Exit Planning
Approximately 80% of lower middle market businesses that go to market do not sell. The reason is almost never that the business is bad — it is that the business was not prepared to be transferable. Exit planning is the multi-year work that determines whether your business sells at the bottom of the range, the top, or not at all.
Parkland Capital Partners is a lower middle market M&A advisory firm with deep sector focus across business services, residential and industrial services, real estate services, infrastructure services, manufacturing, and the broader commercial ecosystem. We work with founders 12 to 60 months before they want to transact.
The Workstreams
Exit planning is structurally different from running a transaction. The work spans personal objectives, business positioning, operational improvement, financial cleanup, tax structuring, and the eventual decision about which exit option fits the founder’s specific situation.
Most exit planning conversations start in the wrong place. The useful starting point is what the founder actually wants from the next 5 to 10 years: financial outcome (specific number, after-tax, accounting for liquidity timing), continued involvement, legacy preservation, and family wealth implications. Different objectives point toward different exit structures.
Before any meaningful planning conversation, the founder needs a candid read on what the business is worth today — not a generic industry multiple, but a specific, defensible valuation grounded in current market data, sector dynamics, and company-specific factors. The baseline determines whether the business can support the founder’s financial objectives.
Every business has specific value drivers and value killers. The work involves identifying which are strong, which are weak, which can be improved in the planning window, and which structurally cannot. This is sector-specific work — what drives multiples in HVAC services differs from industrial distribution or specialty manufacturing.
From the gap analysis, a phased roadmap covering 12, 24, and 36 month milestones. Customer concentration reduction, recurring revenue development, management depth building, operational systems modernization, financial cleanup, contract portfolio improvement, end-market repositioning, technology integration.
Transaction structure (asset versus stock sale), state tax considerations, estate planning integration, and personal wealth structuring all materially affect after-tax proceeds. Tax planning should begin years before close, particularly when ESOP formation, family wealth transfer, gifting strategies, or hybrid structures are under consideration.
As planning progresses, the conversation about which specific exit structure fits: strategic sale, sale to PE, majority recap, minority recap, ESOP formation, management buyout, family transition, search fund or ETA buyer, or hybrid structure. Each has different valuation, tax, structural, and lifestyle implications.
As the planned exit window approaches, the work shifts toward transaction readiness: data room preparation, third-party Quality of Earnings work, audit-readiness, legal cleanup, contract review, and the operational documentation that buyers require during diligence.
Market Context
The 2026 environment makes exit planning more important than at any time in the recent past. Several factors converge.
The largest cohort of business owners in U.S. history is approaching retirement age simultaneously. The oldest baby boomers turned 80 in 2026; the youngest are in their early 60s. The wave of business owners reaching exit decision points is genuinely historic.
Tens of trillions of dollars in business equity is in the process of changing hands over the next 10 to 20 years. The structural decisions individual founders make in their exits compound across the broader economy.
PE dry powder remains at multi-trillion levels. Strategic acquirers and family offices are deploying capital aggressively. But 2026 rewards prepared sellers — generic businesses with messy financials in non-competitive processes continue to receive disappointing offers, while well-positioned businesses in competitive processes achieve premium outcomes.
Multiple federal tax provisions affecting business sales are in flux through 2026 and 2027. Estate tax exemptions, capital gains treatment, qualified small business stock provisions, and state tax considerations create planning opportunities and risks that require coordinated specialty advisory.
Most businesses can be operated successfully by their founders. Far fewer can be transferred to a new owner without losing value. The gap between operability and transferability is the work product of exit planning, and bridging it materially determines outcomes.
A candid first conversation about your situation, your options, and the work that would materially improve outcomes given your planning window.
Exit Options
Different exit options fit different founder objectives. Each has different valuation, tax, structural, and lifestyle implications.
Sale to a competitor, customer, supplier, or strategic acquirer. Typically the highest headline price for businesses with meaningful synergies. Cash close is typical (often 90%+ at close), and the founder usually exits within 6 to 24 months. Best fit for founders ready for a clean break with substantial liquidity.
Sale to a PE firm or PE-backed platform. Typically 60-90% cash at close with the balance in rollover equity, earnout, or seller note. The founder often continues operating for 6 to 36 months post-close. Best fit for founders who want substantial liquidity plus continued upside on growth they have not captured.
Capital partner takes either a minority (20-49%) or majority (51-80%) equity stake. Founder retains meaningful equity and operational involvement. Best fit for founders who want partial liquidity now but not full exit, or who want a strategic capital partner to help build to a larger eventual exit.
Sale to a trust for the benefit of employees. The company borrows to buy the founder’s shares; the loan is repaid using company cash flow. Significant tax advantages for properly structured ESOPs. Best fit for founders prioritizing legacy and employee benefit over headline valuation, with strong cash flow and 5+ year planning runway.
Sale to next-generation family members or existing management team. Best fit for founders prioritizing continuity, legacy, and known buyer relationships. Headline valuations are typically lower than external sales, with substantial deferred consideration through seller financing.
Many sophisticated exits combine elements above: ESOP combined with leveraged recap, family transition with minority outside capital, management buyout with rollover equity. Hybrids often produce better outcomes than any single structure for founders with complex multi-stakeholder objectives.
ETA and search fund operators are increasingly active in the lower middle market — typically experienced operators raising capital to buy and run a single business. They tend to preserve culture and legacy more than institutional buyers and offer flexible deal terms, but typically pay less than competitive strategic or PE processes.
The 80% Failure Rate
The 80% failure rate in lower middle market sales has consistent causes. Founders preparing for exit need to honestly evaluate their business against each.
Timing
The right time depends on the founder’s specific situation, but the general principles are clear.
Ideal for founders contemplating ESOP formation, family wealth transfer, complex tax planning, or major operational repositioning. The longer runway allows full value driver development, multi-year financial preparation, management depth building, and tax structuring optimization.
Appropriate for most founders with reasonable business fundamentals who want to materially improve outcomes through positioning and operational work. Sufficient runway for customer concentration reduction, recurring revenue development, management depth, and financial cleanup.
The minimum useful planning window for most lower middle market businesses. Allows for financial cleanup, basic positioning work, and process readiness, but limits the ability to address structural issues like heavy customer concentration or thin management depth.
Transaction execution rather than exit planning. Pre-process work compresses into Quality of Earnings, data room construction, and process readiness rather than fundamental value driver development. Founders should be honest about what can realistically be improved versus presented as-is.
Even founders without active exit timelines benefit from basic exit planning structure. Buy-sell agreements, key-person insurance, basic succession plans, and fundamental valuation awareness protect against unexpected events and preserve optionality.
Exit planning engagements are structurally different from transaction execution. The objective is preparing the business for the right exit, not running the transaction itself.
Tax planning, estate planning, legal structuring, ESOP feasibility, and family wealth advisory require coordinated work across disciplines. We coordinate the M&A workstream alongside specialty advisors rather than replacing them.
As the planned exit window approaches, the work shifts toward transaction readiness and ultimately to formal sell-side or recap process execution. Exit planning compounds directly into transaction outcomes.
Sell-side M&A focuses on executing the transaction: positioning, marketing, buyer outreach, competitive tension, negotiation, and close. Exit planning focuses on the multi-year preparation that determines what outcomes the eventual transaction can achieve. Both are necessary; neither replaces the other.
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