A Founder’s Due Diligence Checklist for Selling a Business (from VistaPoint)
Brilliant article from Vistapoint https://vistapointadvisors.com/
See the full article here: https://vistapointadvisors.com/perspectives/a-founders-due-diligence-checklist-for-selling-a-business?sf_cid=7014V000001z58m&li_fat_id=91cde9da-78ec-494c-8b6c-90b86288af16
A Founder’s Due Diligence Checklist for Selling a Business
Summary
The due diligence phase of selling a business is notoriously labor-intensive. If, however, your management team arrives at this stage of a transaction prepared with the right materials, you will experience a far more efficient process with a higher likelihood that the deal closes.
How far in advance should a founder prep these materials? The sooner the better.
Why You Need to Prepare for Diligence Now
When a legitimate offer comes along, as a founder you want to be in a position to act quickly and engage in a smooth process. Preparing early will help you:
So what materials do you need to prepare? Diligence falls into two primary categories: business and legal. Below are the key materials for each that, as a founder, you should start preparing early on.
Business Diligence
??Financials. A company’s financials constitute the most important data buyers/investors use to determine the quality of an acquisition (outside of product synergies).
Materials:
Your income statement and monthly revenue by customer documents are the end-all-be-all materials for an acquirer to evaluate your business. Using these documents, buyers will 1) build out a financial model and 2) conduct a retention and customer concentration analysis (or similar analyses depending on your business model). In the earlier stages of the process, you will want to provide anonymized versions of your revenue by customer data.
??HR. HR data gives buyers/investors a sense of company structure as well as where you may have hiring gaps or redundancies. Your HR team should keep an ongoing employee census that includes start & end dates, salary, benefits, etc.
Materials:
??Product. Product materials help buyers/investors understand how you price, market, implement, and plan your product. Often, these materials are fairly easy to gather as you use them internally or with prospects/customers.
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Materials:
In some cases, sharing your product strategy with certain buyers/investors would be disadvantageous (such as with a competitor). Under these circumstances, you can stage product roadmap disclosure for later in the process to avoid giving information to parties you don’t end up transacting with.
??Tech. Buyers/investors want to understand the underlying tech stack that supports your product so they can identify potential synergies and product alignment, as well as potential technical debt. They will also want to understand dependencies on external vendors and code libraries.
Materials:
Your technology stack schematic should detail hosting and data protection infrastructure. Third-party licenses and open source usage are less important during a buyer or investor’s initial review, but more so during confirmatory diligence. Strategic buyers will often run an independent software scan to understand that the business has the proper licenses for open source software they’re using.
??Customer data. In addition to evaluating the raw data outlining customer growth and retention, buyers and investors like to get an understanding of opportunities within your customer base. Specifically, they might look for potential cross-selling opportunities or product gaps to reduce future churn.
Materials:
Legal Diligence
??Corporate governance/structure. Corporate governance documents help buyers/investors structure the deal for tax purposes. A cap table will help them understand how to structure the deal, including equity rolls and liquidity considerations.
Materials:
??Tax. Buyer/investors will require tax documentation later in a process to understand potential risks or taxes owed.
Materials:
??Contracts. Buyers/investors will need to know the contractual obligations they would acquire together with your company.
??Intellectual Property. Buyers/investors will want to understand what you own and what you license in terms of IP, as well as if you’re following the protocols of a licensee.