Engineering Services M&A

Engineering Services M&A Advisory

Engineering services is one of the most consistently consolidated categories in the lower middle market today. Private equity paid an average of 10.6x EBITDA for construction and engineering businesses from 2018 through 2025 — a 41% premium to what strategic buyers paid. Data center demand, infrastructure investment, and a structural shortage of licensed professionals have converged to push valuations higher than they have been in a decade. For founder-led engineering firms with specialty capabilities in growth end markets, the current window is as strong as the sector has seen.

Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep specialization in engineering services tied to real estate, industrial, energy, and infrastructure markets. We advise founder and family-owned engineering firms on sell-side M&A, recapitalizations, buy-side roll-ups, and strategic partnerships across MEP engineering, specialty engineering for data center and life sciences end markets, environmental and civil engineering, and engineering firms with integrated construction management capabilities. We operate within the private equity and strategic operator ecosystem rather than competing with large investment banks.

If you are operating an engineering services firm generating $1M+ in EBITDA and thinking about a transaction in the next 12 to 24 months, this page is for you.

The Engineering Services M&A environment

Engineering services M&A activity surged through the second half of 2025 and has only accelerated into early 2026. The demand drivers are historic in their combination. Roughly $2 trillion in federal infrastructure spending is deploying now, matched by state and local investment. AI data center development is pulling specialty MEP, electrical, and infrastructure engineering capabilities forward at a pace the industry has never seen. The One Big Beautiful Bill included targeted stimulus for semiconductor construction, which flows directly through engineering firms designing those fabs. Labor shortages remain acute across the licensed professional base (PEs, RAs, CCMs), with more than 57% of contractors citing skilled labor as their primary concern and a structural deficit continuing to drive “acqui-hire” dynamics into M&A processes.

The transaction prints that define the market reflect this demand. Legence acquired The Bowers Group in November 2025 at approximately $475 million, representing 0.6x EV/Revenue and 6.6x EV/EBITDA, with Bowers’ $1.3 billion in contract commitments and $825 to $875 million in expected 2026 revenue positioning the platform directly into data center and life sciences end markets. Morgan Stanley Capital Partners announced a majority investment in Olsson, Inc. in January 2026, taking a substantial position in one of the country’s leading employee-owned engineering and design firms. Godspeed Capital Management established a new MEP engineering platform in January 2026 by investing in Engineering Resource Group (ERG) as a Southeast base. RTM Engineering Consultants — a 600-professional multidisciplinary MEP, structural, and civil engineering firm with licensure in all 50 states — completed a strategic minority investment from MML Capital in January 2026. Salas O’Brien merged with RFS Engineering and Rock Brook. Ardurra Group acquired Remington & Vernick Engineers. GHK Capital Partners acquired CPL. First Reserve announced a strategic growth partnership with WGI.

The valuation math underneath this activity is unambiguous. Capstone Partners’ analysis of construction and engineering M&A from 2018 through 2025 shows PE buyers paying an average of 10.6x EV/EBITDA versus 7.5x paid by strategic buyers during the same period. That 41% PE premium reflects buy-and-build economics, debt-financed deployment advantage, and the ability of sophisticated sponsors to pay forward for post-close synergy. With PE competition now structurally embedded in engineering services M&A, average multiples are expected to continue moving higher into 2026. Founders who transact through this window sell into the deepest and most competitive buyer market the category has ever seen.

Engineering Services Environment img

How the market actually values engineering services companies

Engineering services multiples have widened meaningfully between average firms and best-in-class platforms. PE buyers pay a significant premium to strategic buyers on average, and specialty capabilities tied to high-demand end markets drive further multiple expansion. The ranges below are directional benchmarks for how credible buyers approach engineering services valuation in 2026. The specific multiple for any firm depends heavily on discipline mix, end-market exposure, and scale.

Small, owner-operated engineering firms (under $1M EBITDA)

Typically trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 4x to 6x range. Without meaningful licensed professional depth, specialty capabilities, or recurring client relationships, these firms are priced for tuck-in integration into larger AE platforms.

Mid-market engineering firms ($1M to $5M EBITDA)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 6x to 9x range for well-run firms with multi-discipline capabilities, documented utilization metrics, and management teams that operate without the founder. This is the sweet spot for regional PE-backed AE platforms executing add-on strategies.

Regional engineering platforms ($5M to $15M EBITDA)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 8x to 12x range when acquired by strategic consolidators or PE platforms. Firms with strong end-market exposure (data center, life sciences, healthcare, semiconductor, municipal infrastructure) and multi-state licensure command the upper end of this range.

Platform-scale engineering firms ($15M+ EBITDA, institutional quality)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 10x to 15x+ range when acquired by mega-cap PE, national AEC strategic consolidators, or public company acquirers. The RTM Engineering Consultants / MML Capital investment and the Morgan Stanley Capital Partners investment in Olsson both reflect what sophisticated capital pays for institutional-quality multi-discipline engineering platforms.

Discipline and end-market mix drive meaningful multiple variation. Four illustrative examples from the current market:

MEP engineering firms serving data center, life sciences, healthcare, and semiconductor end markets command premium multiples because of the growth profile of those end markets and the technical barriers to entry. The Godspeed Capital platform formation around ERG, MML Capital’s investment in RTM, and Legence’s acquisition of Bowers all target MEP capabilities specifically.

Civil and infrastructure engineering firms with public-sector exposure trade at premiums tied to the infrastructure bill tailwind. Ardurra’s acquisition of Remington & Vernick reflects the premium for water, transportation, and municipal engineering capabilities.

Specialty engineering consulting (forensic, commissioning, energy, sustainability, climate resilience) trade at premiums reflecting professional services economics and lower execution risk than integrated design-build work. BKF’s acquisition of Lotus Water and the WSB/NEO Virtus transaction reflect premium multiples for specialty technical consulting.

Multi-discipline engineering platforms with integrated construction management capabilities trade at premiums to pure design firms because of the recurring revenue and delivery capabilities that carry through the full project lifecycle.

Five factors move the multiple more than anything else. First, licensed professional depth and demographic distribution. Firms with young PE/RA pipelines and documented succession plans trade at premiums to firms concentrated in retirement-age principals. Second, end-market mix. Data center, semiconductor, life sciences, healthcare, and public infrastructure exposure command premiums over pure commercial office work. Third, utilization and project accounting discipline. Clean utilization metrics and project-level margin visibility drive buyer confidence directly. Fourth, multi-state licensure and geographic footprint. Fifth, client diversification and recurring relationship quality.

The buyer universe for engineering services

Running a competitive process means knowing who is in the market, what they are paying for, and how to position the firm for each buyer type. In the lower middle market engineering services space, five buyer archetypes matter.

Public AEC strategic consolidators

WSP Global, Stantec, AECOM, Jacobs, Tetra Tech, HDR, Parsons, Kimley-Horn, and other scaled public AEC firms are actively acquiring to extend scale, discipline depth, and end-market exposure. WSP Global's announced $3.3 billion TRC transaction set a recent benchmark for public AEC consolidator valuations.

PE-backed AEC platforms

A deep layer of PE-backed national and regional AEC consolidators are actively acquiring tuck-ins. Olsson (MSCP), RTM (MML Capital), Salas O'Brien, Ardurra Group, Consor, WGI (First Reserve), CPL (GHK Capital Partners), Verdantas, WSB, Arora Engineers (Jacmel Partners), IMEG Corp, Pennoni, and 25+ additional PE-backed platforms compete for the same regional add-ons. New PE platforms continue to form, led by sponsors like Godspeed Capital Management.

Specialty-focused strategic operators

Strategic buyers expanding across specific discipline combinations (MEP firms adding structural, civil firms adding water resources, multidisciplinary firms adding specialty consulting). Legence's acquisition of Bowers and Salas O'Brien's multiple mergers reflect this thesis.

Infrastructure capital and specialty sponsors

First Reserve (energy, infrastructure, essential services), GHK Capital Partners (industrial and services), MML Capital, Jacmel Partners, Hunter Forest Capital, Godspeed Capital, and other sponsors specifically focused on engineering and technical services are executing disciplined roll-up strategies. These sponsors often pay the strongest multiples for platforms that fit their specific thesis.

Independent sponsors and family offices

Opportunistic capital looking for well-run founder-led engineering firms with clear operational upside. Often move faster than institutional sponsors and offer structural flexibility, though with smaller dry powder and tighter financing dependencies.

A sell-side process that runs only one of these channels leaves money on the table. A process that runs all five, calibrated to your specific firm, drives genuine competitive tension and materially better outcomes at close. We build each buyer list from named targets, reach them through direct relationships, and never rely on public listings or auction platforms to generate interest.

The case against generalist brokers

Engineering services does not trade like a generic services business. The drivers of value are recurring versus project-based revenue mix, backlog quality and visibility, end-market exposure (data center, life sciences, healthcare, semiconductor, infrastructure, civil/municipal), licensed professional depth and demographics (PEs, RAs, CCMs), project delivery capabilities, client diversification, and the sophistication of the systems managing utilization, project accounting, and quality control. 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 engineering services specifically, and leave substantial value on the table.

 

The confidentiality problem is just as serious. Many brokers list engineering services businesses on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, post teasers to broker networks, or run open auctions that expose the firm to buyers with no real capacity to close. In engineering services, that leak reaches licensed professionals, project managers, key clients, and competing firms within days. Engineering firm clients often require multi-year qualified vendor relationships, and ownership changes during active projects create real project continuity risk. Licensed professionals (PEs, RAs) are mobile at will and often carry client relationships with them. A leak during a sale process can directly trigger professional staff attrition, client contract reviews, and competitive poaching before any deal closes.

 

The right advisor for an engineering services firm is one who understands the subsector, speaks the language of billable utilization, project accounting, licensed professional retention, backlog conversion, end-market positioning and knows which PE-backed platforms, public strategics, and independent sponsors are paying premium multiples today for which specialty disciplines and end-market combinations.

Engineering Services banner img

Who we serve

Engineering services is a broad category and the AEC-specialist M&A advisory market (Morrissey Goodale, Zweig Group, AEC Advisors, PSMJ, FMI Capital Advisors) is well-developed for traditional architecture and civil engineering firm transactions. Parkland’s engineering services practice is focused specifically on the intersection with our core sector strengths: real estate, industrial services, infrastructure, and growth end markets where we have genuine relationships with the buyer universe.

MEP engineering firms in growth end markets

Multidisciplinary mechanical, electrical, and plumbing engineering firms with specialty capabilities in data center, life sciences, healthcare, and semiconductor end markets. This is our sweet spot given our existing expertise in data center real estate, industrial services, and facility services.

Engineering firms with integrated CM capabilities

Firms combining engineering with CM agency, owner’s representative, or program management services, particularly those positioned for data center, life sciences, or healthcare project delivery.

Specialty engineering consulting firms

Forensic engineering, commissioning, energy consulting, sustainability engineering, climate resilience, and related specialty consulting firms with professional services economics and strong recurring client relationships.

Civil and environmental engineering firms

Civil engineering firms serving real estate development, industrial site development, water and wastewater infrastructure, and municipal clients across our core real estate and infrastructure end markets.

Multidisciplinary firms with growth end-market concentration

Engineering firms with concentrated exposure to data center, semiconductor, life sciences, healthcare, or critical infrastructure end markets where Parkland’s buyer relationships create meaningful advantage.

ESOP and succession-oriented engineering firms

Founder-led engineering firms where the founder is considering the combination of succession planning, partial liquidity, and continued growth partnership with a PE sponsor (similar in structure to the Olsson/MSCP, RTM/MML, and WGI/First Reserve transactions).
For pure architecture firms, traditional civil engineering firms without specialty end-market focus, and transactions specifically oriented toward AE succession planning in traditional disciplines, we generally recommend founders engage Morrissey Goodale, Zweig Group, AEC Advisors, or other AEC-specialist advisors. We are direct about where we add value versus where a specialist advisor is better positioned for the specific engagement.

What we do

Sell-side M&A

Full-process representation from preparation through close. This is the core of our practice.

Majority and minority recapitalizations

For founders who want significant liquidity without a full exit, recaps let you take chips off the table while keeping meaningful equity for the next chapter with a strategic or PE partner. Minority recapitalizations are particularly common in engineering services transactions (the RTM/MML investment is a representative example) and we negotiate them aggressively on behalf of sellers.

Buy-side advisory and roll-up strategies

For founders and platforms actively acquiring to scale in specific engineering disciplines, add adjacent capabilities, or build end-market exposure. We run structured buy-side programs targeting specific discipline mix, geographic footprint, and end-market exposure goals.

Pre-process advisory

For founders 12 to 36 months out from a transaction, focused on the value drivers that move multiples in engineering services: end-market repositioning, licensed professional depth development, utilization and project accounting discipline, client diversification, and platform readiness.

ESOP and employee ownership transitions

For founders considering transitions from existing employee-ownership or ESOP structures to PE partnership (following the model of the Olsson/MSCP transaction). These transactions have specific structural complexity that requires coordinated tax, corporate, and employee-benefit advisory.

Long-term client relationships across multiple transactions

We frequently work with the same clients across multiple deals over time. That often means running a buy-side roll-up program to scale the platform, then a recapitalization or full sale years later. Our best relationships span years and several transactions because the work compounds.

The 12 months before a process matter more than the process itself

Most of the value in an engineering services sale is made in the year before the teaser goes out. Repositioning end-market mix toward high-multiple categories (data center, life sciences, healthcare, semiconductor, municipal infrastructure), developing licensed professional depth and documenting succession plans, improving utilization and project accounting discipline, reducing top-client concentration, expanding multi-state licensure footprint, and cleaning up 36 months of normalized financials can each add tens of percent to the final sale price.

The reverse is also true. Going to market with messy project accounting, thin licensed professional depth, heavy founder dependency on specific client relationships, undocumented succession plans, or unresolved utilization issues leaves value on the table that no process can recover. Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in engineering services transactions and typically tie a meaningful portion of the purchase price to post-close performance, backlog conversion, and key professional retention 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 firm for the outcome they actually want.

Our process

A Parkland sell-side engagement typically runs five to twelve months from engagement to close. We operate with five principles.

One senior advisor leads every deal, start to finish

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.

Every process is confidential and targeted

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 firm. Confidentiality is protected at every stage, which matters most in engineering services where the wrong signal to licensed professionals, clients, or competitors can damage the firm before a deal ever closes.

Every buyer list is built from scratch

We do not recycle. For each mandate, we construct a buyer universe tailored to your specific discipline mix, end-market exposure, scale, and strategic fit, drawing on our proprietary database, active coverage relationships, and direct conversations with the public AEC strategics, PE-backed AE platforms, and infrastructure sponsor universes.

We run a genuinely competitive process

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, and in a market where PE buyers are paying a 41% premium to strategics on average, the competitive tension among buyer types matters enormously. Competitive tension does not require a public auction. It requires the right buyers engaged in parallel, with the same information and the same deadline.

We protect certainty to close as hard as we protect price

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.

How we protect confidentiality

Confidentiality is operational, not a talking point. For most engineering services founders, the concern is concrete. A premature leak to licensed professionals can drive attrition at the worst possible moment in a process. A leak to key clients can reopen contract negotiations and trigger competitive proposals on upcoming projects. A leak to competitors reaches the referral network within days. Every practice below is designed specifically to prevent those outcomes.

Blind teasers

The initial marketing document describes the firm without identifying it. Revenue profile, discipline mix, end-market exposure, and geographic footprint are calibrated so buyers can evaluate fit without surfacing the firm name.

Named-buyer outreach only

We reach out directly to specific, pre-qualified buyers we have vetted for strategic fit and financial capability. We do not publish listings on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, upload mandates to buyer aggregator platforms, post on broker networks, or run any form of open online auction.

Mandatory NDA before any confidential disclosure

No buyer receives firm-identifying materials until they have executed an NDA. We negotiate NDA terms with buyer counsel when required to protect the seller’s interests, including non-solicit provisions that protect against buyer poaching of licensed professionals, project leadership, or client relationships if the deal does not close.

A tight executive summary, not a 100-page CIM

Most firms produce oversized CIMs that tell sophisticated engineering services buyers what they already know. We do not. We focus on a sharp, well-written executive summary that frames the strategic thesis, the discipline and end-market economics, the professional depth, and the numbers that matter, paired with a well-organized data room that gives serious buyers the materials they actually need to underwrite.

Tiered information disclosure

Sensitive information is released in stages. High-level financials and the executive summary come first. Client concentration, utilization metrics, and discipline-level margin detail come after NDA and initial interest. Deep diligence materials, including full client lists, project-level detail, and licensed professional compensation data, are released only after LOI is signed.

Controlled management involvement

In most processes, only the founder and a small number of trusted corporate leaders initially know the firm is in a transaction. Licensed professionals, project managers, and practice leadership are not informed until post-LOI. We coordinate carefully on when and how to expand the information circle, tying broader management exposure to specific diligence milestones.

Buyer vetting before any disclosure

Before a buyer receives any firm-identifying information, we verify identity, fund or platform credentials, and track record of closing in engineering services specifically. Tire-kickers, competitors fishing for professional and client intelligence, and platforms without real acquisition capacity do not make it past the initial gate.

We manage the data room and confidentiality end to end

We own the workflow, from NDA execution through buyer access controls, document tracking, and Q&A coordination. The founder stays focused on running the firm while we manage the process.

Employee, client, and community communications managed last

Any communication to licensed professionals, project managers, clients, or the broader market is coordinated only after an LOI is signed, confirmatory diligence is substantially complete, and the founder has approved the messaging and timing.
The result is a process where the right buyers see the right information at the right time, and no one else learns the firm is in a transaction until the founder is ready for them to know.

Culture, legacy, and the outcome that actually matters

Economics matter. They are not the only thing that matters.

The best outcomes we deliver for engineering services founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the firm, takes care of the licensed professionals who built it, and continues to serve the clients who trust the brand. Engineering services is a deeply professional-relationship business at every level. Clients hire the firm because of the licensed professionals and project teams they trust with their design risk. Licensed professionals hold those relationships together over decades. A high headline price from a buyer who cuts senior professional capacity, disrupts firm culture, or breaks client relationships is not a win. It is a reputation cost that follows the founder through every future conversation in the industry, and often creates direct financial exposure through earnout clawbacks tied to backlog performance and professional retention.

This is especially true given the industry’s chronic licensed professional shortages. Every buyer is underwriting the risk that acquired PEs, RAs, and key project leaders will walk out, and every founder should be thinking about what the firm looks like 12 to 18 months post-close under different ownership, compensation structures, and integration pressure. The right buyer has done this many times and knows how to preserve the team and professional culture. The wrong buyer does not, and the consequences compound quickly in a business where client trust is built one project at a time.

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 licensed professionals and clients 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 firms at the same time. Engineering firms do not slow down for a sale. Proposals go out. Projects close out. Client meetings happen. Emergencies arise on active projects. 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.

Why Parkland

We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus on real estate services, industrial services, construction management, facilities management, and the broader infrastructure and business services ecosystem. Engineering services fits naturally into our sector coverage, particularly for firms with specialty capabilities tied to data center, semiconductor, life sciences, healthcare, and critical infrastructure end markets. Dallas-Fort Worth is the third-largest data center market in North America, home to the Samsung Taylor semiconductor fabrication investment and Texas Instruments’ expansion, and a major healthcare and commercial development hub, which puts us in daily contact with the strategic operators, PE sponsors, and independent capital sources most actively transacting in engineering 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 firms 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 engineering services space and focused on the kind of relationship-driven process that delivers real outcomes for founders.

Every mandate is run confidentially and bespoke to the firm. We do not run open auctions, list firms 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.

When to start the conversation

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 firm today? Where is the end-market concentration, licensed professional depth, or utilization discipline holding back the multiple? Which AEC strategic consolidators and PE platforms 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 engineering services founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA.

Common questions

Should I use an AEC-specialist advisor (Morrissey Goodale, Zweig Group, AEC Advisors) instead of Parkland?
Honestly, it depends on your firm. The AEC specialist advisors have deep expertise in traditional architecture and civil engineering firm transactions, proprietary AEC-specific pricing databases, and strong relationships with the AEC buyer universe. For pure architecture firms or traditional civil engineering firms focused on AE succession planning, we often recommend our clients consider those advisors alongside us or instead of us. Where Parkland adds genuine differentiation is in engineering services firms positioned at the intersection of our core sector strengths: MEP firms serving data center, semiconductor, life sciences, and healthcare end markets; engineering firms with integrated construction management capabilities; and specialty engineering consulting tied to real estate, industrial, and infrastructure markets. For those firms, our buyer relationships and sector fluency create meaningful advantages. We will tell you in the first conversation where we are the right fit and where you might be better served elsewhere.
Significantly. End-market exposure to data center, AI infrastructure, semiconductor, life sciences, healthcare, and critical utility work is the single most important driver of premium multiples in engineering services today. Legence’s acquisition of The Bowers Group at $475 million and 6.6x EV/EBITDA specifically targeted data center mechanical engineering capabilities, and that transaction is directionally representative of what the market pays for platforms positioned into high-growth end markets. The MML Capital investment in RTM and the Godspeed Capital formation of ERG similarly reflect premium pricing for MEP firms with healthcare, education, and institutional end-market exposure. For founders with this exposure, the current market window is exceptionally strong.
Most sell-side processes run six to twelve months from engagement to close. Clean financials, well-organized project accounting, documented utilization metrics, and diligence readiness compress the timeline. Licensed professional succession issues, heavy founder dependency, or unresolved project disputes extend it.
We typically engage with engineering services firms generating $1M+ in EBITDA. For pre-process advisory, we will work with earlier-stage firms if there is a clear path to transaction readiness.
Our engagements are structured with a monthly retainer paid throughout the engagement period, plus a success fee at close typically structured as a percentage of transaction value. The retainer covers the active work of running the process, and the success fee is calibrated to deal size, complexity, and structure. We walk through the economics in detail during the initial consultation.
Employee-owned firms have specific structural complexity that requires coordinated tax, corporate, and ERISA/employee-benefit advisory. The Morgan Stanley Capital Partners investment in Olsson (January 2026) is a recent example of a successful transition from an ESOP or significant employee ownership structure to PE partnership, and similar transactions are increasingly common as employee-owned engineering firms look for succession pathways, growth capital, or partial liquidity. These transactions are structurally different from traditional sell-side M&A and require careful coordination across multiple advisor workstreams. Parkland can help evaluate ESOP-to-PE transitions and coordinate the specialist advisory needed to execute them well.
Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in engineering services transactions, typically tying 10% to 30% of the purchase price to post-close performance (revenue, EBITDA, backlog conversion, key professional retention) measured over 12 to 24 months. Parkland negotiates earnout terms aggressively on behalf of sellers, including narrower performance definitions, seller-favorable measurement methodologies, and protection against buyer actions that could interfere with earnout achievement. How the earnout is structured often matters as much as the headline multiple.
For many engineering services founders, yes. Minority recapitalizations (following the RTM/MML Capital or WGI/First Reserve model) allow founders to take meaningful partial liquidity while retaining control of firm strategy, professional culture, and succession planning. The current market is unusually favorable for minority transactions because PE sponsors understand the importance of professional culture preservation in AE firms and are structuring investments accordingly. We help founders evaluate minority recapitalization alongside majority sale alternatives to determine which structure best fits their goals.
Yes. We run buy-side mandates for founders and platforms executing roll-up strategies across engineering services sub-verticals. Many of our best client relationships involve multiple transactions over time, often a buy-side program to scale the platform followed by a recapitalization or full sale, or a recap today with a roll-up strategy to follow.
We do not list businesses on public marketplaces, post teasers to buyer aggregators, or run open online auctions. Every outreach is direct and limited to named buyers we have pre-qualified for strategic fit and financial capability. All parties execute an NDA before receiving any confidential materials. Confidentiality is protected at every stage of the process, start to finish.
Yes. We advise on secondary sales, sponsor-to-sponsor transactions, and minority recapitalizations for engineering services firms with existing institutional capital on the cap table.

Request a Consultation

Complimentary consultations are available for engineering services founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA. We will give you a candid read on your positioning, the likely buyer universe for your specific firm, and what the market is currently paying for engineering services platforms like yours.