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What Private Equity Is

Private equity (PE) firms pool investor capital to buy businesses, improve them, and sell them years later at a profit. PE has moved well beyond large corporations, lower-middle-market and even smaller businesses are now active targets, especially in roll-up-friendly industries. For business owners, PE has become a significant potential buyer, one that operates differently from an individual buyer.

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How PE Firms Operate

A PE firm raises a fund from investors, then acquires businesses using a mix of that equity and debt (leverage). They typically buy a platform company and add bolt-on acquisitions, work to grow and improve the businesses over a hold period (often 3 to 7 years), and then exit by selling to a larger buyer or another PE firm at a higher value. Their return comes from growth, debt paydown, and multiple expansion, the same forces behind acquisition investing, at scale.

What PE Firms Look For

Selling Your Business to PE

For sellers, PE can be an attractive buyer, they often pay strong prices for quality businesses and may let the owner roll over equity (keep a stake and share in future upside) or stay on. But PE buyers are sophisticated and rigorous: expect thorough due diligence, a quality-of-earnings analysis, and hard negotiation. The trade-off is a professional, well-capitalized buyer versus a more demanding process. See negotiating your sale.

The Takeaway for Owners

Whether you're a buyer studying PE's playbook (leverage, roll-ups, value creation) or a seller who might sell to a PE firm, understanding how private equity operates is increasingly valuable. A well-run, growing business with clean financials is exactly what PE wants, and preparing your business to that standard maximizes value whoever the buyer is. See what increases value and exit planning.

Note: This article is general educational information, not legal, tax, or investment advice. Consult qualified professionals about your specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do private equity acquisitions work?

A PE firm pools investor capital into a fund, then buys businesses using a mix of equity and debt. They typically acquire a platform company, add bolt-on acquisitions, work to grow and improve the businesses over a hold period of 3 to 7 years, and then sell at a higher value. Their return comes from growth, debt paydown, and multiple expansion.

What does private equity look for in a business?

Strong, stable cash flow and healthy margins, recurring or contracted revenue, diversified customers, a management team that can run the business, growth potential, and often a fragmented industry to consolidate. Size matters, though the threshold has fallen as PE increasingly pursues smaller, lower-middle-market deals.

What does it mean to sell your business to private equity?

It means selling to a sophisticated, well-capitalized buyer that often pays strong prices for quality businesses and may let you roll over equity to keep a stake in future upside or stay on to run it. The trade-off is a rigorous process, expect thorough due diligence, a quality-of-earnings analysis, and hard negotiation.

Does private equity buy small businesses?

Increasingly, yes. Private equity has moved well beyond large corporations into the lower-middle-market and even smaller businesses, especially in fragmented, roll-up-friendly industries like home services and healthcare. A well-run, growing small business with clean financials and recurring revenue can be an attractive PE target.

Martin Navarro, Business Broker and M&A Advisor in Los Angeles
Martin Navarro · Business Broker & M&A Advisor

Martin Navarro advises business owners across Los Angeles, Ventura, and Southern California on selling, buying, and valuing privately held companies. A U.S. Marine Corps veteran with dual CSUN degrees in Business Management and Accounting, he brings hands-on transaction experience and a straight-talking, numbers-first approach to every engagement. Bilingual in English and Spanish.

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