Most Oklahoma business owners leave significant money on the table when they sell. Not because their business isn't valuable — because they went to market before it was ready. We help you fix that first.
Buyers pay a premium for businesses that are clean, documented, and not dependent on the seller to function. Most businesses going to market are none of those things. The result is a lower offer, a longer due diligence process, and a deal that either falls apart or closes at a price the owner did not expect.
Exit preparation is the work you do before the buyer shows up. Three to six months of focused effort that closes the gap between what your business is worth today and what a buyer will actually pay for it at closing.
Getting the books accurate, organized, and presented the way buyers and their advisors expect to see them. Clean financials tell a clear story. Messy ones tell buyers to lower their offer or walk away.
Capturing the processes, systems, and institutional knowledge that live in your head. A business that can only run because the owner knows how everything works is not a business anyone wants to buy at full price.
Building the team structure and accountability systems so the business does not depend on you to function. Buyers do not want to buy a job. They want to buy a business. The difference is what you get paid at closing.
Making sure every revenue stream is documented, every margin is understood, and the financial story you are telling a buyer is defensible under scrutiny. Due diligence exposes everything. We find it first.
Helping you articulate the story of the business — where it came from, where it is going, and why a buyer should pay a premium for what you have built. Numbers matter. So does the story around them.
When you are ready to go to market, we connect you with capital partners and M&A advisors in Oklahoma who work with businesses at your stage and size. You do not start that conversation cold.
Messy books, undocumented processes, an owner who is central to everything. Buyers see these as risks. Risk gets priced into the offer. The gap between your number and theirs is not a negotiation — it's a valuation problem.
Clean the books. Document the operation. Build the team. Tell the story. The work is not glamorous but the financial result is real. A business that presents well under due diligence commands a meaningfully higher multiple than one that does not.
Clean financials, documented systems, a team that runs without the owner, and a clear growth story. That is what a buyer pays a premium for. The preparation fee is not a cost — it's an investment with a very clear return at closing.
At that point you are reacting to due diligence instead of controlling the narrative. The best outcome happens when the preparation is done before the buyer shows up. Even 3 to 6 months makes a meaningful difference.
Generally businesses between $1M and $20M in revenue where the owner is thinking about an exit in the next 1 to 3 years. Family businesses, Oklahoma businesses in the $1M to $20M range, and anyone who wants to exit on their own terms rather than a buyer's.
Scissortail does not act as a broker. The work is getting you ready. When it is time to go to market, you get introduced to Oklahoma capital partners and M&A advisors who work with businesses at your size and stage. You start that conversation prepared.
A straight look at where the business is today — the financials, the operations, the owner dependency, and the gaps between where you are and where a buyer needs you to be. No fluff. No pitch. Just clarity.
A short, ordered list of the highest-leverage improvements to make before going to market. What moves the number most. What a buyer will find in due diligence. What to fix first with the time you have.
Three to six months of execution. Financial cleanup. Process documentation. Team structure. Margin analysis. Owner transition planning. The deliverable is a business that presents well under scrutiny.
When you are ready, a warm introduction to capital partners and M&A advisors in Oklahoma who work with businesses like yours. You go into that conversation with clean books, a clear story, and a prepared team behind you.
Most Scissortail exit preparation engagements run 3 to 6 months. The timeline depends on the current state of the financials, how much operational documentation exists, and how dependent the business is on the owner. Some businesses are closer than they think. Others need more runway. We figure that out in the first conversation.
Three main areas: financial cleanup and presentation, operational documentation, and owner independence. Financial cleanup means getting the books accurate and organized in a way buyers and their advisors expect. Operational documentation means capturing the processes and institutional knowledge that allow the business to run without the owner. Owner independence means building the team structure and systems so the business does not depend on you to function.
Buyers pay a premium for businesses that are clean, documented, and not dependent on the seller. A business with messy books, undocumented processes, and an owner who is the answer to every question is a risk. Buyers price risk into their offers. Removing that risk through preparation closes the gap between what a buyer is willing to pay and what the business is actually worth.
Ideally 12 to 24 months before you want to close. But 3 to 6 months of focused preparation still makes a meaningful difference. The worst time to start is when you already have a buyer at the table. At that point you are reacting to due diligence instead of controlling the narrative.
Scissortail Fractional does not act as a business broker. The work is getting your business exit-ready. When you are ready to go to market, we introduce you to capital partners and M&A advisors in Oklahoma who work with businesses at your stage and size. You start that conversation prepared instead of cold.
Generally businesses between $1M and $20M in annual revenue where the owner is thinking about an exit in the next 1 to 3 years. Family businesses, Oklahoma businesses in the $1M to $20M range, and anyone who has built something real and wants to exit on their terms rather than a buyer's.
No pitch. No deck. A straight conversation about where your business is and what it would take to get it exit-ready.