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What Makes a Company Worth Buying: The Seven Pillars of Exit Readiness

Key Takeaways

Buyers evaluate seven distinct pillars: financial clarity, revenue quality, unit economics, operational independence, legal/IP cleanliness, growth trajectory, and competitive defensibility. Only 2% of companies score well on all seven. A single pillar deficiency can disqualify the deal. Score yourself on each pillar before approaching buyers.

When acquisition teams evaluate potential targets, they're not looking at a single metric. They have a framework—often unspoken—that assesses your business across seven specific dimensions. Get one of these pillars wrong, and the deal falls apart. Get all seven right, and valuation multiples increase dramatically.

I've watched this happen from both sides of the table. Founders think they have a solid acquisition candidate because revenue is growing. The buyer's team comes in and discovers three of the seven pillars are broken. Deal dies. Multiple lost. Or, a founder has systematically built a business that passes scrutiny on all seven dimensions. The buyer is confident. Multiple goes up. Offer accelerates.

Pillar 1: Financial Clarity

This is the foundation. Can a buyer understand how your business makes money? Not in narrative form, but in clean, auditable, documented financial records.

What passes scrutiny: Three years of audited or reviewed financial statements. Monthly P&L that reconciles to general ledger. Clear revenue recognition policy documented and applied consistently. Detailed expense accounting with clear categorization. Accounts receivable aging with collection history. All journal entries documented and justified.

What fails: Revenue that changes month-to-month without explanation. Expenses that are lumped into categories like "miscellaneous" or "other." No monthly accounting for extended periods. Revenue recognized inconsistently (sometimes cash basis, sometimes accrual). Payroll expenses that don't match tax records.

This pillar is non-negotiable. Without financial clarity, buyers can't build financial models. Without models, they can't value the business. I've seen deals fail at the 11th hour because the buyer's accountant couldn't trace $200K in annual expenses. The uncertainty killed confidence. Valuation dropped 15%.

Pillar 2: Revenue Quality

Not all revenue is equal. Buyers distinguish between revenue that's recurring and predictable versus one-time and volatile.

What passes scrutiny: Recurring revenue (subscription, retainer, or contract-based) representing 60%+ of total. Clear customer acquisition patterns. Documented customer contracts. Churn rates below 5% monthly for B2B SaaS, below 10% annually for B2B services. Customer base with no single account exceeding 15% of revenue. Documented pricing with little variance within customer cohorts.

What fails: 80% of revenue from one customer. Project-based revenue with unpredictable timing. Customers who typically buy once and disappear. High churn (15%+ monthly). Price variation that suggests discounting or favoritism. Revenue dependent on founder relationships.

Revenue quality is about predictability. A buyer wants to know that next year's revenue will be similar to this year's. When revenue quality is high, you can command a higher multiple. When it's low, the buyer adds a risk discount.

Pillar 3: Unit Economics

Do you know the true profitability of each unit you sell? Most founders don't. Buyers definitely check.

What passes scrutiny: For SaaS: CAC payback of 12 months or less, LTV/CAC ratio above 3:1, gross margin above 70%. For services: clear project profitability, billable utilization above 70%, margin consistency across projects. For e-commerce: gross margin above 40%, repeat purchase rate above 30%, negative working capital or breakeven. For agencies: clearly profitable client relationships, documented project economics, margin targets that are consistently met.

What fails: You don't know your CAC. You've never calculated LTV properly. Gross margins vary wildly by customer. Service projects are sometimes profitable and sometimes not. You have no visibility into actual unit-level profitability.

This pillar is especially important for high-growth businesses. A buyer will accept lower absolute profitability if unit economics make sense. They'll reject high revenue if unit economics are broken, because scaling a broken model just means bigger losses.

Pillar 4: Operational Independence

Would the business run without you? Most founders haven't tested this. Buyers will.

What passes scrutiny: Key functions documented in writing. Standard operating procedures for sales, delivery, and operations. Management team capable of making decisions without founder input. Documented customer relationships (not stored in the founder's brain). Authority levels defined for different decisions. Training documentation for key processes.

What fails: Customer relationships that only exist because the customer knows and trusts you. Key hires who report exclusively to the founder. No written processes for anything. All decisions waiting for your approval. Sales dependent on your presence.

Operational independence is a red flag test. The buyer is asking: what breaks if the founder leaves in 30 days? If the answer is "everything," the valuation multiple gets halved. If the answer is "nothing material," the multiple stays high.

Pillar 5: Legal and IP Cleanliness

This is the surprise killer. Most founders don't think about this until the buyer's lawyers ask. By then, it's too late.

What passes scrutiny: Clean corporate structure with no hidden liabilities. All IP clearly owned by the company (with proper assignment agreements from founders and contractors). Trademark registrations current and defensible. No active litigation or unresolved disputes. Employment agreements with IP assignment clauses. Vendor contracts reviewed and transferable to a new owner.

What fails: Employee IP not formally assigned to the company. Contractor work where ownership is ambiguous. Trademarks that were never registered. Regulatory violations or outstanding compliance issues. Related-party contracts without formal documentation. Undocumented disputes or past litigation that might re-surface.

A missing IP assignment agreement can kill a deal. I watched a software company's acquisition collapse because the original developer (long-gone) never formally assigned IP rights. The buyer couldn't verify clean ownership. The deal died. Cost: $2M+ in valuation.

Pillar 6: Growth Trajectory

Buyers are paying for future growth, not historical performance. Can you demonstrate that growth is likely to continue?

What passes scrutiny: Consistent year-over-year growth (30%+ for tech, 20%+ for services). Customer acquisition that's improving or stable. Market expansion opportunities that are documented. Pipeline visibility for the next 6-12 months. Growth drivers that are understood and replicable.

What fails: Declining growth despite increasing spending. Stalled growth with no clear explanation. One-time wins that can't be repeated. Markets that are saturated. No pipeline visibility. Growth dependent on founder's personal hustle.

Growth trajectory is why startups with losses get valued higher than profitable small businesses. A buyer will accept lower current profitability if growth is clearly present and sustainable.

Pillar 7: Competitive Defensibility

What stops a competitor from taking your customers or replicating your business? Buyers need to understand why your position is defensible.

What passes scrutiny: Network effects that grow with scale. Switching costs that lock customers in. Proprietary technology or data advantages. Brand strength and customer loyalty. High barriers to entry (capital, expertise, or regulatory). Documented moat that's quantifiable.

What fails: Business model that anyone can replicate overnight. Customers who stay because of personal relationships. No barriers to entry. Technology that's available to competitors. Commoditized product with no differentiation.

Defensibility determines valuation ceiling. Without it, a buyer knows any valuation they pay is at risk. With strong defensibility, they're willing to pay multiples for the privilege of owning that durable advantage.

Scoring Yourself

Here's your action: score yourself on each pillar using a 1-5 scale.

5 = Exceptional. You could show this pillar to any buyer confidently.

4 = Strong. Minimal concerns. A buyer would validate easily.

3 = Acceptable. Some work needed, but fixable before close.

2 = Weak. Buyer would require major improvements or concessions.

1 = Broken. This pillar alone could disqualify the deal.

Anything below 3 is a red flag. Anything below 2 is disqualifying. Your job over the next 12-18 months is to move every pillar to at least 4. That's when you become genuinely acquisition-ready.

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Yanni Papoutsi

VP Finance & Strategy. Author of Raise Ready and Exit Ready. Has supported fundraising across 5 rounds backed by Creandum, Profounders, B2Ventures, and Boost Capital. Experience spanning UK, US, and Dubai markets with multiple funding rounds and exits.