Business services is the largest and most active M&A category in the lower middle market. Private equity has returned to deployment with conviction, platform acquisitions are up five quarters in a row, and the gap between what premium businesses and average businesses transact for has never been wider. Knowing where your business sits on that spectrum is the difference between a good outcome and a great one.
Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm specializing in business services, with deep sector expertise across residential and commercial services, property management, PropTech, tech-enabled services, energy, and infrastructure. We advise founder and family-owned business services companies on sell-side M&A, recapitalizations, buy-side roll-ups, and strategic partnerships. We operate within the private equity and strategic operator ecosystem rather than competing with large investment banks. Every engagement is confidential, senior-led, and targeted. We do not list businesses on public marketplaces, blast teasers to buyer aggregators, or run open online auctions.
If you are operating a business services company generating $1M+ in EBITDA and thinking about a transaction in the next 12 to 24 months, this page is for you.
The business services M&A market has entered the strongest period of broad-based activity it has seen since 2021. Private equity platform acquisitions have grown for five consecutive quarters, driven by unprecedented dry powder deployment pressure. Lower interest rates, easing inflation, and improving CEO confidence have created the conditions for a genuinely broad recovery. Large-cap PE firms, middle-market sponsors, and strategic consolidators are all competing aggressively for quality assets in the same categories, which drives the competitive tension founders want when they come to market.
The transaction prints that define the market are scaled and public. Blackstone announced the acquisition of Champions Group (residential HVAC, plumbing, and electrical) in February 2026 at approximately $2.5 billion and 18.5x EBITDA. Goldman Sachs Alternatives acquired Sila Services in early 2025 at $1.5 to 1.7 billion with a 17 to 20x implied multiple. New Mountain Capital sold Citrin Cooperman to Blackstone at roughly $2 billion in early 2025, marking the first Top 30 CPA firm sponsor-to-sponsor transaction and validating professional services as a scalable PE rollup category. PE has acquired nearly 800 HVAC, plumbing, and electrical businesses since 2022, with PE add-on activity up 88% year-over-year through mid-2025. The overall middle market (under $500M enterprise value) regained its footing in late 2025 and carries meaningful momentum into 2026.
The valuation gap between premium assets and average ones is wider than at any point in the last decade. Capstone’s analysis of 2025 put it plainly: sellers with real businesses (meaning margins, scale, predictable revenue, and credible management depth) “got paid handsomely,” while businesses with customer concentration issues, cyclical exposure, or operational weakness saw “buyers sprint toward diligence, find one too many surprises, and politely excuse themselves from the table.” The implication for founders is direct. What you do in the 12 to 24 months before a process determines which side of that gap you sit on when buyers underwrite your business.
Sub-vertical matters as much as size. Three illustrative examples from the current market:
Tech-enabled B2B services ($9M to $50M recurring revenue) are the single hottest category in business services M&A today, with valuations that have risen from roughly 1.0x revenue in 2020 to 2.3x revenue in 2024 and still climbing. PE sponsors are paying premium multiples for businesses that combine recurring revenue with measurable tech leverage.
Professional services (accounting, wealth management, consulting, legal) has entered its rollup phase. Over 50 PE-related transactions occurred in the CPA and accounting sector in 2025. The Citrin Cooperman transaction demonstrated that $2B+ exits are achievable for institutional-quality professional services platforms.
Residential and commercial route-based services (HVAC, plumbing, electrical, pest control, landscaping) have been in active rollup for five-plus years and remain the most consolidated and capital-rich category in business services.
Five factors move the multiple more than anything else. First, recurring revenue as a percentage of total revenue. Subscription, membership, and contract revenue command premium multiples. Project-based, one-time, and transactional revenue are typically valued at 1x to 2x EBITDA. Second, customer concentration. Platforms with no customer exceeding 10 to 15% of revenue command a premium. Third, tech-enabled operations. Operational systems that produce measurable efficiency (lower CAC, higher productivity, better margin durability) are increasingly non-negotiable for premium multiples. Fourth, management depth below the founder. Businesses that can run without the founder trade at significant premiums to founder-dependent ones. Fifth, AI positioning. Businesses that benefit from AI tailwinds trade at premiums. Businesses where AI is a competitive threat trade at discounts. The bifurcation is real and widening.
Business services does not trade like a commodity business. The drivers of value are recurring revenue as a percentage of total revenue, customer concentration, gross margin durability, management depth below the founder, geographic or vertical specialization, tech-enabled operations, and the defensibility of the revenue model. Generalist brokers miss most of this. They price the business on a blunt SDE or EBITDA multiple against generic small-business comps, cast a wide net of buyers who are not actually transacting in your specific category, and leave meaningful value on the table.
The confidentiality problem is just as serious. Many brokers list business services companies on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, post teasers to broker networks, or run open auctions that expose the company to buyers with no real capacity to close. In business services, that leak reaches employees, customers, suppliers, and competitors within days. Services businesses are especially vulnerable to leak damage because the most important assets (customer relationships and key employees) walk out the door at will. A leak during a sale process can directly trigger customer churn, employee attrition, and competitive poaching before any deal closes, which then drags the seller’s realized proceeds through earnouts, holdbacks, and retention clawbacks.
The right advisor for a business services company is one who understands the subsector, speaks the language of your specific vertical (service agreement revenue, technician productivity, CAM retention, NRR, billable utilization, route density, whatever matters for your business), and knows which PE platforms, strategic consolidators, and independent sponsors are paying premium multiples today versus which ones are opportunistic.
Blackstone, Goldman Sachs Alternatives, KKR, Apollo, Bain Capital, General Atlantic, L Catterton, Gryphon, Gamut, and the rest of the large-cap PE universe are acquiring platform-scale business services companies at the top of the market. These buyers pay for scale, recurring revenue, and platform readiness, and typically take majority control with some founder rollover.
A deep layer of PE-backed national and regional consolidators are actively acquiring tuck-ins and bolt-ons across nearly every business services sub-vertical. Apex Service Partners (Alpine / Partners Group) in HVAC/plumbing/electrical, New Mountain Capital's professional services platforms, numerous PE-backed IT services consolidators, staffing roll-ups, and specialty services platforms. The majority of lower middle market business services transactions clear through this buyer universe.
Category-specific public acquirers (Rollins and Rentokil in pest, BrightView in landscaping, ABM in facility services, FirstService in property management, the Big 5 in commercial real estate services, CBIZ in accounting services) actively acquire to extend scale and geographic reach. Public strategics typically bring the strongest balance sheets and the most disciplined diligence processes.
Opportunistic capital looking for well-run founder-led business services companies with clear operational upside. Often move faster than institutional sponsors and offer structural flexibility, though with smaller dry powder and tighter financing dependencies. Independent sponsors in particular carry higher completion risk because they raise equity and debt transaction-by-transaction.
Strategic buyers expanding across adjacent service categories (an HVAC company buying plumbing, an accounting firm buying wealth management, an MSP buying cybersecurity). These buyers often pay a premium for the right business because the strategic fit extends their offering, and the deal value to them is higher than to a generalist consolidator.
Most of the value in a business services sale is made in the year before the teaser goes out. Increasing recurring revenue as a percentage of total revenue, documenting customer concentration and diversification, developing a management team that runs the business without the founder, implementing operating systems that drive measurable efficiency, reducing dependence on one-time or project revenue, and cleaning up financials to a 36-month normalized view can each add tens of percent to the final sale price.
The reverse is also true. Going to market with messy financials, heavy founder dependency, unresolved customer concentration, or cyclical exposure leaves value on the table that no process can recover. Earnouts, seller notes, and retention clawbacks are standard in business services transactions and typically tie a meaningful portion of the purchase price to post-close performance, customer retention, and key employee continuity over 12 to 24 months. A messy book exposes the seller to real earnout risk. A clean book on strong systems reduces it materially and often allows us to negotiate tighter earnout terms or more seller-favorable definitions of qualifying performance.
We work with founders well before the official engagement, sometimes for a year or more, to position the business for the outcome they actually want.
You do not get handed off to an analyst once the engagement letter is signed. The person you meet on the first call is the person negotiating your LOI.
We do not post businesses on public marketplaces, blast teasers to buyer aggregator lists, or run open online auctions. Every outreach is direct, curated, and tailored to your specific business. Confidentiality is protected at every stage, which matters most in services businesses where the wrong signal to employees, customers, or competitors can damage the business before a deal ever closes.
We do not recycle. For each mandate, we construct a buyer universe tailored to your specific sub-vertical, scale, revenue profile, and strategic fit, drawing on our proprietary database, active coverage relationships, and direct conversations with the mega-cap PE, national strategic, and regional consolidator universes.
The goal is multiple credible bidders at LOI stage with real economic tension between them. That is what drives the final 10% to 20% of enterprise value that matters most. Competitive tension does not require a public auction. It requires the right buyers engaged in parallel, with the same information and the same deadline.
A high headline LOI that falls apart in diligence, or erodes materially through earnout mechanics and purchase price adjustments, is worth far less than the LOI number suggests. We vet bidders for real capability to close, negotiate earnout terms aggressively on behalf of sellers, and structure the process to keep the right buyers engaged through signing and funding.
Economics matter. They are not the only thing that matters.
The best outcomes we deliver for business services founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the business, takes care of the team that built it, and continues to serve the customers who trust the brand. Services businesses are people businesses at their core. Employees are the relationship with the customer. Key account managers and technicians hold brand loyalty together. A high headline price from a buyer who cuts the team, disrupts culture, or centralizes operations in a way that degrades service quality is not a win. It is a reputation cost that follows the founder through every future conversation in the industry.
This is especially true in a market with persistent labor shortages across most skilled services categories. Every buyer is underwriting the risk that acquired teams will walk out, and every founder should be thinking about what the business looks like 12 to 18 months post-close with different ownership, different compensation structures, and different integration pressure. The right buyer has done this many times and knows how to preserve the team. The wrong buyer does not, and the consequences are real.
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 teams and customers they have acquired in the past. We talk to former sellers on the other side of acquisitions. 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 who are running their businesses at the same time. Services companies do not slow down for a sale. Customer calls come in. Emergencies happen. Deals close. Employees call. We run tight timelines, protect our clients’ calendars, manage diligence requests so they do not become a second full-time job, and stay selective on which buyers we bring to the table so that energy is spent on real bidders only. Being selective is what makes the process easier, not harder. Fewer, better bidders produce better outcomes with less chaos.
We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep specialization across business services, particularly in residential and commercial services, property management and real estate services, PropTech and vertical SaaS, energy, and infrastructure. We have covered more than 30,000 units across our property management mandates alone and maintain direct relationships with the PE platforms, strategic consolidators, public acquirers, regional roll-up sponsors, and independent sponsors actively transacting in business services today.
We work within the private equity middle market and strategic operator ecosystem, not as competitors to large investment banks. Our clients are founder-led businesses and the institutional capital partners that buy them, invest alongside them, and grow with them. 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.
Every mandate is run confidentially and bespoke to the business. We do not run open auctions, list companies on public marketplaces, or push teasers to aggregator networks. Information is shared only with named buyers we have vetted and qualified, under NDA, on a timeline we control.
The best time to engage an M&A advisor is 12 to 24 months before you intend to transact. The earliest conversations are about positioning, not process. What would a buyer pay for this business today? Where is the recurring revenue gap, customer concentration, or management dependency holding back the multiple? Which PE platforms and strategic consolidators should we be building relationships with now? What would it take to reach platform multiple territory in the next 24 months?
Those are the conversations that change outcomes. We offer complimentary initial consultations for business services founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA.