Selling to Private Equity vs. a Strategic Buyer

Two fundamentally different buyer types – with different pricing dynamics, deal structures, post-close expectations, and upside profiles. Understanding the tradeoffs is essential to choosing the right path for your exit.
Published by Parkland Capital Partners · Updated 2026

Private Equity

Growth-oriented · Rollover equity · 2nd exit

Strategic Buyer

Synergy-driven · More cash at close · Integration

Private Equity

Institutional capital with a growth mandate

Hold Period

3 – 7 years

Structure

60 – 80% cash + 20 – 40% rollover equity; earnouts common

Advantages

Considerations

Best For: Founders who want to de-risk with a partial liquidity event, retain meaningful equity, and participate in building a larger platform over 3 – 5 years.

Strategic Buyer

Operating companies acquiring for synergy and market position

Hold Period

Permanent (integration)

Structure

80 – 100% cash at close; simpler structures

Advantages

Considerations

Best For: Founders seeking a clean break with maximum cash at closing, who are less concerned about the business’s post-close identity and operations.

Side-by-Side Comparison

DimensionPrivate EquityStrategic Buyer
Cash at Close60 – 80% of purchase price80 – 100% of purchase price
Rollover Equity20 – 40% retained alongside PE sponsorRare – typically all-cash
Earnout LikelihoodCommon – tied to revenue or EBITDA targetsLess common but possible
Post-Close RoleCEO or operating partner for 2 – 3+ yearsTransition period of 6 – 18 months
Operational ChangesInvest in growth; maintain platform identityIntegrate into acquirer’s operations
Business IdentityTypically preserved as standalone platformOften absorbed into acquirer’s brand
Upside PotentialSignificant – second exit at higher multipleLimited post-close upside

Explore Both Buyer Types

Parkland runs structured processes that include both PE and strategic buyers – letting the market determine optimal value.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which buyer type pays more?
It depends on the situation. PE buyers often pay higher headline valuations for platform companies they plan to grow, but a portion of the price may be structured as rollover equity or earnout. Strategic buyers may offer a lower headline number but more cash at close. Total economic value – including rollover equity upside – often favors PE, but certainty favors strategics.
Rollover equity means retaining a portion of your ownership (typically 20 – 40%) alongside the PE buyer. When the PE firm eventually sells the platform (usually 3 – 7 years later), your retained equity participates in that exit – often at a higher valuation. This ‘second bite of the apple’ can be highly valuable.
In most cases, yes. Including both PE and strategic buyers creates genuine competitive tension, provides more data points on value, and gives you optionality to choose the best combination of price, structure, and cultural fit.
Scrutinize the earnout metrics (revenue, EBITDA, retention targets), the measurement period, and whether you retain control over the variables that drive the earnout. Parkland models each offer to show the range of total economic outcomes under different scenarios.
PE is typically the better fit. PE platforms actively want founder involvement and often structure management incentive plans that reward continued performance. Strategic acquirers generally want to integrate and may not need the founder beyond a transition period.

Start the Conversation

Discuss your buyer preferences and exit goals with our team.