How to Attract Growth Equity Before a Strategic Exit
Not every founder is ready to sell outright.
Sometimes the goal isn’t to exit immediately—it’s to scale intelligently, de-risk the business, and increase enterprise value before pursuing a full strategic sale.
That’s where growth equity comes in.
Growth equity sits between bootstrapping and buyouts. It provides capital to accelerate expansion without requiring founders to relinquish full control. When deployed correctly, it can meaningfully increase valuation ahead of a future exit.
After nearly three decades as an entrepreneur, investor, and advisor, I’ve seen growth equity serve as both a powerful catalyst and, when misaligned, a distraction. The difference lies in clarity of purpose.
As I explain in my book, The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, every capital decision should be evaluated through the lens of long-term exit strategy—not short-term liquidity.
What Growth Equity Really Means
Growth equity investors typically:
- Invest minority or significant minority stakes
- Target profitable or near-profitable businesses
- Avoid full buyouts
- Focus on accelerating growth
They are not venture capitalists funding early-stage risk.
They are not buyout firms seeking control.
They invest in businesses that have proven product-market fit and want to scale faster.
On the Legacy Advisors Podcast, we’ve discussed how growth equity can professionalize companies while preserving founder leadership.
Why Founders Pursue Growth Equity Before a Sale
Founders often pursue growth equity to:
- Expand geographically
- Invest in sales and marketing
- Build leadership depth
- Execute acquisitions
- Upgrade systems and infrastructure
If the business is strong but constrained by capital or bandwidth, growth equity can accelerate value creation before a strategic or PE sale.
At Legacy Advisors, we often evaluate whether a company’s next inflection point requires outside capital—or operational discipline first.
The Strategic Exit Lens
Here’s where founders get tripped up.
Growth equity should not be pursued because it’s available.
It should be pursued because it aligns with a future exit thesis.
Ask:
- Will this capital meaningfully increase EBITDA?
- Will it reduce founder dependency?
- Will it strengthen recurring revenue?
- Will it improve scalability?
In The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, I emphasize that capital should serve strategy—not ego.
What Growth Equity Investors Look For
If you want to attract growth equity, you must demonstrate:
- Strong revenue growth
- Clear unit economics
- Expanding margins or path to margin expansion
- Large addressable market
- Repeatable sales processes
Investors are looking for acceleration potential—not survival capital.
On the Legacy Advisors Podcast, we often stress that clarity of growth drivers matters more than top-line excitement.
Institutional Readiness Matters
Growth equity firms expect a certain level of maturity.
You should have:
- Clean financial reporting
- Defined KPIs
- Scalable systems
- Leadership depth beyond the founder
- Transparent governance
If your business still revolves entirely around founder instinct, institutional capital may hesitate.
At Legacy Advisors, we often recommend strengthening internal reporting before initiating capital discussions.
Dilution and Control Considerations
Growth equity investors typically require:
- Board representation
- Protective provisions
- Defined information rights
While you may retain majority ownership, governance will evolve.
Founders must evaluate:
- Decision-making authority
- Exit timing expectations
- Alignment around growth pace
In The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, I explain that governance alignment shapes long-term satisfaction.
Using Growth Equity to De-Risk an Exit
One of the most effective uses of growth capital is de-risking founder dependency.
By investing in:
- Professional management
- Systems automation
- Sales leadership
- Financial controls
you increase buyer confidence for the eventual strategic or PE exit.
On the Legacy Advisors Podcast, we frequently discuss how institutionalization drives valuation expansion.
Avoiding the “Capital for Capital’s Sake” Trap
Capital is tempting.
But misaligned growth equity can create pressure:
- Aggressive growth targets
- Forced expansion
- Cultural strain
- Exit timing misalignment
Growth equity investors expect returns within defined timelines.
If your personal timeline doesn’t align, friction follows.
At Legacy Advisors, we ensure growth capital decisions align with long-term founder objectives.
Signaling Effect to Future Buyers
Strategically chosen growth equity partners can signal credibility.
Future buyers may view institutional backing as validation of:
- Financial rigor
- Governance maturity
- Scalable infrastructure
However, poorly structured minority deals can complicate future exits if terms are misaligned.
In The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, I stress that today’s cap table becomes tomorrow’s negotiation variable.
When Growth Equity Makes Sense
Growth equity may be strategic when:
- EBITDA is strong but expansion capital is constrained
- The market opportunity is large and time-sensitive
- Leadership upgrades will accelerate value
- You want to scale before selling outright
It may not make sense when:
- Fundamentals are unstable
- Capital is needed to fix structural problems
- Exit vision is unclear
Strategic Takeaway
Growth equity is a tool.
When aligned with long-term strategy, it can:
- Accelerate scale
- De-risk founder dependency
- Expand valuation multiples
- Strengthen competitive positioning
When misaligned, it introduces unnecessary pressure.
As I emphasize repeatedly in The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, clarity precedes capital.
Find the Right Partner to Help Sell Your Business
Attracting growth equity before a strategic exit can amplify enterprise value—if structured intentionally.
The right advisory partner helps founders evaluate capital needs, investor alignment, governance impact, and future exit implications.
At Legacy Advisors, we guide founders through capital strategy decisions with long-term exit clarity—so growth capital becomes a multiplier, not a distraction.
Because capital is powerful.
But only when it serves the end game.
Frequently Asked Questions About How to Attract Growth Equity Before a Strategic Exit
What’s the difference between growth equity and private equity buyouts?
Growth equity investors typically take minority or significant minority stakes in profitable or near-profitable companies that want to accelerate expansion. They are not seeking full control the way traditional buyout firms often do. Their goal is to fuel growth, professionalize operations, and position the business for a larger future exit. In my book, The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, I explain that founders must evaluate capital through the lens of long-term strategy. Growth equity is a scaling tool—not an exit in itself.
How do I know if my company is ready for growth equity?
Readiness usually includes strong revenue momentum, clear unit economics, scalable infrastructure, and leadership beyond the founder. Growth equity investors want acceleration potential—not turnaround stories. On the Legacy Advisors Podcast, we’ve discussed how institutional capital expects institutional discipline. Clean financial reporting and defined KPIs are essential before initiating conversations.
Will taking growth equity make a future sale easier?
It can—if structured properly. Institutional backing can signal credibility and improve governance, leadership depth, and reporting standards. That often increases buyer confidence in a later strategic or PE transaction. However, misaligned minority terms can complicate a future sale. At Legacy Advisors, we help founders structure growth equity deals with future exit flexibility in mind.
How much control will I lose with a growth equity partner?
While founders typically retain majority ownership, growth equity investors often receive board seats, protective provisions, and information rights. Governance becomes more structured. In The Entrepreneur’s Exit Playbook, I emphasize that alignment around pace, exit timing, and growth strategy is critical. Governance friction often arises from unclear expectations—not equity percentages.
Should I raise growth equity if I’m planning to sell in the next year or two?
Usually not. Growth equity works best when there’s a defined runway to scale meaningfully before a larger exit. If you’re already within a short sale horizon, introducing a new investor may complicate negotiations and dilute returns unnecessarily. On the Legacy Advisors Podcast, we often stress that sequencing matters. Capital strategy should align with timing strategy.
