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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Exit Strategy Planning: A Founder's Complete Guide

TS行政書士
Supervisionado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Consultor Administrativo Licenciado, JapãoTodo o conteúdo da MmowW é supervisionado por um especialista em conformidade regulatória licenciado nacionalmente.
Plan your business exit strategy across 7 countries. MmowW Scrib🐮 prepares exit planning documents for founders ready to move on. An exit strategy is a plan for how a business owner will eventually transfer their ownership of the business — whether by selling, passing to family, floating on a stock exchange, or closing. Every business owner will exit eventually; the question is whether that exit will be on their terms.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Every business should have an exit strategy — whether you plan to sell in two years or thirty. Planning early maximises value, minimises tax, and ensures you are in control of the outcome.

What You Need to Know

An exit strategy is a plan for how a business owner will eventually transfer their ownership of the business — whether by selling, passing to family, floating on a stock exchange, or closing. Every business owner will exit eventually; the question is whether that exit will be on their terms.

Founders who plan their exit early have the highest probability of achieving a good outcome. They can structure their business to maximise valuation, manage tax liabilities, develop successor leaders, and approach buyers from a position of strength rather than desperation.

Founders who ignore exit planning until they are forced to exit — by illness, burnout, a financial crisis, or a family emergency — typically achieve far worse outcomes. Distressed exits attract distressed valuations.

This guide provides a framework for exit strategy planning, with reference to country-specific tax reliefs and timing considerations across seven countries.

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Start With the End in Mind

The first step in exit planning is clarity about what you want. Ask yourself:

Answering these questions clearly enables you to choose the right exit route and structure your business accordingly.

The Main Exit Routes

Trade sale: Selling to another company (often a competitor, supplier, or customer). Typically achieves the highest valuation multiple because strategic buyers pay for synergies. Requires finding a motivated buyer, which takes time and specialist advisors.

Private equity sale: Selling a majority stake to a PE fund, which typically seeks a further exit in 3–7 years. PE buyers pay for growth potential and management teams. Often structured as a partial sale (founder retains a stake for the "second bite of the cherry").

Management buyout: Selling to the existing management team. Values business continuity and is often founder-preferred. Financing the management team is typically the key challenge.

Employee Ownership Trust (EOT): Particularly popular in the UK — the company is sold to a trust on behalf of employees. The founder receives full market value, employees benefit from ownership, and the transaction may attract tax advantages. Growing in popularity in other jurisdictions.

IPO (Initial Public Offering): Floating the company on a stock exchange. Suitable only for larger businesses with strong growth prospects and investor appetite. Expensive and time-consuming process.

Family succession: Passing the business to family members. See our Business Succession Planning guide for detailed coverage.

Orderly wind-down: Closing the business rather than selling it. Appropriate when no viable buyer exists and the business's value lies primarily in its cash generation while trading.

Building Toward a Successful Exit

Once you have chosen an exit route and target timeline, plan backwards:

3–5 years before target exit:

1–2 years before:

6–12 months before:

Tax Planning for Exit

Available tax reliefs for business exits vary significantly by country, but the common thread is that the reliefs are time-sensitive and must be planned for well in advance.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Key Exit Tax Relief Qualifying Conditions Planning Lead Time
🇬🇧 UK Business Asset Disposal Relief (10% CGT rate up to £1M lifetime limit) Trading company, employee/director for 2+ years 2+ years before exit
🇫🇷 France Pacte Dutreil, Entrepreneur relief Various — asset type, holding period 2–5 years before
🇸🇪 Sweden Participation exemption (unlisted shares) Holding period requirements 5+ years
🇦🇺 Australia 15-year exemption, Retirement exemption, Small business rollover Active asset, age, turnover thresholds 2–3+ years
🇳🇿 New Zealand No CGT on most business sales Generally no specific planning needed Confirm with accountant
🇨🇦 Canada Lifetime Capital Gains Exemption (up to CAD $971,190 for qualifying small business shares) Qualified Small Business Corporation shares 2+ years before
🇺🇸 USA Section 1202 QSBS Exclusion (up to $10M or 10x cost) C-corp, technology focus, 5-year hold 5+ years

Key government resources:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Starting too late. Most exit tax reliefs require qualifying conditions to have been met for a minimum period (typically 2–5 years). Starting exit planning only after you decide to sell means these reliefs may not be available.
  2. Not getting a professional valuation early enough. Many founders have an inflated (or deflated) view of their business's value. An independent valuation — even if just a management benchmark — provides a reality check and helps set realistic expectations.
  3. Over-reliance on a single customer or employee. High customer concentration (one client representing more than 20–30% of revenue) or key person dependency are significant valuation discounts. Address these systematically in the years before exit.
  4. Negotiating without a clear BATNA (Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement). Having only one potential buyer at the table is a weak negotiating position. Develop relationships with multiple potential buyers or appointing an advisor who can run a competitive process.
  5. Ignoring post-exit emotional considerations. Many founders underestimate how difficult the transition from "owner" to "former owner" can be. Think carefully about what you will do with your time and identity post-exit, and factor this into the timing of your exit.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

MmowW Scrib🐮 can help you prepare the foundational corporate documents that buyers, advisors, and tax authorities will need throughout your exit process.

Helpful tools:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. Exit planning involves complex legal, tax, and financial decisions — engage a qualified attorney, accountant, and M&A advisor well in advance of your target exit date.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How is a business valued for sale?

A: Business valuation methods vary by industry and size. Common approaches include: EBITDA multiples (the most common for SMEs — typically 3–8x EBITDA depending on growth, sector, and risk), revenue multiples (common for SaaS and high-growth companies), discounted cash flow analysis (for businesses with predictable cash flows), and net asset value (for asset-heavy businesses). A qualified business valuator or M&A advisor can provide a formal valuation.

Q: Do I need an M&A advisor to sell my business?

A: For transactions above a certain size (typically $1M+), an M&A advisor, business broker, or investment banker adds significant value by identifying buyers, managing the process, maintaining confidentiality, and negotiating on your behalf. Their fees (typically 3–10% of sale price for smaller transactions) are usually well justified by the improvement in sale price and process management. For very small transactions, some owners manage the process themselves — but always use a qualified attorney for legal documentation.

Q: What is an earnout and should I accept one?

A: An earnout is a deferred payment structure where the seller receives additional consideration if the business achieves certain performance targets post-completion. Earnouts help bridge valuation gaps between buyer and seller but are high-risk for sellers — post-completion disputes about whether earnout targets have been met are very common. If you accept an earnout, ensure the targets are clearly defined, the measurement methodology is specified, and your ability to influence performance is protected. Always have a qualified attorney review earnout provisions.

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