Manufacturing M&A

Manufacturing M&A Advisory

Manufacturing M&A activity accelerated through the back half of 2025 and has carried that momentum into 2026. Chart Industries and Flowserve agreed to merge in a $19 billion deal. Siemens announced the acquisition of Altair for roughly $10.6 billion. Nippon Steel closed its $14.9 billion U.S. Steel acquisition. Honeywell acquired JM Catalyst Technologies at approximately 11x EBITDA. Beneath those megadeals, lower middle market manufacturing is among the most active M&A sub-sectors in the country as reshoring tailwinds, aging founder demographics, and renewed PE deployment converge.

Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across industrial services, distribution and logistics, infrastructure services, energy services, and the broader real estate and business services ecosystem. Our manufacturing practice is focused on founder and family-owned specialty manufacturing businesses at the intersection of our core sector strengths.

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

The Manufacturing M&A environment

Manufacturing M&A entered 2026 with the strongest tailwind combination the sector has seen in a decade. Reshoring and onshoring continue to drive valuation uplift for U.S.-based manufacturing assets, particularly in semiconductors, batteries, specialty materials, defense components, and life sciences manufacturing. The Section 168(n) 100% immediate deduction for qualified production property (IRS Notice 2026-16) effectively subsidizes domestic manufacturing capacity expansion. Interest rate stability and easing financing conditions have reopened leverage markets. Aging family-owned business owners are reaching succession deadlines at exactly the moment PE deployment has reaccelerated.

The transaction prints at the top of the market reflect this capital deployment. Chart Industries and Flowserve’s $19 billion merger creates a scaled equipment platform with concentrated exposure to LNG, nuclear, and data center end markets. Nippon Steel’s $14.9 billion U.S. Steel acquisition closed after extended regulatory review. Siemens announced its $10.6 billion acquisition of Altair. Quikrete and Summit Materials agreed to combine at roughly $11.5 billion. Honeywell acquired JM Catalyst Technologies at approximately 11x EBITDA. Thermo Fisher acquired Sanofi’s Ridgefield sterile fill-finish manufacturing site. LG Energy Solution agreed to sell U.S. battery factory assets to Honda for $2.86 billion. Lyten’s approximately $5 billion acquisition of Northvolt’s battery manufacturing assets creates a vertically integrated battery platform.

The lower middle market is at least as active. Private equity reemerged as a dominant force through 2025 with five consecutive quarters of platform acquisition growth per Capstone Partners. The share of middle market deals involving PE buyers reached a near-record 45% by Q3 2025. Ventus Industrial Partners formed Aeron Defense through acquisitions of General Tool Company and Magna Machine. American Industrial Partners, CORE Industrial Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Blue Point Capital, Audax, Platinum Equity, Nautic Partners, Kohlberg, Wind Point, Cortec Group, Genstar, Trive Capital, Pfingsten, Pacific Avenue, Warren Equity, and the broader industrial PE universe continue to deploy capital across every manufacturing sub-vertical.

The structural case for transacting in 2026 is stronger than it has been in several years. Private equity firms hold an estimated $4 trillion in global dry powder. Aging fund vintages create “use it or lose it” deployment pressure. Aging founder demographics create consistent supply of high-quality family-owned businesses reaching succession decisions. Reshoring policy is bipartisan and durable through the current administration cycle. For well-positioned founder-led manufacturers, the buyer pool is competitive and deep.

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How the market actually values manufacturing companies

Manufacturing multiples vary more significantly by sub-category than almost any other sector Parkland covers. The ranges below are directional benchmarks for how credible buyers approach lower middle market manufacturing valuation in 2026. The specific multiple for any business depends heavily on end-market exposure, technology differentiation, contract structure, and scale.

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

Typically trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 3x to 5x range. Without meaningful technology differentiation, customer diversification, or recurring revenue content, these businesses are priced for tuck-in integration into larger platforms.

Mid-market manufacturing ($1M to $5M EBITDA)

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 5x to 8x range for well-run businesses with multi-year customer relationships, documented quality systems, and management teams that operate without the founder. Specialty manufacturers with defense, aerospace, life sciences, or data center end-market exposure command the upper end. The sweet spot for regional PE-backed platforms and strategic consolidators.

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

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 7x to 12x range when acquired by strategic consolidators or PE platforms. Specialty manufacturers with clear end-market concentration (defense/aerospace, electrification, semiconductor, life sciences, infrastructure), meaningful technology differentiation, or recurring aftermarket revenue command the upper end.

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

Trade on adjusted EBITDA multiples in the 9x to 14x+ range when acquired by mega-cap PE, specialty-focused sponsors, national strategic consolidators, or public company acquirers. Honeywell’s acquisition of JM Catalyst Technologies at approximately 11x EBITDA reflects directional pricing for specialty industrial assets at scale.

End-market and capability mix drive meaningful multiple variation. Five illustrative examples from the current market:

Defense and aerospace manufacturing. Premium category given rising global defense budgets, specialty certification barriers (AS9100, DFARS, ITAR), and concentrated OEM customer relationships. Ventus Industrial Partners’ formation of Aeron Defense through General Tool and Magna Machine reflects the PE thesis in this space.

Electrification and battery manufacturing. Premium category given structural tailwinds in EV, energy storage, and grid-scale battery deployment. The Lyten/Northvolt ($5 billion) and LG/Honda ($2.86 billion) transactions reflect scale deployment.

Semiconductor and electronics manufacturing. Premium category given CHIPS Act investment, AI-driven semiconductor fabrication, and the onshoring thesis. Specialty manufacturers serving semiconductor and electronics end markets command particular premiums.

Life sciences and pharmaceutical manufacturing. Premium category given Thermo Fisher’s pattern of acquisitions and continued contract manufacturing and specialty biologics demand.

Industrial services manufacturing (tanks, vessels, specialty fabrication, engineered products). Solid mid-market category given stable end-market demand in energy, infrastructure, and industrial maintenance. Premium multiples for operators with meaningful recurring aftermarket or service content.

Five factors move the multiple more than anything else. First, end-market mix — defense, aerospace, semiconductor, electrification, life sciences, and data center exposure command premiums. Second, recurring revenue content — aftermarket parts, service contracts, consumables, and multi-year OEM supply agreements drive premium multiples. Third, technology and process differentiation — proprietary processes, specialty certifications, and barriers to entry. Fourth, management depth and skilled labor retention. Fifth, operational systems maturity (ERP, MES, quality systems, compliance documentation), which directly affects diligence efficiency and buyer underwriting of operational risk.

The buyer universe for manufacturing

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

Industrial-focused PE platforms

American Industrial Partners, CORE Industrial Partners, Wynnchurch Capital, Blue Point Capital, Audax, Platinum Equity, Nautic Partners, Kohlberg, KPS, Wind Point, Cortec Group, Arsenal Capital Partners, Genstar, Trive Capital, Pfingsten, Pacific Avenue, Warren Equity, Gauge Capital, Greenbriar, Bregal Sagemount, Ventus Industrial Partners, and the broader industrial-focused PE universe are actively deploying capital across manufacturing sub-verticals.

Public strategic consolidators

Specialty components and precision: Illinois Tool Works, Dover, Roper, AMETEK, TransDigm, Heico. Defense and aerospace: Moog, Curtiss-Wright, Kratos, AeroVironment. Industrial technology: Emerson, Parker Hannifin, Honeywell, Eaton. Building products: James Hardie, AZEK, Owens Corning. Specialty chemicals and materials: Arkema, Ashland, Johnson Matthey. Each is an active acquirer depending on sub-vertical fit.

Family offices and long-duration capital

Family office capital has become increasingly important in lower middle market manufacturing, particularly for family-owned succession situations where generational capital aligns naturally with family-owned business values. Many of the most successful lower middle market manufacturing transactions in recent years have involved family office buyers who prioritize continuity, legacy, and long-duration ownership over traditional PE exit horizons.

Specialty-focused strategic operators

Strategic buyers expanding across specific capability combinations (fabricators adding precision machining, specialty chemical producers adding specialty materials, OEMs acquiring strategic suppliers). Includes many privately held scaled manufacturers and family-controlled operators pursuing selective strategic acquisitions.

Independent sponsors

Opportunistic capital looking for well-run founder-led manufacturing businesses with clear operational upside. Often move faster than institutional sponsors and offer structural flexibility, though with smaller dry powder. Independent sponsors have been especially active in defense, aerospace, and specialty industrial manufacturing niches over the past 24 months.

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 business, 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

Manufacturing does not trade like a generic services business. The drivers of value are end-market exposure (defense, aerospace, data center, life sciences, electrification, semiconductor, infrastructure, consumer), customer concentration and contract structure, technology differentiation and process barriers to entry, recurring versus transactional revenue (aftermarket parts, service contracts, consumables), capital intensity and maintenance capex, operational systems maturity (ERP, MES, quality systems), labor model and skilled labor retention, regulatory and compliance depth (defense clearances, FDA, AS9100, ISO, specialty certifications), and the depth of engineering, operational, and commercial leadership. Generalist brokers miss most of this.

 

The confidentiality problem is equally serious. Many brokers list manufacturing businesses on BizBuySell or similar marketplaces, post teasers to broker networks, or run open auctions that expose the business to buyers with no real capacity to close. In manufacturing, that leak reaches plant managers, skilled operators, quality engineers, key customers, and competing manufacturers within days. Manufacturing customers often require multi-year supplier qualification and first article inspection processes. Skilled labor (CNC programmers, tool and die makers, welders, quality engineers) is extraordinarily mobile given persistent shortages. A leak during a sale process can directly trigger skilled labor attrition, customer sourcing reviews, and competitive poaching of key operators before any deal closes.

 

The right advisor for a manufacturing business is one who knows the subsector, speaks the language of part-level margin analysis, work-in-process economics, aftermarket attach rates, capital intensity and maintenance capex, quality systems and supplier qualifications, sub-vertical-specific end-market dynamics and knows which PE-backed platforms, public strategics, and specialty-focused sponsors are paying premium multiples today for which capability and end-market combinations.

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Who we serve

We work with founder and family-owned manufacturing businesses generating $1M+ in EBITDA across the following sub-verticals.

Precision manufacturing and machining

CNC machining, precision components, tool and die, specialty fabrication, and related precision manufacturing operators serving defense, aerospace, semiconductor, medical, and industrial OEM customers.

Specialty industrial manufacturing

Specialty pumps, valves, heat exchangers, specialty industrial equipment, and engineered products serving energy, chemical, water, industrial, and infrastructure end markets.

Tank and vessel manufacturing

Pressure vessel manufacturing, storage tank fabrication, specialty tank products, and related operators serving energy, water, chemical, and industrial end markets. Particularly relevant given the strong Texas and Gulf Coast concentration.

Defense and aerospace suppliers

Tier 2, Tier 3, and Tier 4 defense and aerospace suppliers, particularly those with AS9100, DFARS, ITAR, or specialty defense certifications, and those serving major defense prime contractors or Tier 1 aerospace OEMs.

Electrification and battery manufacturing

Battery components, battery storage assembly, power electronics, specialty motor manufacturing, and related electrification operators positioned for EV supply chain localization and energy storage deployment.

Semiconductor and electronics manufacturing

Specialty semiconductor equipment components, electronic manufacturing services (EMS), printed circuit board assembly, specialty electronics manufacturing, and related operators.

Specialty materials and chemicals

Specialty chemicals manufacturing, specialty materials production, engineered polymers, and related lower middle market operators. Larger transactions are typically better served by specialist advisors.

Industrial services manufacturing

Manufacturers producing specialty equipment, consumables, or components for the industrial services ecosystem, particularly those with meaningful aftermarket or recurring service content. Strong alignment with Parkland’s industrial services practice.

Building products & specialty construction

Manufacturers of specialty building products, construction components, specialty prefabrication, and related operators with differentiated capability or end-market focus.
If your business generates durable customer relationships, meaningful technology or capability differentiation, and defensible manufacturing operations, there is a buyer pool actively looking for it. Our job is to put you in front of the right ones.

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. Rollover structures and minority recapitalizations are particularly common in family-owned manufacturing transactions and we negotiate them aggressively on behalf of sellers.

Family-owned business succession advisory

For family-owned manufacturing businesses reaching generational succession decisions, we provide structured advisory on succession pathways, including full sales, family office partnerships that preserve continuity, management-led buyouts, ESOP formation, and hybrid structures.

Buy-side advisory and roll-up strategies

For founders and platforms actively acquiring to scale in specific manufacturing sub-verticals, add adjacent technical capabilities, or build end-market exposure in high-growth categories. We run structured buy-side programs targeting specific revenue profiles, capability mix, and end-market goals.

Capital partner search

For founders seeking majority or minority growth capital partners rather than full exits, we run structured capital partner search processes identifying financial sponsors whose thesis, timeline, and structural flexibility align with the founder’s continued ownership.

Pre-process advisory

For founders 12 to 36 months out from a transaction, focused on the value drivers that move multiples in manufacturing: end-market repositioning, aftermarket development, customer concentration reduction, technology and process differentiation, quality systems maturity, and management depth.

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

Most of the value in a manufacturing sale is made in the year before the teaser goes out. Repositioning end-market mix toward high-multiple categories (defense/aerospace, electrification, life sciences, semiconductor, data center), developing aftermarket and recurring revenue content, reducing top-customer concentration, documenting technology and process differentiation, maturing quality systems and operational documentation, developing management depth below the founder, 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 financials, undocumented quality systems, heavy customer concentration, thin management depth, unresolved compliance issues, or founder-dependent customer and supplier relationships leaves value on the table that no process can recover. Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in manufacturing transactions and typically tie a meaningful portion of the purchase price to post-close performance, customer retention, and operational continuity over 12 to 24 months. A clean book on strong systems reduces earnout risk materially and often allows us to negotiate tighter earnout terms.

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.

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 business — which matters most in manufacturing where the wrong signal to plant managers, quality engineers, skilled operators, OEM customers, or competitors can damage the business 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 sub-vertical, scale, end-market exposure, technology differentiation, and strategic fit, drawing on our proprietary database, active coverage relationships, and direct conversations with the industrial-focused PE, public strategic, family office, and specialty 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. In manufacturing where the spread between specialty industrial sponsors, public strategics, and family office capital can be meaningful, the competitive tension among buyer types matters enormously.

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 manufacturing founders, the concern is concrete. A premature leak to plant managers, quality engineers, or skilled operators can drive attrition at the worst possible moment in a process. A leak to OEM customers can trigger supplier sourcing reviews and qualification audits on upcoming programs. A leak to competitors reaches skilled labor and customer relationships within days. A leak to tier-1 suppliers or raw material vendors can trigger credit line reviews and terms adjustments. Every practice below is designed specifically to prevent those outcomes.

Blind teasers

The initial marketing document describes the business without identifying it. Revenue profile, product mix, end-market exposure, and geographic footprint are calibrated so buyers can evaluate fit without surfacing the company 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, or run any form of open online auction.

Mandatory NDA before any confidential disclosure

No buyer receives company-identifying materials until they have executed an NDA. We negotiate NDA terms with buyer counsel when required, including non-solicit provisions that protect against buyer poaching of plant managers, quality engineers, skilled operators, or customer relationships if the deal does not close.

A tight executive summary, not a 100-page CIM

We focus on a sharp, well-written executive summary that frames the strategic thesis, end-market and customer economics, technology and capability differentiation, and the numbers that matter, paired with a well-organized data room. The quality of the story and underlying data drive bids, not page count.

Tiered information disclosure

Sensitive information is released in stages. High-level financials and the executive summary come first. Customer concentration, product-level margins, and operational metrics come after NDA. Deep diligence materials, including full customer lists, individual contracts, quality system documentation, and wage 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 business is in a transaction. Plant managers, quality engineers, skilled operators, and regional leadership are not informed until post-LOI.

Buyer vetting before any disclosure

Before a buyer receives any company-identifying information, we verify identity, fund or platform credentials, and track record of closing in manufacturing specifically. Tire-kickers, competitors fishing for customer and operational 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 business while we manage the process.

Communications managed last

Any communication to plant managers, quality engineers, skilled operators, customers, suppliers, 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 business 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 manufacturing founders are the ones where the buyer honors the legacy of the business, takes care of the plant managers, quality engineers, skilled operators, and shop floor teams who built it, and continues to serve the OEM customers who trust the brand. Manufacturing is a deeply relationship-driven business at every level, often more so than many buyers initially appreciate. OEM customers contract with the business because of the execution reliability, quality consistency, and operational responsiveness it has built over decades. Plant managers and quality engineers hold customer relationships together across OEM qualification cycles that can take years to replicate. A high headline price from a buyer who cuts skilled labor, disrupts quality systems, or breaks customer trust is not a win.

This is especially true given the industry’s chronic skilled labor shortages. Every buyer is underwriting the risk that skilled operators, programmers, quality engineers, and key operational leadership will walk out. The right buyer has done this many times and knows how to preserve operational culture and skilled labor. The wrong buyer does not, and the consequences compound quickly in a business where a single major quality incident or customer sourcing decision can reset the trajectory.

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 skilled labor, quality systems, and OEM customer relationships they have acquired in the past. We talk to former sellers on the other side of acquisitions. Sometimes the right answer is not the highest offer. It is the right partner at a strong price.

Why Parkland

We are a Dallas-based lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across industrial services, distribution and logistics, infrastructure services, energy services, construction management, engineering services, facilities management, property management and real estate services, and the broader business services ecosystem. Texas is one of the most active manufacturing markets in the country, anchored by the Samsung Taylor semiconductor fabrication investment, Texas Instruments’ manufacturing expansion, a deep aerospace and defense manufacturing corridor (Lockheed Martin, Bell Helicopter, L3Harris, Raytheon), Gulf Coast energy infrastructure manufacturing, extensive specialty industrial manufacturing (particularly pressure vessels, tanks, specialty fabrication), and one of the most active reshoring investment destinations in the United States.

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 keeps us close to the buyers actually transacting in the lower middle market manufacturing 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 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.

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 business today? Where is the end-market exposure, customer concentration, or operational systems maturity holding back the multiple? Which industrial-focused sponsors 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 manufacturing founders generating at least $1M in EBITDA.

Common questions

My business is a family-owned manufacturer going through generational succession. What are my options?
Family-owned manufacturing succession is among the largest categories of lower middle market manufacturing M&A today. The primary structural options are: (1) Full sale to a strategic buyer (typically the highest headline price but most disruptive to family legacy); (2) Full sale to PE (competitive headline pricing with growth capital, but five to seven year exit horizon); (3) Majority recapitalization with PE (take substantial liquidity, retain meaningful equity); (4) Minority recapitalization with family office or long-duration capital (preserves family control); (5) ESOP formation (tax-advantaged transition, lower headline valuation); (6) Management-led buyout (preserves continuity, requires seller financing). We help families evaluate the full set of options rather than defaulting to any single approach.
Significantly. Defense and aerospace manufacturing is among the hottest lower middle market manufacturing sub-verticals in 2026. Rising global defense budgets, supply chain sovereignty concerns, AS9100 and DFARS certification barriers to entry, and concentrated OEM customer relationships all flow directly to multiple expansion. Ventus Industrial Partners’ formation of Aeron Defense through General Tool and Magna Machine reflects the PE consolidation thesis in this space.
Meaningfully. Reshoring and onshoring create valuation uplift for U.S.-based manufacturing assets, particularly in capital-intensive and specialty capability-intensive sub-sectors. The Section 168(n) 100% immediate deduction for qualified production property (IRS Notice 2026-16) provides direct tax subsidy for domestic manufacturing expansion. Thermo Fisher’s acquisition of Sanofi’s Ridgefield site and LG Energy Solution’s sale of U.S. battery assets to Honda reflect the pattern.
Directly and more than most founders realize. Concentration of more than 25-30% in a single customer typically triggers meaningful buyer caution. Concentration of 50%+ typically triggers significant multiple compression regardless of contract structure, and often requires earnout structures that tie a substantial portion of purchase price to specific customer retention. For founders with concentrated exposure, the most leveraged pre-process work is often diversifying into adjacent customers in similar end markets.
Most sell-side processes run six to twelve months from engagement to close. Clean financials, well-organized quality system documentation, diligence-ready operational data, and solid skilled labor retention compress the timeline. Unresolved compliance issues (AS9100, DFARS, ITAR, FDA, ISO), customer contract transferability problems, or environmental liabilities can extend it, sometimes significantly.
We typically engage with manufacturing businesses generating $1M+ in EBITDA. For pre-process advisory, we will work with earlier-stage businesses 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.
Significantly. Manufacturing businesses with meaningful aftermarket parts, service contracts, consumables, or recurring OEM supply revenue command premium multiples over pure transactional project-based manufacturing. Buyers underwrite recurring revenue differently — typically at higher multiples and with lower working capital risk. For founders whose businesses have latent aftermarket opportunity that is not currently captured, pre-process work focused on building this revenue stream is among the highest-leverage multiple-expansion opportunities available.
Increasingly meaningfully. Manufacturing businesses with demonstrated AI-enabled production systems, MES integration, predictive analytics, robotics deployment, and digital twin capabilities command premium multiples. Buyers are increasingly specific about AI and automation readiness in diligence, and businesses without meaningful technology integration face competitive pressure from acquirers building AI-enabled platforms.
These are among the most common sources of deal friction and purchase price adjustment in manufacturing M&A. Environmental liability (particularly for operators with long operating history), OSHA incident history, Phase 1 and Phase 2 environmental assessments, PFAS and emerging contaminant exposure, and regulatory compliance history all affect buyer underwriting directly. Clean documentation and proactive remediation materially reduce deal friction and support stronger headline pricing.
Yes. We run buy-side mandates for founders and platforms executing roll-up strategies across manufacturing 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.
Yes. We advise on secondary sales, sponsor-to-sponsor transactions, and minority recapitalizations for manufacturing platforms with existing institutional capital on the cap table.
Earnouts and performance-based consideration are common in manufacturing transactions, typically tying 15% to 35% of the purchase price to post-close performance (revenue, EBITDA, customer retention, key employee 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.

Request a Consultation

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