Middle-market owners often ask, “Should I sell?” Soon, more questions follow. For example, who would buy the business? Next, how long will the process take? Also, what will buyers want to see? Most of all, how do you avoid surprises?
This post explains the sell-side M&A process. It also shows what to do first. As a result, you can lower risk and stay in control.
1) Do a readiness check
First, review what buyers will review. That way, you spot issues early. Then, you can fix them.
A readiness check often includes:
- Financials: clean monthly reports and clear trends
- Customers: concentration, retention, and contracts
- Team: who runs daily work
- Working capital: AR, inventory, and AP
- Legal items: key contracts and open issues
Even if you are not selling yet, this helps. In fact, it can improve terms later.
2) Build a simple buyer story
Next, explain the business in plain terms. Buyers want future results. So, show how the company makes money. Also, show why it keeps winning.
Your story should cover:
- What you sell and who buys it
- Why customers choose you
- What drives growth
- What could slow growth
- How the business runs without you
To support the story, use facts. For instance, share KPIs, retention, and pipeline.
3) Prepare the deal materials
Then, get the key documents ready. As a result, buyers get answers faster. Meanwhile, you control what they see.
Most processes use:
- A teaser (no name, high level)
- A CIM (full overview under NDA)
- A management deck
- A data room (files for diligence)
In short, good materials save time. They also cut repeat questions.
4) Choose the right buyers
After that, build a buyer list. Fit matters. For example, some buyers want growth. Others want cost savings. You want buyers who value what you built.
Common buyer groups:
- Strategic buyers (often want scale)
- Private equity (often wants growth and a strong team)
- Family offices / independent sponsors (often want flexibility)
By keeping the list focused, you protect privacy. At the same time, you improve offer quality.
5) Run a structured process
Next, go to market in a controlled way. This matters because structure creates competition. As a result, you avoid a one-buyer process.
A common flow:
- Outreach under NDA
- Q&A
- IOIs (early offers)
- Management meetings
- LOIs (final offers)
Because buyers move at the same time, you gain leverage. In addition, terms often improve.
6) Review LOI terms, not just price
At this point, price matters. However, terms can change what you keep. So, read the full LOI.
Key terms include:
- Cash at close
- Earnout (if any)
- Working capital target
- Escrow or holdback
- Exclusivity (how long you pause other talks)
- Timeline for diligence and closing
A strong LOI reduces last-minute changes. It also keeps the deal moving.
7) Plan for diligence
Then, diligence starts. Buyers check the facts. Therefore, being organized helps.
Buyers often ask about:
- Earnings and one-time items
- Customer churn and concentration
- Contracts and renewals
- Working capital trends
- Legal and HR items
- Systems and cybersecurity
If you prepare early, diligence goes faster. As a result, closing risk drops.
8) Close the deal
Finally, you move to final documents. Details matter. So, keep the process moving.
Closing often includes:
- Final purchase agreement
- Final diligence items
- Any needed consents
- Closing steps and transition plan
At the end, good project management helps. In turn, it reduces delays.
What you can do now
Even if you are not ready to sell, start here:
- Clean up monthly reporting
- Reduce customer concentration when you can
- Build leadership depth
- Review key contracts
- Track key KPIs
Over time, these steps make a sale easier.
How Hedman M&A Advisors helps
We run sell-side processes for middle-market owners. Specifically, we manage buyer outreach and keep the process organized. In addition, we help negotiate terms and manage diligence. As a result, you protect privacy and keep momentum.
Next step
If you may sell in the next 12–36 months, start with a confidential call. Then, we can talk about goals, timing, and first steps.

