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Saas Acquisition Prep Coach

Coach a SaaS founder preparing to be acquired (sell-side) — when to start prep (12-24 months out), getting the data room right (financial / customer / contra...

personAuthor: charlie-morrisonhubclawhub

saas-acquisition-prep-coach

Coach a SaaS founder preparing to be acquired — whether they're 24 months out and starting prep deliberately, or 30 days into an inbound LOI from a serious buyer. The job is to walk the founder through the entire process before, during, and at-close: data room construction, metrics narrative, valuation reality, deal structure, and post-close planning.

Most first-time founder exits underperform their fair value because the founder enters the process unprepared, scrambles in the 60-day diligence window, and accepts a structure with too much earnout / not enough cash because the leverage gap was wide. This coach closes the leverage gap by front-loading the prep work.

When to engage

Trigger when the founder mentions:

  • Direct exit terms: acquisition, exit, sell the company, M&A, "we're getting acquired"
  • Inbound: "got an inbound from [buyer]", "[strategic] reached out", "term sheet"
  • Process docs: data room, LOI / letter of intent, NDA, term sheet, definitive agreement, MIPA / SPA, rep-and-warranty
  • Valuation questions: "what's my SaaS worth", "valuation multiples", "ARR multiple", "EBITDA multiple", "rule of 40"
  • Buyer types: strategic acquirer, PE rollup, growth-equity, aggregator (Constellation Software, Tiny Capital, Vela Software, Verne Capital), microacquire / FE International / SaaSGroup
  • Diligence: QofE (quality of earnings), tech diligence, customer reference calls, contract review, IP audit
  • Deal structure: cash at close, earnout, rollover equity, founder employment, vesting, escrow, indemnity cap, basket, rep-and-warranty insurance
  • Post-LOI process: 60-day diligence, no-shop / exclusivity, breakup fee, MAC clause
  • Specific concerns: customer concentration, MRR vs ARR definitions, anniversary-billing risk, churn cohort drift

Do not engage for: pre-revenue acquihire conversations (different dynamics, different skill), acquihire-by-FAANG (mostly an offer process, different playbook), divestitures of business units (different from selling the whole company), or pure fundraising rounds (use pre-seed-fundraising-coach for the up-rounds).

Diagnostic sweep

  1. Stage of process.

    • Pre-process: 12-24 months out, no buyer contact yet — best stage for prep
    • Inbound active: a buyer has reached out, no LOI yet — fast prep + strategic positioning
    • LOI signed: in 60-day diligence window — execution focus
    • Pre-close: definitive agreement drafting — specific clause negotiation
    • Post-LOI fall-through: deal died, recovery + relaunch — different scenarios
  2. Company shape.

    • ARR / MRR with definition rigor (committed / live / annualized?)
    • Growth rate (M-o-M, Y-o-Y), durability across 24 months
    • Net Revenue Retention (NRR) and Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) by cohort
    • Gross margin (true: COGS / revenue, not "all costs - revenue")
    • Burn rate, runway, EBITDA (or burn-to-EBITDA-positive timeline)
    • Customer count, customer concentration (top customer % of revenue, top 10 %)
    • Headcount + key-person dependency
  3. Cap table.

    • Founder %, investor %, ESOP %
    • Liquidation preferences (1x non-participating standard, 2x or participating = problems for founder)
    • Outstanding convertibles, SAFEs, warrants
    • Preferred stock provisions (drag-along, tag-along, anti-dilution)
    • Employee option vesting status
  4. Founder goals.

    • Cash at close target (life-changing? founder-secure? operator-rich?)
    • Post-close intent (stay 1-3 years for earnout? exit immediately? operator-on-equity-only?)
    • Team obligations (existing employees, vested options, retention pool)
    • Investor expectations (preference floor, return multiple targets)
  5. Buyer landscape.

    • Likely buyer types for this product / vertical / scale
    • Existing buyer relationships (past partnerships, CTO-network connections)
    • Active aggregators in the segment

Why this is a 12-24 month process (not a 60-day process)

Founders often think the exit is the 60-day diligence window. The actual exit starts 12-24 months earlier. What changes during prep:

  • Contract base cleanup: removing termination-for-convenience clauses, auto-renewing customers, fixing change-of-control language
  • Metrics narrative cleanup: 24+ months of clean cohort data, NRR consistency, classification of "ARR" vs "non-ARR" revenue
  • Cap table simplification: SAFEs converting, warrants exercised, deceased / hostile shareholders bought out
  • Customer concentration reduction: nudging top customer % below 20%, ideally below 10% before going to market
  • Engineering / IP cleanup: open-source license audit, IP assignment confirmations, contractor IP transfers documented
  • HR cleanup: option grants up to date, termination agreements clean, no dormant equity claims

A founder who enters a process with 30-day-old data room scrambling under deadline gets discounted by buyers. A founder who has had clean metrics for 24 months gets a premium.

Buyer types and what they pay

Different buyer types value SaaS differently. Know who you're talking to.

Strategic acquirers (other software companies)

  • Pay highest multiples (5-15x ARR for healthy growth-mode SaaS)
  • Value: customer base + product fit + team + IP
  • Typical structure: 60-90% cash at close, 10-30% rollover equity, 0-20% earnout
  • Earnout duration: 12-36 months
  • Founder retention: usually 12-24 months
  • Best when: your product overlaps with their roadmap; you have customers they want; you have tech they don't have
  • Examples: Salesforce buying Slack, HubSpot buying smaller SaaS, Atlassian acquisitions

Growth equity / PE buyout

  • 4-10x ARR for high-growth, 2-5x for slowing growth
  • Value: financial returns; expects 18-36 month operational improvement, then resale or IPO
  • Typical structure: 60-70% cash, 20-30% rollover, sometimes earnout
  • Earnout: shorter (12-24 months) and metrics-based
  • Founder retention: 24-48 months typically
  • Best when: company has clear path to 2-3x growth in 3-5 years and PE adds operating leverage

PE rollup / strategic-PE

  • 3-7x ARR, sometimes lower
  • Value: tucking into existing portfolio + cost synergies + cross-sell
  • Typical structure: 70-100% cash, sometimes rollover into rollup vehicle
  • Earnout: rare in pure cash deals; common in part-rollover deals
  • Best when: you fit a thesis (vertical SaaS rollup, AI-tools rollup); you're profitable or near profitable

Aggregators (long-hold buy-and-hold)

  • Constellation Software, Tiny Capital, Vela Software, Verne Capital, Banyan Software, Eldridge Industries (smaller)
  • 3-6x EBITDA (NOT ARR multiple) — different math
  • Value: durable cash flow; long-hold (decades), no resale plan
  • Structure: 80-100% cash, occasional small earnout
  • Founder retention: 6-12 months typical, often allowed to exit fast
  • Best when: profitable + slow-growth + durable customers; founder wants to exit cleanly

Microacquire / FE International / SaaSGroup

  • $50K - $5M deal range
  • 2-5x ARR for SaaS, 2-3x SDE for cash-flow-focused
  • Mostly all-cash, fast close (4-12 weeks)
  • Best when: small ($500K-$3M ARR), profitable, founder wants to exit and move on

Public-company strategic

  • 6-15x ARR for hot AI / vertical wins
  • Often share-based or 50/50 cash/share
  • Valuation locked at signing, fluctuates with stock until close
  • Best when: you fit an investor-narrative story for the public buyer

The metrics buyers actually scrutinize

Revenue metrics

  • ARR / MRR: committed annualized recurring revenue. Buyer will reclassify what's actually "ARR" — often strips trial / non-renewing / month-to-month customers.
  • Growth rate: usually expressed as ARR Y-o-Y growth. Magic number around 30-50% YoY for venture-back, 15-25% for PE-attractive.
  • NRR (Net Revenue Retention): revenue from cohort N+1 vs cohort N (same customers). Best-in-class: 110-130%. Below 100% = expansion problem; below 85% = serious churn problem.
  • GRR (Gross Revenue Retention): same as NRR but excluding expansion. Best-in-class: 90-95%. Below 80% = churn crisis.
  • Logo retention: % of customers that don't churn. Best-in-class: 92-95% per year.
  • Magic number: ($Q ARR - $Q-1 ARR) × 4 / S&M spend in $Q-1. Above 1.0 = healthy growth efficiency.
  • CAC payback: months until customer profitability. Below 12 months = best-in-class; 12-24 months = healthy; >24 months = problematic.

Margin metrics

  • Gross margin: revenue - COGS / revenue. SaaS norm 75-85%. Below 70% = scrutinized.
  • Sales efficiency: ARR added / S&M spend. >1.0 healthy.
  • Rule of 40: growth rate + EBITDA margin. >40 healthy. PE buyers especially anchor here.

Customer concentration

  • Top customer % of revenue: <10% ideal; >20% gets diligence questions
  • Top 10 customers: <40% ideal; >60% creates valuation discount
  • Vertical concentration: too much in one industry creates concentration risk

Cohort durability

  • 24-month cohort retention curves
  • Churn rate by signup year (older cohorts often churning faster — important to surface or hide)
  • Expansion by cohort

The data room

Buyers will request access to your data room early. A clean data room signals professionalism; a messy one creates discount.

Standard data room sections

  • Corporate: Articles, bylaws, board minutes, shareholder agreements, cap table (current + historic)
  • Financial: 3-year P&L, balance sheet, cash flow; monthly for last 24 months; financial model
  • Customers: customer list (with revenue, contract end, NRR cohort), top customer agreements, churn log
  • Contracts: master agreements with vendors, employees, contractors; non-disclosure agreements; non-competes
  • IP: trademarks, patents, copyrights, software ownership, open-source license inventory, IP assignments from contractors
  • HR: org chart, employee contracts, option grants, ESOP plan, dispute logs
  • Legal: pending litigation, GDPR / data privacy reviews, security audits (SOC 2, ISO), regulatory filings
  • Tech: engineering team org, key tech stack, infrastructure providers, SLA commitments, security architecture
  • Tax: federal + state + foreign filings, sales tax (Wayfair compliance), R&D tax credit history

Data room red flags (fix before going to market)

  • Open-source dependencies under copyleft (GPL, AGPL) — get legal review
  • Contractors who built core IP without IP assignment — fix retroactively if possible
  • Customer contracts with auto-renewal language buyer can break post-close
  • Customer contracts with rate-lock provisions reducing valuation flexibility
  • Cap table with significant unvested founder shares (buyer wants founders fully vested)
  • Cap table with disputed claims (former cofounder claims, dispute settlements)
  • Tax exposure (sales tax for SaaS in nexus states; multi-state employee withholding)

LOI to close — the 60-day diligence sprint

Once a buyer issues a Letter of Intent (LOI), the typical timeline:

Week 0-2: LOI negotiation

  • Cash at close vs earnout structure
  • Exclusivity / no-shop period (usually 60 days)
  • Breakup fee (acquirer pays if they walk; usually 1-3% of deal value)
  • Earnout milestones (revenue, retention, founder retention)
  • Rollover equity %

Week 3-6: Diligence

  • Quality of Earnings (QofE) by accounting firm — buyer-paid, takes 4-6 weeks
  • Technical diligence by buyer's tech team or 3rd party
  • Customer reference calls (5-15 customers)
  • Legal / IP / contracts review
  • HR / culture interviews
  • Site visit / team meetings

Week 7-9: Definitive agreement

  • Stock Purchase Agreement (SPA) or Asset Purchase Agreement (APA) drafting
  • Reps and warranties (R&W) negotiation
  • Schedule of exceptions (disclosures of known issues)
  • Indemnity cap and basket negotiation
  • Escrow holdback negotiation
  • Working capital adjustment formula

Week 10-12: Close

  • Final investor consents
  • Customer notifications (post-close usually)
  • Wire instructions
  • Closing conditions met
  • Day of close: signing + funds transfer

Common diligence killers

  • Discovery of customer concentration not previously disclosed
  • Surprise litigation (employee claim, IP claim, contract dispute)
  • Cybersecurity incident in last 12 months
  • Tax exposure (sales tax, R&D credit clawback)
  • Founder-departing-key-employee patterns
  • Data privacy violations (GDPR, CCPA)
  • Open-source license violations
  • Cap table surprises (lost option grant, deceased shareholder)

Deal structure — getting the cash mix right

Cash at close

  • Larger upfront cash = lower buyer risk premium = higher willingness to pay overall
  • Founder benefit: certainty
  • Negotiate maximum cash at close

Rollover equity

  • Founder takes some equity in NewCo (rolls forward)
  • Tax-deferred (in qualifying tax structure)
  • Aligns founder incentive with buyer
  • Risk: NewCo equity could be worth $0 (PE rollups especially)
  • Negotiate: rollover should be 10-30% if reasonable

Earnout

  • Future payments contingent on milestones (revenue, retention, founder service)
  • Buyer prefers (de-risks); founder dislikes (uncertain)
  • Negotiate earnout milestones SPECIFIC and IN FOUNDER'S CONTROL — not "company hits $X new business" if buyer can choke marketing budget
  • Earnout shouldn't exceed 30% of total deal value
  • Earnout duration: 12-24 months (not 36+, too risky)

Founder employment / retention

  • Buyer typically wants 12-24 months of founder
  • Negotiate: severance if buyer terminates without cause
  • Base salary at market (often "no demotion" clause)
  • Title: not always C-level post-close (often EVP / VP)
  • Vesting acceleration on termination without cause

Reps and warranties (R&W)

  • Founder makes representations about company state
  • Buyer claims indemnity if rep is false
  • Negotiate: Indemnity cap (max liability — usually 10-30% of deal value)
  • Basket (deductible-style; small claims don't trigger indemnity)
  • Survival period (rep claims allowed for 12-24 months post-close)
  • R&W insurance: increasingly common; insurance pays claims, shifts risk off founder

Escrow / holdback

  • Portion of deal proceeds held in escrow for 12-24 months
  • Used to settle indemnity claims
  • Negotiate: smaller escrow % preferred; shorter survival; faster release schedule

Working capital adjustment

  • Deal price assumes "normal" working capital
  • Adjusted at close based on actual working capital balance
  • Watch for: cash sweep clauses (founder must leave $X in business); deferred revenue treatment

Managing the team during the process

Confidentiality

  • Most processes are confidential to <5 people internally for the first 30-60 days
  • "Project Falcon" code names, separate dataroom access, NDA-bound staff list
  • When to widen circle: as customer / contract diligence requires customer-facing employee involvement; usually mid-process

Key-employee retention

  • Buyer wants top 5-15 employees to stay 12-24 months
  • Founder negotiates retention pool: 5-10% of deal value as bonus pool to key employees, structured as retention bonuses
  • Communicate to key employees only after LOI; offer retention package before close

Investor management

  • Existing investors must approve sale (usually preferred-stock provisions require)
  • Investor pre-approval: get major investors aligned BEFORE LOI signed
  • Liquidation preferences: founders sometimes leave money on table because preferences eat into common-stock proceeds; understand cap-table waterfall

Customer communications

  • Buyer typically wants customer notifications post-close, not pre-close
  • Some customers have change-of-control consent rights (review contracts; often 10-30% of customer base for B2B)
  • Coordinate communication strategy with buyer

Anti-patterns / red flags

  • Selling to first inbound buyer without competitive process (low leverage)
  • Accepting LOI with vague earnout language ("upon achieving 'success'")
  • Accepting >50% earnout (too much risk; founder's leverage is at LOI not in earnout)
  • Skipping financial advisor / banker for deals >$10M (advisor fee is 1-3% but often delivers 20-50% higher valuation through process management)
  • Skipping legal counsel familiar with M&A (general lawyers miss key clauses)
  • Letting buyer drive timeline (they'll stretch diligence to extract concessions)
  • Disclosing too much before NDA (leakage to competitors)
  • Founder over-promising during diligence (buyer compares against actuals at close, claws back)
  • Hiding known issues (gets discovered in diligence; deal often dies; trust never recovered)
  • "We'll close in 4 weeks" timelines (deals close in 8-12 weeks minimum from LOI)

Realistic outcomes

Most healthy SaaS exits land at:

  • $500K - $3M ARR: 2-5x ARR (Microacquire, smaller PE)
  • $3M - $20M ARR, profitable: 4-8x ARR (PE / aggregator)
  • $20M - $100M ARR, growing: 6-15x ARR (strategic, growth PE)
  • $100M+ ARR: 8-20x ARR (strategic, IPO-eligible)

Adjustments:

  • Sub-100% NRR: 30-50% multiple discount
  • High customer concentration (top customer >20%): 20-40% discount
  • Open-source license issues / IP gaps: 10-30% discount
  • Profitability gap (deep burn): 20-50% discount

Pre-process / quick-prep mode (if a buyer just inbound-ed)

When the founder has 30-90 days, not 12-24 months:

Week 1-2: triage

  • Determine if buyer is serious (have they done deals like this before? What's their track record?)
  • Engage advisor / investment banker if deal size justifies
  • Begin data room construction (basic version, ready in 14 days)
  • Brief select investors / board members

Week 3-6: pre-LOI

  • Build out data room
  • Run light competing-process: reach out to 3-5 other plausible buyers; create implicit competition
  • Engage M&A counsel
  • Negotiate LOI carefully (don't sign on first draft)

Week 7+: same as standard process

Output to founder

After diagnostic, produce:

  1. Stage assessment (12-24 months out / mid-process / LOI / post-LOI)
  2. Company-readiness scorecard (data room, metrics narrative, contract cleanup, cap table) with gap list
  3. Buyer-type match (strategic / PE / aggregator with named buyers in their segment)
  4. Valuation expectation range (multiple range × ARR with adjustments)
  5. Pre-process work plan (12-24 month timeline, or 30-90 day quick-prep if reactive)
  6. Deal-structure target (cash mix, rollover, earnout limits, R&W approach)
  7. Diligence kill-list (known issues to fix before going to market)
  8. Team / customer / investor communication plan (when to widen the circle, retention pool sizing, customer comms timing)
  9. Advisor list (banker / M&A counsel / accounting / R&W insurance — when to engage each)
  10. Walk-away criteria (specific deal terms below which "stay independent" is the better path)

Selling a SaaS is one of the highest-leverage decisions a founder ever makes. Most first-time founders enter unprepared and accept bad structure under deadline pressure. This coach builds preparation, structure-literacy, and leverage long before the LOI lands.