創業者の事業売却・引退

プライベートエクイティがあなたのビジネスにとって適切な買い手であることは稀な理由

PEは目を引く数字を提示します。しかし、チーム、文化、そしてレガシーを大切にする創業者にとって、最高の入札額が最良の結果であることは稀です。PEの買い手が実際に行っていることと、代替案について説明します。

Nirji Venturesリサーチ
7分 読む2026-05-12
一般的な情報コンテンツ。投資、法律、または税務に関するアドバイスではありません。

There is a version of the business exit that founders dream about: a private equity firm arrives, writes a large cheque, and your business joins a portfolio of successful companies with institutional support and a clear growth runway. Your employees are well looked after. Your brand continues. The culture you spent years building is respected and preserved.

This version of events happens. It is also the exception, not the rule.

For most founders of small and medium businesses in Southeast Asia — businesses with EBITDA between S$500,000 and S$10 million, with 20 to 200 employees, serving regional or local markets — private equity is frequently the wrong buyer. Understanding why requires understanding what PE firms are actually trying to achieve, and how their objectives tend to collide with the things founders care about.

How Private Equity Actually Works

A private equity firm raises money from institutional investors — pension funds, endowments, sovereign wealth funds, family offices — with a commitment to return that capital, plus significant gains, within a defined timeframe. The typical fund life is ten years. Investments are usually made in the first three to four years, and returned to investors in the final three to four years. This means PE firms are structurally committed to selling every business they buy.

This is not a flaw in the PE model — it is the model. And it has produced extraordinary returns for institutional investors over the past four decades. But it has direct implications for founders who sell to PE firms.

When you sell to PE, you are not selling to an owner who intends to keep the business. You are selling to a temporary steward who will optimise the business for resale at a higher multiple within three to seven years. Every decision made during the ownership period — hiring, investment, cost management, strategic direction — is evaluated against the objective of making the business more attractive to the next buyer.

What Happens After the Sale

The first year after a PE acquisition is typically characterised by a "100-day plan" — a structured process of assessing the business, identifying areas for improvement, and beginning to implement changes. For founders who stay on in an advisory or management role, this period can be disorienting.

The language changes. "EBITDA improvement" becomes the lens through which every decision is evaluated. Headcount is reviewed. Costs that were previously justified by relationship or culture are questioned. The pace of decision-making accelerates, and the tolerance for ambiguity narrows.

This is not a criticism of PE — it is a description of a rational, well-designed operating model. PE firms are very good at what they do. The problem arises when a founder has not thought clearly about what they are actually selling.

If you are selling a business where the financial returns are the only thing that matters to you, PE is a highly competent buyer. If you are selling a business where the people, the culture, the customer relationships, and the brand reputation matter to you — and for most long-tenured founders in Southeast Asia, they do — then the 3–5 year horizon and the EBITDA-first operating model of a PE firm will frequently conflict with those priorities.

The Staff Situation

The most common concern founders raise about PE buyers is staff. "Will my team be looked after?" In our experience, the honest answer is: it depends, and you probably cannot control it as much as you think once the deal is closed.

PE firms are not malicious employers. But they are disciplined about costs, and headcount is a cost. In any acquisition, there will be a review of roles, responsibilities, and redundancies — particularly if the PE firm has other portfolio companies in similar businesses and can consolidate functions.

Some founders negotiate employment protections into their sale agreements. This is good practice and we always recommend it. But contractual protections typically run for one to two years. After that, the new owner makes staffing decisions based on their operating plan, not the preferences of the previous owner.

The Culture Question

Culture is even harder to protect in a transaction than staff. A PE firm acquiring a business does not acquire its culture — culture is a function of leadership behaviours, internal norms, and the stories an organisation tells about itself. When the founder leaves and a PE-appointed management team arrives, the culture begins to change, regardless of anyone's intentions.

This is not unique to PE — it is true of any ownership change. But PE firms tend to be more systematic about performance management, more rigorous about removing underperformers, and more focused on standardising processes across their portfolio. For businesses where the culture was the founder's primary contribution — where the warmth of the workplace, the loyalty of the team, and the unusual quality of the customer relationships were built through the founder's personal presence — the post-PE transition can be particularly difficult to watch.

Who the Better Buyers Might Be

This is not an argument against selling your business. It is an argument for being thoughtful about who you sell it to — and what you are optimising for.

Strategic buyers — companies in your industry or adjacencies who want to acquire your business as part of their own growth strategy — often offer better cultural continuity than PE. They are buying because they want what you built, not because they want to resell it. The retention incentives are different, and the management approach often allows more of the existing team and culture to survive.

Permanent capital vehicles — holding companies that buy to own indefinitely, rather than to flip — are a growing category in Southeast Asia. These structures are explicitly designed to be a better alternative to PE for founders who want their business to have a long-term home.

Management buyouts, where your own senior team acquires the business, preserve continuity by definition. The people running the business post-sale are the same people who ran it pre-sale. The culture survives because the culture-bearers stayed.

Employee ownership structures allow a broader group of staff to become owners, creating alignment and loyalty that a clean third-party sale rarely generates.

How to Evaluate a Buyer

When you receive offers for your business, the evaluation should go well beyond the headline number. Questions worth asking: What is the buyer's track record with businesses they have previously acquired? What happened to the leadership teams and staff of those businesses? What is their explicit plan for the first twelve months? What are their intentions regarding the brand and customer relationships? And critically: what is their exit horizon?

A buyer who answers the exit horizon question clearly and honestly — "we plan to hold this business for ten years and grow it organically" — is a different proposition from a buyer who is evasive on the question. Evasion on this point usually means a short horizon.

The right buyer for your business is not the buyer who pays the most. It is the buyer whose plans for the business align with the outcome you want — for yourself, for your team, and for what you spent your career building.

The Role of Your Adviser

A good sell-side adviser does not simply run a process designed to maximise the bid. They help you define what you are optimising for, identify buyers who fit that profile, and run a process structured to attract the right offers — not just the highest ones.

This sounds obvious. In practice, it is unusual. Most business brokers and investment banks are compensated on transaction size, which creates an incentive to maximise price above all else. Founders who have sold their businesses and later expressed regret almost always trace that regret to the same place: they let the highest offer become the deciding factor, without adequately interrogating what the buyer was planning to do with what they had sold.

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執筆者

Nirji Ventures Research

Research & Strategy

Nirji Venturesは、シンガポールに本社を置く戦略アドバイザリーおよびビジネスコンサルティング会社で、30カ国以上で35年以上の複合アドバイザリー経験を有しています。当社は、ビジネス変革、市場参入、ベンチャービルディング、資金調達準備を専門としています。

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