Phase 05: Operate

By SearchFundMarket Editorial Team

Published June 15, 2025

How to Select & Work with an Investment Banker for Your Exit

When it's time to sell your company, an investment banker (or M&A advisor) can significantly increase the sale price and manage the complexity of the process. For search fund companies in the $5-30M revenue range, choosing the right advisor and managing the relationship effectively is critical to maximizing your exit outcome.

When to Hire an Investment Banker

  • EBITDA above $2M: Below this level, the fees may not justify the cost. Consider a business broker instead.
  • Timeline: Engage 6-9 months before your target close date
  • Multiple buyers expected: Bankers add the most value when they create competitive tension among multiple bidders
  • Complex deal: If the transaction involves rollover equity, earnouts, or complicated structures, professional guidance pays for itself
  • You lack M&A experience: Even experienced search fund CEOs benefit from sell-side expertise

Selecting the Right Banker

What to Look For

  • Industry expertise: Has the banker closed deals in your industry? They should know the buyers and speak your language.
  • Size fit: Choose a firm that regularly handles transactions your size. A bulge-bracket firm won't prioritize a $10M EBITDA deal.
  • Buyer relationships: Ask for a preliminary buyer list. A good banker should immediately name 15-20 likely buyers.
  • Senior attention: Will the senior banker who pitches you actually run your deal? Get it in writing.
  • Track record: Ask for 5 recent comparable transactions with references

Red Flags

  • Promising unrealistic valuations to win the engagement
  • No industry specialization or relevant deal history
  • Bait-and-switch: senior banker pitches, junior team executes
  • Pressure to sign an exclusive engagement immediately

Fee Structures

  • Success fee: Typically 3-5% of transaction value for deals under $25M; 1-3% for larger deals
  • Monthly retainer: $10-25K/month to cover the banker's time during the process (often credited against success fee)
  • Minimum fee: Most bankers have a minimum fee ($150-500K) regardless of deal size
  • Expense reimbursement: Travel, data room, and marketing materials are typically separate
  • Tail provision: The banker earns a fee on any sale to a buyer they introduced, typically for 12-24 months after engagement ends

The Sell-Side Process

  1. Preparation (4-6 weeks): CIM creation, financial model, data room setup, buyer list
  2. Marketing (4-6 weeks): Teaser distribution, NDA execution, CIM delivery
  3. First round (3-4 weeks): Receive IOIs, evaluate and shortlist bidders
  4. Management presentations (2-3 weeks): Meet with shortlisted buyers
  5. Final bids (3-4 weeks): Receive LOIs, negotiate terms, select buyer
  6. Due diligence & closing (6-10 weeks): Buyer due diligence, definitive agreement, close

Key Takeaways

  • Hire an investment banker if your EBITDA exceeds $2M and you expect multiple interested buyers
  • Choose based on industry expertise, deal size fit, and senior banker commitment, not just the pitch
  • Typical fees: 3-5% success fee plus $10-25K monthly retainer for sub-$25M deals
  • Engage 6-9 months before your target close for optimal process management
  • The entire sell-side process takes 6-9 months from engagement to close

Related Resources

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to hire an investment banker for a lower middle market exit?

For transactions in the $5-30M range typical of search fund exits, expect total investment banking fees of 3-5% of the transaction value. Axial’s 2024 fee survey shows the median success fee for sub-$25M deals is 4%, with most banks also charging a monthly retainer of $10-25K (typically credited against the success fee at close). Most bankers have minimum fee floors of $150K-$500K regardless of deal size. Additional costs include data room expenses ($2K-$5K), marketing materials ($5K-$15K), and travel. For a $15M EBITDA business selling at 6x ($90M EV), total banking fees would typically be $2.7M-$4.5M. The higher fees at smaller deal sizes reflect the similar level of work required regardless of transaction value.

When should a search fund CEO start preparing for an exit?

Begin exit preparation 12-18 months before your target exit date, and engage an investment banker 6-9 months before. Stanford GSB’s research on search fund exits found that companies with 12+ months of exit preparation sold at multiples 1.0-1.5x higher than those that initiated sale processes opportunistically. Preparation includes cleaning up financials (2-3 years of audited or reviewed statements), professionalizing operations, reducing customer and key-person concentration, and building the management team so the business operates independently of you. Harvard Business Review recommends building a “sale-ready” business from day one, as the disciplines that make a business attractive to buyers also make it better to operate.

What is the typical timeline for a sell-side M&A process?

A complete sell-side process typically takes 6-9 months from investment banker engagement to close. The phases are: preparation (4-6 weeks for CIM creation, data room setup, and buyer list development), marketing (4-6 weeks for teaser distribution and CIM delivery), first round (3-4 weeks to receive and evaluate IOIs), management presentations (2-3 weeks), final bids and LOI negotiation (3-4 weeks), and buyer due diligence through closing (6-10 weeks). According to Axial’s market data, the median time from engaging a banker to signed LOI is 3-4 months, with an additional 2-3 months for due diligence and closing. Processes involving strategic buyers often move faster than those involving financial sponsors.

Sources

  • Harvard Business Review, Selecting and Managing Your Sell-Side Advisor (2024)
  • Axial, Investment Banking Fee Survey for Lower Middle-Market Transactions (2024)
  • Stanford GSB, Exit Process Management for Search Fund Companies (2024)

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does an investment banker charge for an exit?
Typical fees for sub-$25M transactions: 3-5% success fee on transaction value, plus a monthly retainer of $10-25K (often credited against the success fee). Most bankers have a minimum fee of $150-500K. The tail provision means the banker earns fees on sales to introduced buyers for 12-24 months after engagement ends.
When should I engage an investment banker?
Engage 6-9 months before your target close date. The sell-side process takes 6-9 months: 4-6 weeks preparation, 4-6 weeks marketing, 3-4 weeks first round, 2-3 weeks management presentations, 3-4 weeks final bids, and 6-10 weeks due diligence and closing.

Sources & References

  1. Harvard Business Review - Selecting and Managing Your Sell-Side Advisor (2024)
  2. Axial - Investment Banking Fee Survey for Lower Middle-Market Transactions (2024)
  3. Stanford GSB - Exit Process Management for Search Fund Companies (2024)
  4. McKinsey & Company - Creating Value Through M&A Integration (2023)
  5. IESE Business School - International Search Fund Study (2024)

Disclaimer

This article is educational content about search funds and Entrepreneurship Through Acquisition (ETA). It does not constitute financial, legal, tax, or investment advice. Always consult qualified professional advisors before making investment or acquisition decisions.

SF

SearchFundMarket Editorial Team

Our editorial team combines academic research from Stanford GSB, INSEAD, IESE, and HEC with practitioner insights to produce the most thorough ETA knowledge base in Europe.

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