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Adam Haynes is a managing director at GLC Advisors, an M&A advisory firm that helps bootstrapped founders to successfully sell their companies. The software advisor team at GLC has been working with practical software founders for over 15 years and has completed over 100 software transactions.
In this expert interview, Adam shares:
Quote from Adam Haynes, M&A Advisor at GLC Advisors “When you are selling your company and the buyer is looking at all your challenges and problems, founders should know that deal breakers are very rare. Buyer and seller want to get a deal done, and there are ways to navigate around them.
“You can’t have a software company without tech debt. That’s okay. Nothing’s perfect, but you need to have a remediation plan for it. If you were going to close a couple of big deals during diligence and you don’t, or they get delayed, the valuation may take a hit. Or they might inject some structure like an earn-out if you can get these two deals signed.
“But if you don’t own your IP and don’t own or clearly license all your code, that’s tough to navigate around. Or if you’ve infringed on somebody. That can be a dealbreaker, but it isn’t that common.”
LinksTune into the Practical Founders Podcast for weekly in-depth interviews with founders who have built valuable software companies without big funding. Subscribe to the Practical Founders Podcast using your favorite podcast app.
Get the weekly Practical Founders newsletter and podcast updates at practicalfounders.com.5
2626 ratings
Adam Haynes is a managing director at GLC Advisors, an M&A advisory firm that helps bootstrapped founders to successfully sell their companies. The software advisor team at GLC has been working with practical software founders for over 15 years and has completed over 100 software transactions.
In this expert interview, Adam shares:
Quote from Adam Haynes, M&A Advisor at GLC Advisors “When you are selling your company and the buyer is looking at all your challenges and problems, founders should know that deal breakers are very rare. Buyer and seller want to get a deal done, and there are ways to navigate around them.
“You can’t have a software company without tech debt. That’s okay. Nothing’s perfect, but you need to have a remediation plan for it. If you were going to close a couple of big deals during diligence and you don’t, or they get delayed, the valuation may take a hit. Or they might inject some structure like an earn-out if you can get these two deals signed.
“But if you don’t own your IP and don’t own or clearly license all your code, that’s tough to navigate around. Or if you’ve infringed on somebody. That can be a dealbreaker, but it isn’t that common.”
LinksTune into the Practical Founders Podcast for weekly in-depth interviews with founders who have built valuable software companies without big funding. Subscribe to the Practical Founders Podcast using your favorite podcast app.
Get the weekly Practical Founders newsletter and podcast updates at practicalfounders.com.1,266 Listeners
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