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When business owners prepare for an exit, they focus on revenue, financials, and inventory—but often overlook one of their most valuable assets: their people.
In this episode, Adi Klevit welcomes back Cindy Free to discuss why HR plays a critical role in mergers, acquisitions, and business exits. Cindy explains that while financial due diligence is standard practice, HR due diligence is frequently ignored. This oversight can expose buyers to hidden liabilities such as compliance violations, lawsuits, misaligned compensation structures, or cultural dysfunction.
Adi and Cindy break down the three essential HR vantage points for exit readiness: compliance, culture, and best practices. Compliance ensures risk is minimized through proper documentation and lawful employment practices. Culture ensures that leadership strength, employee engagement, and retention metrics are attractive to a buyer. Best practices focus on organizational design, scalable systems, and leadership structures that allow the company to operate independently of the founder.
The conversation reinforces a powerful systems principle: when the people side of the business is structured correctly, transitions are smoother, value increases, and owners can exit without being pulled back in. HR is not an afterthought—it is infrastructure that protects the transaction.
By Adi Klevit4.3
66 ratings
When business owners prepare for an exit, they focus on revenue, financials, and inventory—but often overlook one of their most valuable assets: their people.
In this episode, Adi Klevit welcomes back Cindy Free to discuss why HR plays a critical role in mergers, acquisitions, and business exits. Cindy explains that while financial due diligence is standard practice, HR due diligence is frequently ignored. This oversight can expose buyers to hidden liabilities such as compliance violations, lawsuits, misaligned compensation structures, or cultural dysfunction.
Adi and Cindy break down the three essential HR vantage points for exit readiness: compliance, culture, and best practices. Compliance ensures risk is minimized through proper documentation and lawful employment practices. Culture ensures that leadership strength, employee engagement, and retention metrics are attractive to a buyer. Best practices focus on organizational design, scalable systems, and leadership structures that allow the company to operate independently of the founder.
The conversation reinforces a powerful systems principle: when the people side of the business is structured correctly, transitions are smoother, value increases, and owners can exit without being pulled back in. HR is not an afterthought—it is infrastructure that protects the transaction.