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What makes a search fund first-year budget useful?

By Michael Kaufman

A useful first-year budget connects baseline performance, debt service, hiring needs, transition costs, working capital, and value creation initiatives.1,2

The first-year budget should help the new operator control cash and priorities while the business is still being learned. For searchers and acquisition entrepreneurs moving from search activity into operating control, the practical answer is to treat the question as part of target screening, investor communication, acquisition diligence, leadership transition, and first-year ownership, not as a one-off definition. The record should show the search thesis, target screen, diligence findings, investor approvals, lender package, transition plan, and first board materials so an investor, lender, counsel, administrator, or operating lead can reconstruct the decision later. Tie the budget to monthly reporting, lender covenants, board review, seller transition obligations, and named operating initiatives. The common failure mode is using the acquisition model as the operating budget without converting diligence assumptions into controllable line items.1,2

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Sources & References

  1. 1.Stanford Graduate School of BusinessSearch FundsStanford GSB(Search fund model, searcher workflow, acquisition process, and operator education.)primary · market-context · search-funds
  2. 2.U.S. Small Business AdministrationBuy an Existing Business or FranchiseSBA(Business acquisition, diligence, financing, and ownership transition context.)primary · workflow-standard · search-funds

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