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After three decades in capital markets and entrepreneurial ventures, I’ve learned one hard truth: Most founders wait too long to think about their exit. They’re focused on growing the business, product-market fit, hiring the right people or raising their next round, and understandably so. But here’s the reality: The companies that scale, endure and lead are the ones built with the end in mind.
Having an exit mindset doesn’t mean you’re planning to abandon ship. It means you’re architecting your business with intention and strategic foresight. Whether your future includes an IPO, a SPAC merger, a venture-backed acquisition or simply attracting long-term capital, an exit mindset forces clarity. It requires discipline. And it ensures you’re building not just for now but for what comes next.
Related: Starting a Business? You Should Already Be Thinking About Your Exit Strategy. Here’s Why.
I learned this the hard way
During the Great Recession, I lost everything. Years of work and millions in value disappeared seemingly overnight. That moment was both devastating and instructive. I realized that while I had been focused on growth and momentum, I hadn’t built with durability in mind. I hadn’t built to exit; I’d built to run.
Coming back from that loss forced me to rebuild from the ground up and reimagine what success really meant. I leaned into the volatility instead of resisting it, and over time, that shift led me to support other founders navigating the capital markets, helping them structure for growth and prepare for their own exits.
I noticed a pattern: The most successful entrepreneurs weren’t necessarily the smartest or the most well-funded. They were the ones who led with clarity, who built their businesses with the intention to exit, whether that meant selling, stepping back or scaling beyond themselves.
Exit is a mindset, not a milestone
Going public or selling your company shouldn’t be a last-minute decision. It can (and should) take years, as a natural progression of a business built on solid fundamentals. That starts with a clear answer to one question: What are you building toward?
If your answer is vague or reactive, it’s time to revisit your strategy.
An exit mindset helps you:
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Build toward investor-grade readiness: This includes predictable revenue, clean cap tables, strong corporate governance and a scalable operating model.
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Attract the right capital partners: Investors can sense when a business has long-term value versus short-term hustle.
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Avoid short-term traps: When you’re playing the long game, you’re less likely to overpromise, overhire or overextend.
Related: 4 Go-To Moves to Help Start Your Exit Strategy Now
Think like a public company (even if you’re not one yet)
Entrepreneurs often underestimate the rigor and transparency required to go public or raise institutional capital and often think of an IPO or acquisition as a finish line. But it’s not a finish line, it’s a new starting gate. And the market doesn’t hand out second chances.
If you want public markets, investors or strategic acquirers to take you seriously, you need to demonstrate:
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Financial maturity: Are your books audit-ready? Do you understand your KPI and unit economics? Can you forecast with precision?
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Strategic clarity: Do you have a clearly articulated long-term vision? Can you tell a compelling growth story?
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Operational resilience: Have you built processes that scale? Do you have a team that can lead beyond you?
I tell the entrepreneurs I work with that the stock doesn’t trade itself. A great business is not the same as a great public company. The companies that perform post-IPO are the ones that prepared for the scrutiny long before the bell rang.
Lessons from the frontlines
Over the past few years, I’ve seen how volatile and unforgiving the IPO and public markets can be. In 2021, deal flow was booming. In 2022 and 2023, it all but froze. Yet in that same period, a handful of companies thrived. Why? Because they had built with optionality in mind.
Take CAVA Group, for instance. In a tough IPO market, they went public in 2023 and saw their stock jump 37% on the first day. That didn’t happen by accident. It was the result of strategic decisions made years earlier: disciplined growth, strong financial performance, well-crafted storytelling, focused leadership and the ability to meet investor expectations.
Don’t just raise capital. Rehearse the exit.
Too many founders treat fundraising like a finish line. But capital is a tool, not a strategy. If you raise money without a clear exit roadmap, you risk dilution, misalignment, or worse, getting stuck in the middle.
Instead, start with the exit in mind. Ask yourself:
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What would a strategic acquirer find most valuable about my business?
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If I were to list tomorrow, are my systems, controls and structures ready?
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Do I have the right team and board to guide me through a real transition?
The earlier you ask these questions, the more optionality you create. And in this volatile market, optionality isn’t a nice-to-have. It is your edge.
Related: How to Expertly Position Your Business for an Exit
Build to exit, lead to endure
The paradox is real: The strongest exits come from businesses that aren’t built just to exit. They’re built to endure. They have resilient models, committed teams and founders who lead with transparency and purpose.
An exit mindset doesn’t mean you’re pulling back. It means you’re more strategic and leading with vision. It doesn’t mean you’re ready to walk away; it means you’re building something that can outlast you.
So, whether you’re on your first round or your fifth, ask yourself: If I had to exit tomorrow, would I be ready?
If the answer is no, you’re not alone. The time to start building with that end in mind is now.
After three decades in capital markets and entrepreneurial ventures, I’ve learned one hard truth: Most founders wait too long to think about their exit. They’re focused on growing the business, product-market fit, hiring the right people or raising their next round, and understandably so. But here’s the reality: The companies that scale, endure and lead are the ones built with the end in mind.
Having an exit mindset doesn’t mean you’re planning to abandon ship. It means you’re architecting your business with intention and strategic foresight. Whether your future includes an IPO, a SPAC merger, a venture-backed acquisition or simply attracting long-term capital, an exit mindset forces clarity. It requires discipline. And it ensures you’re building not just for now but for what comes next.
Related: Starting a Business? You Should Already Be Thinking About Your Exit Strategy. Here’s Why.
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