Many entrepreneurs view the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) process as a binary decision: either maintain total control or sell 100% of the operation and exit the business. However, the sell-side perspective offers intermediate strategic paths that allow founders to monetize part of the equity built over the years. This choice helps inject the necessary oxygen to finance the company’s next growth cycle.
Selling a partial stake acts as a lever to accelerate expansion while diluting the business’s corporate risks. This dynamic prepares the company for new market heights without requiring leadership to surrender the strategic direction of the operation. Strategic capital reduces cash flow pressure and unlocks investments that would otherwise be postponed.
The growth model through partial liquidity
The trajectory of the software company RD Station exemplifies the technical efficiency of this approach before its definitive consolidation in the market. In its intermediate traction phases, the founders chose to open their cap table to Growth Equity funds. In one of its primary rounds, the company received a 62 million BRL investment led by TPG Growth, avoiding a premature total exit that would have limited the brand’s upside.
This operation combined a capital injection into the company’s cash flow to finance growth with the sale of a minority share of stock. This structure guaranteed immediate financial liquidity for the original partners while keeping the founders in absolute control of the business and its management. The movement demonstrates that strategic partners add governance and immediate sector expertise without stripping away the creators’ autonomy.
The bridge to a billion-dollar exit
This strengthening strategy through minority partners was the essential factor that enabled the company’s future. Years later, in 2021, with a robust operation, established market reach, and governance aligned with global standards, the company had 92% of its shares acquired by Totvs for 1.86 billion BRL. This billion-dollar transaction proved the success of the partial liquidity model.
Bringing in the right partners at an intermediate stage multiplied the company’s valuation and built muscle for the final negotiation. It was not about losing ground, but rather using third-party capital to appreciate the shares the founders still held in the controlling block. The partial sale worked as the necessary stepping stone for the brand’s definitive consolidation at the top of the market.
How to apply this model to your corporate reality
Bringing in a minority partner to accelerate growth requires aligning the founder’s personal goals with the company’s expansion plan. The injected capital must have a clear destination, such as developing new distribution channels, geographical expansion, or acquiring smaller competitors. The entry of the new partner needs to accelerate the growth timeline by years.
Corporate dynamics change when cash is shared with institutional funds or strategic partners. The founder gains an advisory board and begins responding to more formal governance rituals. This change should be viewed positively, as it professionalizes the operation and removes the weight of isolated decisions from the CEO’s shoulders.
Structural challenges and how to mitigate them at the negotiating table
One of the main pressure points in a partial liquidity transaction lies in the potential loss of autonomy through complex clauses or vetoes on operational decisions. This scenario is perfectly manageable through specialized advisory services, establishing rigorous safeguards in the shareholders’ agreement to secure voting rights and preserve the reins of strategy in the founder’s hands.
Similarly, pressure from funds for accelerated growth or rigid divestment timelines can cause some misalignment of expectations on the board. The solution to this impasse is to align the exit thesis during preliminary conversations, structuring clear future liquidity mechanisms and balanced transition rules for both sides. The risk of sharing control is heavily offset by the dilution of the entrepreneur’s equity risk, who no longer has all personal capital concentrated in a single operation.
Furthermore, the reporting and governance requirements that accompany an investor’s arrival should not be seen as a time drain, but as a stamp of quality for the market. This professionalization shields the company against operational inefficiencies, elevates bargaining power with major partners, and prepares the company for much larger liquidity events in the future. In practice, the founder trades a piece of a medium-sized company for control of a scalable and significantly more valuable operation.
Technical preparation behind the scenes
The journey to attract a top-tier minority partner begins long before negotiation meetings. The company must undergo a deep internal audit to organize balance sheets, mitigate tax and labor risks, and document operational processes. Cleaning house prevents contingencies that destroy company value during due diligence.
The information architecture and financial data must be translated into clear growth indicators and revenue predictability. Presenting a bulletproof strategic plan and a sustainable growth thesis puts the founder in a position of advantage at the table. The market only values what it can clearly audit and understand.
The strategic guidance of Pipeline Capital
Pipeline Capital acts consultatively on the sell-side, functioning as the strategic partner that diagnoses the best transaction structure for your current business stage. Our team evaluates your financial data and long-term business goals in detail to design the ideal capital opening model.
Our practice focuses on fully shielding and protecting the interests of the CEO and founders throughout all stages of the M&A process. We ensure that attracting capital results in real equity appreciation, legal security in the shareholders’ agreement, and total autonomy to lead your operation’s next acceleration phase.