Where business owners, advisors, and capital groups align. Before a transaction is ever announced.
Business Brokerage & Commercial Advisory | Lower–Middle Market
I work with founders, family offices, and trusted advisors during early-stage exit planning, acquisitions, and complex liquidity events—long before a listing hits the market.
This page is for:
• Business owners considering an exit, not rushing one
• Family offices seeking proprietary deal flow or trusted intermediaries
• Wealth advisors, CPAs, and attorneys involved before a liquidity event
• Buyers who understand that structure matters more than price
This page is not for:
• Tire-kickers
• Owners seeking quick valuations without preparation
• Mass-market listings
• High-pressure deal environments
Most deals don’t fail because of price.
They fail because of timing, preparation, and misaligned incentives.
I operate upstream of the transaction, where decisions have leverage and outcomes are shaped quietly.
My role is to:
• Reduce execution risk
• Align advisors early
• Prepare businesses for market before exposure
• Create clarity where emotion often overrides logic
Transactions are the outcome—not the starting point.
How I actually Work
I believe:
• Confidentiality is a strategic asset
• Most exits happen too late, not too early
• Advisors should collaborate, not compete
• Capital structure often matters more than valuation multiples
• The best deals are never widely marketed
Because of this, I work selectively and intentionally, often months or years before a transaction occurs.
Who I Work Alongside
I frequently collaborate with:
• Family offices evaluating direct acquisitions
• Wealth managers guiding founders through liquidity planning
• CPAs and estate attorneys preparing clients for exits
• Strategic buyers seeking off-market opportunities
My role is to ensure alignment before complexity compounds.
What I’m Often Asked About
• When is the right time to begin exit planning?
• How do family offices evaluate founder-led businesses differently?
• Why do quality businesses fail late in the deal process?
• What preparation actually moves valuation—not marketing?