No Surprises, No Setbacks: Preparing for Due Diligence in the M&A Process

 
For many business owners in the construction, energy, and building services spaces, the idea of selling your business comes with a mix of excitement and uncertainty. You’ve built something valuable—but are you really ready for the spotlight that comes with due diligence?

At CB Energy Business Consulting, we work with owners not just to market their companies—but to prepare them. Because in M&A, surprises aren’t just inconvenient—they’re expensive.

Here’s how to prepare for due diligence and avoid the kind of red flags that can kill a deal or reduce your final valuation.

 

What is Due Diligence, Really?


Due diligence is the buyer’s deep-dive into your business. They want to confirm what they’re buying—your contracts, your financials, your people, your risks. Think of it as a full-body scan of your company’s operations, books, and value drivers.

The more prepared you are, the more confident the buyer becomes—and the smoother the road to closing.

 


 

5 Ways to Prepare and Avoid Surprises

 

1. Get Your Financials in Order


Make sure your books are clean, consistent, and accurate. That means:

  • Three years of P&Ls and balance sheets, preferably audited or reviewed

  • Clear categorization of revenue streams

  • Normalized EBITDA (adjusting for owner comp, one-time expenses, etc.)

  • A solid trailing twelve-month (TTM) view

👉 Pro Tip: Buyers get wary when they see “lumpy” margins or unexplained swings in revenue. Tell the story behind the numbers before they ask.


 

2. Document Key Contracts and Customer Info


Do you have long-term service agreements? Are any major customers on handshake deals?

Buyers will want:

  • Copies of customer and vendor contracts

  • Terms, renewal periods, and cancellation clauses

  • A customer concentration analysis (anything over 20% is a flag)

👉 Pro Tip: Lock in key relationships before you go to market. Even verbal renewals should be formalized.


 

3. Clean Up Corporate Structure and Compliance


Legal and tax surprises = deal killers. Before due diligence, make sure:

  • Your corporate entity is properly structured

  • All filings and licenses are current

  • Employee classifications (W2 vs 1099) are accurate

  • No outstanding legal issues or unresolved tax liabilities

👉 Pro Tip: Consider a pre-transaction legal review. Better to fix it now than explain it later.


 

4. Build a Team Beyond the Owner


Buyers aren’t just buying your backlog—they’re buying your people. If the business can’t run without you, expect a discount.

Document:

  • Org chart and key employee roles

  • Incentive plans or non-competes

  • Training or transition plans

👉 Pro Tip: Start delegating now. Show the business can run (and grow) without you.


 

5. Be Ready to Answer the “Why Now?” Question


Smart buyers want to know why you’re selling. Retirement? Growth capital? Market timing?

Make sure your story is:

  • Honest

  • Strategic

  • Consistent across all materials

👉 Pro Tip: Buyers are more likely to close a deal when they feel aligned with your reason for selling.


 

Our Role: Anticipate, Prepare, Maximize


At CB Energy Business Consulting, we guide owners through this process from the very beginning. We don’t just react to diligence—we anticipate it.

Our pre-sale consulting engagements help:

  • Conduct a “reverse due diligence” review

  • Identify red flags before buyers do

  • Position your business to reduce friction and increase valuation

The result? Less stress, fewer surprises, and more leverage when it counts.


 

Thinking About a Sale? Let’s Talk.


Even if you’re 1–3 years out from selling, now is the time to prepare. Reach out to us for a confidential consultation—we’ll help you understand what buyers will see and how to make your business due diligence-ready.

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