In the mergers and acquisitions (M&A) market, information asymmetry is one of the variables that generate the most friction for the sell-side. A founder who initiates a sales process motivated solely by the arrival of an unsolicited proposal enters the negotiation table at a strategic disadvantage. True bargaining power does not reside in the ability to negotiate terms under pressure, but in the freedom to refuse an offer because the company is structured to continue operating with predictability.
The corporate market deals with complex and multifactorial scenarios. Historical analyses indicate that between 70% and 90% of mergers and acquisitions fail to achieve their originally stipulated financial goals, according to value creation studies compiled by the Harvard Business Review. While the factors for this percentage involve unpredictable external dynamics and post-sale integration challenges, the absence of preventive planning in the early stages significantly reduces the founders’ room for maneuver.
To ensure your company does not become part of this statistic, M&A preparation must be treated as a technical process, structured across three fundamental fronts of action.
1. Preventive Auditing (Vendor Due Diligence)
The first step in instructing the market on the value of your asset is to anticipate everything the buyer will try to find to reduce the price. Preparation requires executing an independent internal audit across accounting, tax, and labor fronts before opening any data to the market.
- Balance Sheet Saneamiento: Reconcile outstanding liabilities, renegotiate contingencies, and permanently separate the partners’ personal expenses from the company’s operating expenses (ending asset confusion).
- Contract Organization: Ensure that all contracts with key clients and suppliers contain clear “Change of Control” clauses, guaranteeing that the business remains valid after the acquisition.
2. Institutionalization of Processes and Governance
Strategic buyers and Private Equity funds buy the continuity of results, not the past history. If daily operations, commercial relationships, or strategic decisions depend exclusively on the figure of the founder, the risk perceived by the buyer increases exponentially, which translates into severe discounts on EBITDA multiples.
- Delegation Matrix: Design and implement decision-making scopes for middle management, proving that the business generates cash and grows without the daily interference of the partners.
- Documentation of Methods: Transform the leadership’s tacit knowledge into standard operating procedures (SOPs) and structured market intelligence reports.
3. Value Engineering and Setting the Reservation Price
The ability to refuse an unsatisfactory proposal depends on strictly mathematical, not emotional, financial criteria. Sell-side planning requires building a proprietary financial model that establishes the limits of the negotiation.
- Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) Model: Structure a long-term financial projection based on realistic market data, serving as a baseline to challenge the buyer’s aggressive assumptions.
- Reservation Price: Define the minimum acceptable value and evaluate the long-term impact of risk clauses, such as earn-outs (staged payments tied to future goals), ensuring that the proposal covers the opportunity cost of keeping the company under current control.
The Role of Pipeline Capital
At Pipeline Capital, we act as risk mitigation agents to structure M&A processes from the perspective of rigorous sell-side planning. Our role is not to promise guaranteed results in a dynamic market, but to work side-by-side with the founder to eliminate all controllable vulnerabilities of the company before it exposes itself to investors.
We organize the financial architecture, lead due diligence preparation, and design solid investment theses so that our clients maintain control of the narrative. Pipeline Capital’s market intelligence ensures that founders reduce transaction uncertainties, maintaining the strategic autonomy necessary to sign the agreement only when the terms are fully satisfactory for the business’s posterity.