs. $10M EBITDA typically trades 1.5x–3.0x higher at the larger scale.
The single largest valuation driver. Operators with 40%+ revenue from MSAs, retainers, multi-year sponsor contracts, or annually recurring programs typically command 1.5x–3.0x EBITDA premiums over purely project-based peers.
Diversified bases (no client >15–20% of revenue) support premium valuations. Top-three customers above 25% typically reduces valuation 10–30%. Concentration is particularly damaging in production and experiential agency sub-segments.
Deep specialization (financial services, technology, automotive, hospitality, sports & entertainment, specific music genres) creates switching costs, deeper relationships, and pricing power. Specialization in growth segments can add 1.0x–2.0x to the multiple.
Senior creative, production, account, and technical leadership that has stayed through multiple cycles supports premium valuations. Sub-5% key-employee turnover is the healthy median; above 10% compresses multiples meaningfully.
Margins above 20% typically support 1.0x–2.0x higher multiples in services-heavy sub-segments. Below 10% compresses multiples regardless of scale. Trajectory matters — operators showing margin expansion through scale command premiums.
For AV, staging, venue, and fabrication, modern well-maintained fleets with strong utilization rates support premium pricing. Aging equipment requiring near-term capex compresses multiples. Owned real estate adds value beyond the earnings multiple.
Private equity-backed platforms executing roll-up strategies across event production, AV, staging, festival operations, and adjacent categories — the most active acquirers across the vertical in recent years, building national or super-regional footprints to serve enterprise clients comprehensively.
Publicis, WPP, Interpublic, Omnicom, Dentsu, and Stagwell acquire experiential and event capabilities to extend their broader marketing services platforms — strategic in their logic and often paying premium multiples for quality agencies that fit their platform thesis.
Encore (formerly PSAV) is the dominant institutional consolidator in AV and staging with continued active acquisition activity. Other national and super-regional AV consolidators acquire to expand footprint and equipment capability.
Live Nation, AEG, Endeavor, and other large live entertainment platforms occasionally acquire festival properties, venue operations, and adjacent infrastructure — most relevant for larger festival brands and venue portfolios.
PE-backed trade show platforms (Emerald, CloserStill, Easyfairs, Hyve, Nineteen Group, Marketplace Events) and sports/entertainment platforms (Range Media Partners, Endeavor) actively acquire producers, event marketing, talent, and experiential capabilities.
Increasingly active in live experiences acquisitions, particularly for founder-owned businesses where continuity and values-aligned ownership matter. Often more flexible on structure than institutional sponsors.
How Parkland Approaches Live Events Mandates
Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm building dedicated expertise across the live events and entertainment infrastructure vertical. Our approach follows the same five principles that guide every Parkland engagement: senior advisor leadership through close, confidential and targeted process, buyer universe built from scratch for each mandate, genuinely competitive process to drive value, and disciplined certainty-to-close protection.
For larger institutional events M&A — global agency networks, multi-hundred-million-dollar transactions, complex creative services groups — specialist events M&A advisors (firms like Mayfield Merger Strategies and Populate) and the major creative agency M&A bankers are typically the right call, and we will tell you that directly. Where Parkland creates value is in the lower middle market lane: founder-owned event production companies, regional experiential agencies, AV and staging operators, festival operators, venue management businesses, event staffing companies, and adjacent service businesses in the $1M–$20M EBITDA range. We work alongside specialist events M&A advisors when their execution capability is the right fit.
What We Do
We frequently work with the same clients across multiple deals over time — a buy-side roll-up program to scale, then a recapitalization or full sale years later. Or the reverse: a recap today with a roll-up strategy to follow. Our best relationships span years and several transactions because the work compounds.
Comprehensive valuation using live events & entertainment infrastructure-specific multiples, comparable transactions, and strategic value analysis to position your business at maximum value.
Targeted outreach to pre-qualified buyers through our proprietary network while maintaining strict confidentiality to protect employees, clients, and competitive position.
Rigorous buyer qualification, competitive tension creation, and expert negotiation of LOI terms including purchase price, structure, earnouts, and transition requirements.
Full management of the due diligence process, coo
Confidentiality
Culture & Legacy
Economics matter. They are not the only thing that matters. The best outcomes we deliver for founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the business, takes care of the creative, production, account, and operational talent who built it, and continues to serve the clients and sponsors who trust it. Live events is a relationship business at its core — both with the brands on the brief and with the talent in the trucks, on the stages, and behind the consoles. A high headline price from a buyer who guts the team or neglects client commitments is not a win. It is a transaction a founder will regret every time a former employee calls or a former client complains.
We spend real time on cultural fit. We vet buyers not just on financial capability and strategic rationale, but on how they have actually treated the businesses they have acquired in the past. We talk to management teams on the other side of the table. We advise our clients on which bidders will be good stewards and which ones will not, even when the economics say otherwise. Sometimes the right answer is not the highest offer. It is the right partner at a strong price.
We also believe the process itself should be as smooth as possible for founders trying to run their businesses at the same time. Events companies do not slow down for a sale process. Shows still load in. Clients still call. Peak season does not move. We run tight timelines, protect our clients’ calendars, manage diligence requests, and stay selective on which buyers we bring to the table. Fewer, better bidders produce better outcomes with less chaos.
We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm building dedicated expertise across live events and entertainment infrastructure alongside our core practice areas in residential and industrial services, business services, real estate services, and property management. We have built the relationships, the buyer intelligence, and the sector fluency needed to deliver real outcomes across event production, festivals, AV and staging, event staffing, venue management, ticketing, and artist infrastructure.
Our positioning sits squarely in the lower middle market lane where founder-owned operators in the $1M–$20M EBITDA range need a senior-led, confidential, and genuinely competitive process. These are the engagements where direct relationships with the PE-backed platforms, holding companies, and strategic acquirers most actively transacting in live events materially affect outcomes.
We work within the private equity middle market and strategic operator ecosystem, not as competitors to large investment banks. That positioning is deliberate. It keeps us close to the buyers actually transacting in the lower middle market and focused on the kind of relationship-driven process that delivers real outcomes for founders.
View representative engagements across property management and related sectors.For founders and platforms executing roll-up strategies.
Whether you’re considering a full exit, partial recapitalization, or simply want to understand what your live events & entertainment infrastructure business is worth – start with a confidential conversation.