Who's Actually Buying Your Business — PE Firms, Strategic Buyers, and Individuals Explained
"A buyer" is not a single thing. The check that lands in your account at closing might come from a private equity firm rolling up businesses in your industry, a competitor looking to expand, or an individual who wants to own a business for the first time. These buyers have completely different motivations, different timelines, different things they'll pay a premium for — and very different implications for what happens to your business, your team, and your legacy after the sale.
The three buyer types in small and mid-market M&A
Financial buyers: private equity and family offices
Private equity firms — and family offices operating similarly — buy businesses as investments. They are not operators seeking to run a business in a field they know. They are capital allocators seeking to acquire, improve, and eventually sell businesses at a higher multiple than they paid.
In the service business world, PE activity is dominated by "platform and add-on" strategies:
- A PE firm acquires a larger service business as a platform — the operational foundation for a roll-up strategy.
- They then acquire smaller businesses in the same or adjacent industries as add-ons — bolted onto the platform to create a larger, more valuable entity that can eventually be sold to a larger PE firm or taken public.
For sellers, what this means in practice:
- Multiples are often higher for businesses that fit cleanly into a PE firm's rollup thesis. A commercial landscaping company that is the 6th add-on to a national grounds maintenance platform is worth more to that buyer than to almost anyone else — because of the synergies and the scale they're building toward.
- Process and management matter enormously. PE buyers are buying into their own operational capability, not yours. They want clean financials, documented processes, and a management team they can work with. An owner-dependent business with informal operations is a poor fit for most PE buyers.
- Rollover equity is common. Many PE transactions involve the seller retaining 10–30% equity in the combined entity, betting on the platform's eventual sale at a higher multiple. This "second bite of the apple" strategy can produce excellent returns — or produce nothing if the platform doesn't perform.
- Speed of change is high. PE-backed businesses change faster post-close than most sellers anticipate. New systems, new management, integration into a larger entity — your team and customers will experience a different organization within 12–24 months.
Strategic buyers: competitors and adjacent businesses
Strategic buyers acquire businesses to gain something — customers, geography, capabilities, or talent — that makes their existing business more valuable. They're not primarily motivated by financial return on investment; they're motivated by strategic gain.
- They can often pay the most for the right business, because the value to them includes synergies that a financial buyer can't capture. A Texas HVAC company that wants to expand to Houston will pay a premium for an established Houston competitor that it can integrate — because the alternative is building market share from scratch.
- The due diligence is different. Strategic buyers know your industry well and will scrutinize your customer relationships, team, and operational practices through a lens of "how does this integrate with us?" They're assessing fit as much as financial performance.
- Post-close integration can be significant. If a competitor acquires you, your brand may eventually disappear into theirs. Your employees may be retained, consolidated, or let go based on how their roles overlap with the acquirer's existing team.
- The deal may close faster than with a financial buyer. Strategic buyers typically don't need to raise acquisition financing — they're using their own capital or existing credit facilities — which removes a major source of deal delays.
Individual buyers: owner-operators and search funds
Individual buyers — often called "searchers" or "ETA (entrepreneurship through acquisition) buyers" — are individuals looking to buy and personally operate a business. They're increasingly common in the $1M–$5M revenue range, often funded through SBA loans, self-directed IRAs, and investor networks.
- They typically pay lower multiples than PE or strategic buyers, because they're constrained by personal capital and debt service on acquisition financing. An SBA loan at current rates means the business's cash flow has to service debt — which limits how much an individual buyer can rationally pay.
- They genuinely intend to run the business. This matters for sellers who care about what happens to their team and customers. An individual buyer typically plans to be present in the business, maintain relationships, and preserve what's been built — unlike a financial buyer rolling up the business into a platform.
- Financing risk is higher. Individual buyers often rely on SBA loans, which have specific qualification requirements and can fall through even after an LOI is signed. SBA-financed deals also take longer to close. If certainty of close matters to you, understand the buyer's financing situation before signing an LOI.
- Seller financing is common. Individual buyers often need the seller to finance 10–20% of the purchase price as a sign of confidence in the business. This is standard in smaller deals and not inherently problematic — but it does mean you don't receive full payment at closing.
Which buyer type is right for your business?
The answer depends on what you want from the transaction — and those priorities are more personal than financial for most sellers.
Prioritize certainty of close: Strategic buyers with their own capital or PE firms with committed funds close more reliably than individual buyers with SBA financing.
Prioritize legacy and culture preservation: Individual operators who plan to run the business themselves are most likely to maintain what you've built — relationships, team culture, the way things are done.
Prioritize speed: Strategic buyers who know your industry and have done their diligence informally through market observation often close fastest.
What to ask when you know who's approaching you
When a buyer expresses interest, understanding their type tells you what questions to prioritize:
For PE buyers:
- What platform are you building, and how does my business fit the thesis?
- What are your expectations for my involvement post-close?
- What happens to my employees in the integration process?
- What's your holding period and exit strategy for the platform?
- Is rollover equity expected or optional?
For strategic buyers:
- What specifically about this business is strategically valuable to you?
- How do you typically handle brand and team integration post-close?
- Are there customer or territory overlap issues we should address upfront?
- What's your timeline to close, and how is the acquisition being financed?
For individual buyers:
- How is the acquisition being financed, and is SBA approval in process?
- What's your operational background for running a business like this?
- Are you expecting seller financing, and what amount?
- What's your plan for the management team and key employees?
Know your value before buyers tell you theirs
Understanding your estimated value range puts you in a better position to evaluate any offer — regardless of who's making it.
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Last updated April 2026