
Nobody starts a business with the exit in mind. At least, that used to be true. Today, founders are far more strategic about exits than traditional, legacy-type businesses. Whether you are building for rapid growth and a three-year sale, planning a private equity-backed scale-up, or creating a long-term lifestyle business for your lifetime, your exit trajectory should influence decisions from day one.An exit is not an event. It is a process that unfolds in three distinct stages, each requiring a different legal mindset, financial discipline and commercial awareness. Miss one, and the consequences tend to surface at the worst possible time.
Stage One: Building With the Exit in Mind
Before revenue accelerates, before investment discussions begin, before heads of terms are drafted, there must be structure. This stage is about intentional design. Crafting the exit may be for investors, but it is also what you want.
1. What are you actually building?
Are you:
- Packaging for rapid growth and sale within three to five years?
- Building a business designed to attract angel funding and later VC?
- Creating something for your staff to take over and buy you out?
- Growing sustainably as a lifestyle business with long-term income and eventually a retirement sale?
The answer affects everything:
- Share structure maybe founder equity splits
- Tax planning – maybe Options and EMI schemes
- Employment – Restrictions – Directors’ contracts tied to shares
- Dividend vs salary extraction
- Long-term capital gains planning
If you intend to raise investment, your constitutional documents must anticipate it. Consider what type of investor, timeframes and the terms you will be seeking, and this should be wrapped up as part of your exit plan.
If you have a co-founder or business partner, you need to have these conversations early and either be on the same page or work out a longer-term strategy. If you intend to remain in control, your minority protections need to be embedded early.
If this is a retirement asset, succession and tax structuring should not be an afterthought. If the business is really just you, and your relationship you have with your customers, how do you move this goodwill from you to the business for a later buy-out – otherwise how will you exit?
The earlier the thinking, the greater the flexibility.
Stage Two: Investment and Scaling: Where Control Quietly Shifts
This is the stage most founders underestimate. You become “investment ready”. You negotiate a term sheet. You sign a subscription agreement and shareholders’ agreement. You celebrate.
But this is also where you begin tying yourself into the business.
You need to understand:
1. Founder Protection
- How much control are you giving away? How long for?
- Who do you have to account to? What information do you have to provide. When do you have to provide it and in what format? A VC will want a board seat; EIS investors an out in 3 years – what happens if co-founders want different things?
- Can you be paid a salary and/or dividends without investor consent?
- What happens if you need a down round, and sell shares for less than what the investor paid for them?
- Are there weighted voting rights?
2. Your Position as Director
- What powers are reserved to investors?
- Can you give/ receive directors’ loans?
- Are you having to pay investor reps to sit on your board – can you vet them?
- Can you be removed as a director? What happens to your shares if you resign or are terminated?
- What happens if you get ill, divorce or die?
- Are there restrictions on your holiday? Working times? Salary? Expenses?
- Can you be replaced as CEO?
3. Restrictive Covenants
Often overlooked, but critical. If things do not work out:
- How long are you restricted from competing?
- Can you work in the same sector?
- Are non-solicitation clauses reasonable, maybe you want to work for a client?
- What is owned by the Company? can you use the same trading name? What if it is your name?
- What happens if you are deemed a “bad leaver”?
Without careful drafting, a founder can lose control, lose equity value and still be unable to operate in their industry.
Stage Three: Final Chapter
Preparation and planning are key if you are to sell from a position of strength and receive the full valuation.
Buyers and private equity houses will expect:
A Fully Prepared Data Room
- Executed shareholder and subscription agreements
- Proper corporate resolutions and filings to hand
- Employment and consultancy contracts signed
- IP assignments into the company
- Commercial contracts
- Regulatory compliance documentation
- Litigation history / red flags resolved or highlighted openly
- Insurance records
- Property documentation
Gaps reduce valuation and erode trust. Inconsistencies will delay deals.
Financial Clarity
- Audited or at least robust management accounts
- Clear EBITDA / justifiable valuation calculations
- Normalised earnings
- Debt and working capital analysis
Leverage and Negotiation
Entering negotiations from strength requires:
- Governance history
- Properly documented decisions
- No hidden issues
- No founder disputes
In addition, be aware of the tax benefits and structures. The strongest exits are those prepared years in advance.
The Reality Most Founders Discover Too Late
- The structure you chose at incorporation may affect your sale.
- The investor you took on at the seed stage affects your control at Series A.
- The shareholders’ agreement you signed with friends can dictate your exit freedom.
- The restricted covenants you overlooked may restrict your next venture.
Every Stage Is Vital
- Stage One determines flexibility.
- Stage Two determines control.
- Stage Three determines value.
They are not separate phases; they are connected decisions across the lifecycle of your business.
An exit is not simply a transaction at the end. It is the cumulative result of legal, financial and structural decisions made throughout the journey. For founders building serious businesses, whether for scale, investment or eventual retirement, the question is no longer whether to plan for exit. It is whether the planning started early enough.

The post Why founders should start early on exit strategies appeared first on Enterprise Times.
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