M&A Process Roadmap
From Teaser to Close
Navigate every stage of the M&A process with confidence. Learn deal-killer traps, timeline expectations, and momentum-building strategies through our interactive 5-phase roadmap.
Understanding the M&A Journey
The M&A process typically takes 6-12 months from first contact to closing. Understanding each phase helps you stay organized, avoid common pitfalls, and maintain momentum when things slow down (and they will).
Below is an interactive timeline showing all 5 phases and 14 key milestones. Click on any milestone to see detailed information, typical timelines, and what to watch out for.
Interactive M&A Timeline
M&A Sale Process Overview
Your Interactive Exit Journey
Livmo structures a process specifically for your company to balance value maximization, speed, and certainty
Phase 1: Preparation
Duration: 6-10 weeks • 4 milestones
Initial Due Diligence
Gather and organize all financial, legal, and operational documentation
Key Activities
- •Financial audit
- •Legal review
- •Customer data analysis
- •Tech stack audit
Deliverables
- ✓Clean financials
- ✓Cap table
- ✓Customer contracts
- ✓IP documentation
CIM Development
Create compelling Confidential Information Memorandum
Key Activities
- •Market positioning
- •Competitive analysis
- •Growth story
- •Financial projections
Deliverables
- ✓Professional CIM
- ✓Executive summary
- ✓Management presentation
Data Room Setup
Organize secure virtual data room for buyer due diligence
Key Activities
- •Document indexing
- •Access controls
- •Q&A preparation
Deliverables
- ✓Organized VDR
- ✓Document index
- ✓FAQ document
Buyer Research & Universe Development
Identify and research strategic and financial buyers to create targeted acquisition list
Key Activities
- •Strategic buyer mapping
- •Financial buyer identification
- •Buyer profiling
- •Target list creation
Deliverables
- ✓Buyer universe list
- ✓Buyer profiles
- ✓Prioritization matrix
Common Deal-Killer Traps
Phase 1-2: Initial Engagement
- • Moving too fast: Signing LOI before proper valuation analysis
- • Information overload: Sharing everything before NDA is signed
- • Wrong buyer type: Not qualifying if they can actually close
- • Single track: Talking to only one buyer (no leverage)
Phase 3: LOI & Negotiation
- • Weak LOI terms: Accepting vague language that favors buyer
- • No exclusivity limit: Giving unlimited time for diligence
- • Earn-out heavy: Too much value tied to future performance
- • Missing break-up fees: No penalty if buyer walks away late
Phase 4: Due Diligence
- • Unorganized data: Slow responses kill momentum and trust
- • Surprises: Anything not disclosed upfront becomes leverage for buyer
- • Over-explaining: Defensive responses to every question
- • Missing documentation: Verbal agreements with no paper trail
Phase 5: Closing
- • Indemnification traps: Unlimited liability after closing
- • Escrow overreach: Too much held back for too long
- • Employment terms: Vague expectations for post-close role
- • Last-minute changes: Accepting major revisions at signing
Realistic Timeline Expectations
| Phase | Typical Duration | What Affects Speed |
|---|---|---|
| Preparation | 4-12 weeks | How organized your data room is |
| Teaser to NDA | 1-3 weeks | Buyer interest level and legal speed |
| NDA to LOI | 2-6 weeks | Valuation complexity and negotiations |
| Due Diligence | 60-90 days | Data room quality and surprises found |
| Definitive Docs to Close | 30-60 days | Legal complexity and final negotiations |
Reality Check: Most deals take 6-12 months total. Strategic buyers tend to move slower (8-14 months) due to internal approvals. PE firms can move faster (4-8 months) if they really want the asset. Plan accordingly and don't quit your day job until the wire hits.
How to Keep Momentum
1. Stay Organized from Day One
Build your data room before you need it. Every document request should be answered same-day. Slow responses signal either disorganization or something to hide - both kill momentum.
Pro tip: Use our Legal Due Diligence Checklist to organize everything upfront.
2. Run Multiple Tracks (If Possible)
Talk to 3-5 buyers simultaneously. It creates urgency, gives you leverage, and ensures if one falls through you don't start from zero. Single-track deals die more often and get worse terms.
Pro tip: Learn about different buyer types to run a diverse process.
3. Set Clear Deadlines
Every phase needs hard deadlines. LOI exclusivity should be 60-90 days max. Diligence should have weekly milestone check-ins. Vague timelines = stalled deals = buyer fatigue.
4. Keep Running the Business
Nothing kills a deal faster than declining metrics during diligence. Buyers get nervous when revenue dips or churn spikes. Stay focused on operations even when you're drowning in document requests.
5. Get Expert Help
M&A attorney and deal advisor are worth every penny. They've seen every trap, know market terms, and keep things moving when you're emotionally exhausted. First-time founders without help leave 20-30% on the table.
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