Why senior team strength now drives PE exit valuations more than ever

Why senior team strength now drives PE exit valuations more than ever

By Adrian Lawrence FCA, Founder, Exec Capital

PE-backed exit conversations have changed materially over the past two years. Where senior team composition was historically discussed late in the process — typically once an indicative offer was on the table and management presentations were being prepared — sophisticated buyers and advisers now bring senior team substance into the conversation substantially earlier. The shift has consequences for how PE-backed firms approach senior hiring decisions in the eighteen to thirty-six months before a likely exit.

The pattern recurs across the firms we work with. A PE-backed business approaches exit with strong financial performance, a credible commercial story, and a senior team that has delivered the value-creation plan to date. The diligence process opens. Within three to four weeks, the buyer’s commercial team and the senior team start to interact substantively. Where the senior team holds up — substantive answers under pressure, credible track record across the relevant dimensions, evident bench strength below the C-suite — the deal advances on the trajectory expected. Where it doesn’t, the offer either softens, is conditioned on senior team changes, or quietly walks away.

A Note from Adrian Lawrence FCA

The dynamic isn’t new. What has changed is the timing and the substance. Buyers and their advisers now do substantively more senior team diligence in pre-LOI phase than they did three to four years ago. Some of this is driven by the substantial proportion of PE exits that are now secondary buyouts — sophisticated PE buyers know what good senior teams look like and they price the difference into their offers. Some of it is driven by the broader trade-buyer environment, where senior team integration risk is now scrutinised much earlier in the process. The net effect is that PE-backed firms approaching exit need senior team strength as one of their commercial assets at exit, not just as the team that delivered the value-creation plan.

Adrian Lawrence FCA  |  Founder, Exec Capital  |  ICAEW Verified Fellow  |  ICAEW-Registered Practice  |  Companies House no. 13329383

What senior team strength looks like at exit

Sophisticated buyers assess senior team strength across four substantive dimensions. The first is credible track record against the value-creation plan. The senior team should be able to walk a buyer through the value-creation work delivered, the decisions made, and the substantive outcomes — without defaulting to scripted talking points or visibly leaning on advisers in the room.

The second is genuine bench strength below the C-suite. Buyers increasingly meet not just the senior team but the senior leaders one tier down. Where the firm has substantive senior management depth, this lands well; where the executive team is the only credible leadership layer, it shows.

The third is continuity proposition. Buyers want to understand which members of the senior team are committed to staying through the new ownership period and which are likely to depart at or shortly after close. The substantive answer to this question shapes the deal materially — both in price and in close-conditions.

The fourth is realistic forward agenda articulation. The senior team needs to be able to articulate substantively what the next chapter looks like under new ownership. Generic commercial slides don’t suffice; sophisticated buyers want to hear specific operating priorities, capability gaps the team would address, and the substantive judgement about where the next eighteen months of value creation come from.

Why this affects senior hiring eighteen to thirty-six months pre-exit

The implication for senior hiring is straightforward but often overlooked. Senior appointments made in the eighteen to thirty-six months before exit need to be calibrated explicitly to the senior team strength dimension at exit, not purely to operating performance during the holding period.

This sometimes means hiring senior leaders who are stronger than the operating role strictly requires — because what the firm needs at exit is senior team substance, not just operating delivery. It sometimes means accepting compensation calibration above the firm’s natural benchmarks because the right senior leader at exit substantially affects valuation. It sometimes means restructuring senior team composition in the year before exit to address gaps that would surface in diligence, even where the existing team is delivering operationally.

For substantive treatment of senior hiring in the pre-exit window, see our Pre-Exit and M&A Hiring Guide. For the broader senior hiring framework for PE-backed businesses, see our PE Executive Hiring Guide.

The CFO question specifically

The role most consistently affected by this dynamic is CFO. PE buyers know what credible PE-backed CFOs look like, and they assess incumbents accordingly. Firms approaching exit with a CFO whose track record is operating-strong but PE-context-light frequently make a senior CFO change in the twelve to twenty-four months before exit specifically to address this — typically bringing in a CFO with prior PE-exit experience to lead the firm through the transaction itself.

This is consequential enough that we cover it in detail through our sister firm FD Capital, which leads pre-exit CFO appointments across the portfolio.

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Speaking to PE-backed firms about pre-exit senior team work

Adrian Lawrence FCA leads pre-exit senior mandates personally.

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