Valuation & Exit Planning
Most M&A advisors treat valuation and exit planning as separate services. Founders ask “what’s my business worth?” and get a number. Then later they ask “how do I prepare to sell?” and get a checklist. The reality is these are not two different conversations. They are the same multi-year work viewed from two different angles, and treating them separately is one of the most common reasons founders leave value on the table.
Framework
Every founder-led business has two valuations: what it would sell for today in its current state, and what it could sell for at the right exit if the right work is done in the planning window. The gap between those numbers is often 30% to 100%, and closing the gap is the work product of integrated valuation and exit planning.
The current valuation reflects the business as it exists right now, with all its strengths and weaknesses. Customer concentration, owner dependency, contract structure, financial cleanliness, management depth, sector positioning, and operational systems all factor in. A candid current valuation is the foundation of every meaningful exit planning conversation. Without it, founders default to optimistic assumptions about what the business is worth and make planning decisions based on inflated expectations.
The potential valuation reflects what the business could realistically be worth if specific value drivers are improved in the planning window. Which value drivers matter and how much they can move the multiple depends on the founder’s specific business and sector. A business with one major customer at 60% concentration might gain 1.5 to 2.5 multiple turns from diversification. A founder-dependent service business might gain 1 to 2 turns from management depth development. A commodity-positioned manufacturer might gain 2 to 3 turns from end-market repositioning toward premium categories. The work involves identifying which gaps are real, which are addressable, and which require the planning runway available.
The gap analysis is sector-specific work. What drives multiples in HVAC services is different from what drives multiples in industrial distribution, which is different from what drives multiples in specialty manufacturing. Generic exit planning checklists miss the sector-specific value drivers that actually move multiples in any given sector. Closing the gap requires understanding which factors matter most in the founder’s specific sector and prioritizing the highest-leverage improvements.
Value drivers
The reasons businesses fail to capture their potential valuation are consistent across sectors. Founders preparing for exit need to honestly evaluate their business against each.
The pattern: lower middle market businesses fail to capture their potential valuation because they go to market with structural issues that compress multiples or kill deals, when those same issues could have been materially addressed in the planning window before going to market.
The major workstreams in our integrated approach.
Benchmarks
The ranges below are directional benchmarks for lower middle market businesses in the sectors Parkland covers. These are starting points for valuation conversations, not conclusions — company-specific factors typically move multiples 1.0x to 3.0x in either direction within any given cell.
| Sector | $1M – $5M EBITDA | $5M – $15M EBITDA | $15M+ EBITDA |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential Services | 5x-9x | 8x-12x | 11x-18x+ |
| Industrial Services | 6x-9x | 8x-12x | 11x-20x+ |
| Facilities Management | 4x-6x | 6x-9x | 9x-14x+ |
| Construction Management | 6x-9x | 9x-13x | 12x-18x+ |
| Engineering Services | 6x-9x | 8x-12x | 10x-15x+ |
| Infrastructure Services | 6x-10x | 9x-14x | 11x-18x+ |
| Energy Services | 5x-8x | 7x-12x | 10x-16x+ |
| Distribution and Logistics | 5x-8x | 7x-11x | 9x-14x+ |
| Manufacturing | 5x-8x | 7x-12x | 9x-14x+ |
| Healthcare-Adjacent Services | 6x-9x | 8x-12x | 10x-15x+ |
| Staffing | 4x-7x | 6x-10x | 8x-13x+ |
| Franchise (franchisor) | 5x-9x | 8x-14x | 10x-16x+ |
| Property Management | 4x-9x | 6x-12x | 8x-14x+ |
| SaaS and Tech-Enabled Services | 6x-12x | 9x-18x | 12x-25x+ |
| Consumer Service Businesses | 5x-8x | 6x-10x | 8x-12x+ |
From multiples to dollars
Multiples are useful shorthand, but founders care about dollars. The table below translates EBITDA multiples into approximate enterprise value ranges.
| EBITDA Level | Approximate EV Range |
|---|---|
| $500K | $1.5M – $2.5M |
| $1M | $4M – $7M |
| $2M | $10M – $16M |
| $3M | $15M – $24M |
| $5M | $30M – $45M |
| $7M | $49M – $70M |
| $10M | $70M – $110M |
| $15M | $120M – $180M |
| $20M | $180M – $240M |
| $30M | $270M – $390M |
These ranges assume well-run businesses in standard sectors with strong fundamentals. Premium businesses in premium sectors trade above; businesses with weak fundamentals trade below.
Headline enterprise value is not what the founder receives in cash at close. After working capital adjustments, net debt deduction, escrow holdbacks, earnouts, transaction expenses, and tax leakage, actual cash at close typically runs 60% to 85% of headline enterprise value. Sophisticated process management can materially improve this ratio, but founders planning their next chapter need to understand the difference between headline value and actual proceeds.
Timing
Process
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