How to Prepare Your Consulting Firm for Sale – Keys to Maximum Success

Selling your consulting firm is one of the biggest business decisions you can make. However, finding potential buyers is just the final step in a much longer process. The most important work—pre-exit preparation—takes place long before the sales process begins. The key is to prepare the company properly to maximize its value and make it attractive to potential buyers.

Below, we list several insights from Ruby Tuesday, inspired by current industry data and our own experiences.

Structure for Growth Without You

To attract a buyer, your consulting firm must be self-sufficient and not reliant on you as the owner. It is about ensuring sustainability and scalability through clear processes, governance, and agreements so that the company can continue to grow and develop after a sale.

Keep in mind:

Do you have agreements in place with both employees and clients that protect the company? What is the duration of the agreements? Have you secured recurring revenue? Are there internal policies for workflows and governance that create structure and clarity within the organization? Does your company have relevant certifications that enhance credibility and quality?

Practical Tips:

  • Clearly document all internal processes, from project management and resource allocation to risk management. This way, the business can be easily taken over.
  • Review all agreements—with employees, clients, and partners—and ensure that the right protective clauses are in place, that the contract durations support recurring business, and that you have a clear process for contract renewal.

Right Positioning, Differentiate, and Create Value

Our experience, as well as the latest market reports, shows that consulting firms that have specialized and clearly defined their market position have a stronger chance of successfully selling. Buyers are looking for companies with unique expertise and a clear niche—not generalists that ‘do everything for everyone.’ Therefore, positioning is central if you want to increase your company’s value before a sale.

Keep in mind:

What is your core competence, and how do you differentiate yourself from your competitors? How do you package your services so that buyers can clearly see your offerings and value? Do you have strategies for attracting and retaining customers, as well as for public procurement and partnerships?

Practical Tips:

  • Positioning, Profiling, and Productization. Build your brand around your core skills and package your offerings as clear products, services, or concepts.
  • Strategic Partnerships. Think strategically about collaborations that can enhance your offering. Utilize opportunities within the private and public sectors based on what suits your business model. Being proactive in these areas can open new revenue opportunities and further strengthen your position.

By combining the right positioning, effective marketing, and strategic business development, you create a consulting firm that is clear, has stable revenues, and attracts potential buyers.

Transparency Creates Security

For buyers, it is important to see a consulting firm that has a full grasp of its numbers and processes. Transparency is about more than just a polished annual report. It involves providing a clear and open picture of profitability, utilization rates, client portfolio, and invoicing. But even more important is that these figures are linked to how the company’s IT and operational architecture are structured to create maximum business value. IT consulting firms often find themselves in a ‘cobbler’s children’ situation regarding this.

Keep in mind:

Do you have the right systems and structures in place to collect and analyze relevant data? Are your key performance indicators, from financials to project status, clear and easily understandable for an external buyer? Is there a scalable IT strategy that supports your growth objectives? Are you gaining valuable insights from your data management?

Practical Tips:

  • IT and Business Architecture in Symbiosis. Ensure that your IT strategy is integrated with the business operations to achieve maximum business benefit. When your systems are linked to operational processes, it creates a foundation for transparent and efficient reporting, which is often of significant value to the buyer.
  • Build a Scalable Platform. Think long-term. A stable and scalable platform with integrations that support the business while adhering to security requirements and regulations is crucial. This not only enhances the company’s credibility but also demonstrates that you are ready for growth and can adapt to future changes.

By connecting business architecture with IT strategy and data management, you create not only transparency but also a platform that drives business value and secures your position ahead of a sale.

Pre-exit work is crucial

Getting a consulting firm ready for sale is about much more than just attractive numbers. It involves ensuring that the company is structurally optimized, commercially positioned correctly, and that you have control over relevant key figures and data well before you initiate a sale. At the same time, you need to consider industry trends and insights to create clear value for your customers. It is the pre-exit work that builds value and lays the foundation for a successful transaction.

Navigating this process can be challenging. Just as you wouldn’t sell your house without a real estate agent, you need advisors to provide the right guidance and maximize the value of your business. It’s not about putting up a “For Sale” sign and hoping for the best. In most cases, it’s a targeted process where the advisor and seller, in addition to the pre-exit phase work, strategically identify buyers and create competition to achieve the right price. Many buyers prefer to negotiate without competition, but as a seller, you want to have multiple bidders in place. With the right advisory support, you ensure that you have a prepared company, the right bidders, and the right terms and price when it really matters.

Do you have questions about how to best prepare for a sale? Contact us at Ruby Tuesday.

Guest Bloggers - Kimilia Carlsson Edland and Cecilia Ingmo Magnergård, Founders of <a href=Ruby Tuesday">

Guest Bloggers - Kimilia Carlsson Edland and Cecilia Ingmo Magnergård, Founders of Ruby Tuesday

Kimilia Carlsson Edland is the lawyer who loves business! She has held roles as sales manager, vice president, and business developer. She is not afraid to roll up her sleeves - equally comfortable on the consulting floor as at the boardroom table. Cecilia Ingmo Magnergård, an engineer and economist, has been a business developer, vice president, and CEO. She knows what it takes to drive growth and create efficiency. Together, they have built, sold, and developed companies, combining strategic thinking with hands-on experience. Two doers who know how to deliver results!

You may also like...

All posts