HoldCo Builders

PrivatEquityGuy

The HoldCo Builders Podcast with PrivatEquityGuy is a place where you can find meaningful conversations about holding companies, entrepreneurship, small businesses, investing, and more.Be sure to follow the podcast, so you never miss an episode!

  1. How We Bought 27+ Businesses and Built a $1 Billion HoldCo at 39 | Steve Carroll Interview

    20 HR AGO

    How We Bought 27+ Businesses and Built a $1 Billion HoldCo at 39 | Steve Carroll Interview

    Steve Carroll is the CEO & co-founder of Kelso Industries, a national MEP services platform uniting HVAC, mechanical, plumbing, and electrical companies. In just a few years, Kelso went from a gritty, nearly-broke first acquisition to 29 acquisitions and $1B+ in revenue. Steve breaks down the bruises and the blueprint: why their first year almost killed the business (including a single job that wiped out a year of profit), the switch from “buy and replace” to a partner-and-keep-the-owner model, how they finance growth without overpaying, and the operating system (recruiting, cash, WIP discipline) that lets local brands scale without losing their soul. Sponsors This episode is brought to you by CapitalPad. A marketplace that connects acquisition entrepreneurs who need capital with investors who want exposure to small-business deals. Standardized terms, governance, and distributions included. If you’re raising for a deal - or want to back operators - check out https://capitalpad.com/ Our sponsor Spacebar Studios builds and runs your newsletter so you stay top-of-mind with founders, brokers, LPs, and talent - without adding to your workload. HoldCo Builders listeners also use their two-week free trial. Go to https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire and get started for free. Timestamps 00:00 Intro 00:34 Steve’s background 01:56 Early thesis: from marketing & home services lead gen to HVAC focus 03:54 Bootstrapping experiments, agencies, pest control—what worked/what didn’t 04:58 Personal runway & the real cost of chasing deals while employed 06:00 Broken deals, travel, and swallowing $100k–$200k before first close 06:16 Meet the co-founder: lifelong friend Steve Nicholson; Kelso name origin 08:32 First near-deal dies; deciding to swing at the largest SBA-sized deal 10:26 Finding a commercial HVAC business in Arizona 13:11 Sponsor: CapitalPad 18:23 Survival year: no new acquisitions, just fixing ops and cash 19:13 The unlock: partnering with an Idaho operator who stays on, not exits 20:21 Bringing in a PE partner (Peterson Partners): why working capital blew up the SBA plan 24:26 How the PE check actually changed things (and what it didn’t) 28:29 Sponsor: SpaceBar Studios 29:32 Scale after deal #2: ~$40–50M revenue; raising the bar to $30–40M targets 30:50 Handing Arizona to Poncho so Steve can live on planes finding partners 33:22 Hitting $10M EBITDA in 2 years and setting the $1B revenue goal 34:32 Reaching $1B TTM four years after launch 36:25 Structure: Kelso buys 100%, owners stay, roll equity, 3-year earnouts 37:48 Why this is a relationship business (and why replacing owners destroys value) 43:10 Liquidity: horizon to public markets or new capital partner—patient equity model 46:59 Building the corporate engine: legal, HR, recruiting (15 in-house), finance, insurance 49:06 Project businesses need WIP discipline; dashboards and tighter forecasting 49:57 Footprint today 51:05 Centralized cash & working capital management 52:36 Post-close uplift: many ops 2–3x EBITDA with branch and service expansion 54:27 Financing new deals mostly via lenders + internal cash; no overpaying 56:24 Succession planning at every level; why this creates employee confidence 59:42 Example: ex-owner now building Kelso’s national service platform 1:01:10 Why Kelso hasn’t sold any companies (and likely won’t) 1:02:58 Steve’s evolving role: firing himself from jobs, hiring an exec team Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarst This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for inve

    1h 11m
  2. How I Completed 12+ Acquisitions and Still Built a New Roll-Up

    3 DAYS AGO

    How I Completed 12+ Acquisitions and Still Built a New Roll-Up

    My guest today is Nick Hatchka, founder of Cube Investments, which has completed over a dozen acquisitions. Nick is now building a regional platform of generator dealers and service businesses in California alongside his operating partner, Dylan Ferguson. We discuss his journey: - to independent sponsorship, - lessons from 12+ acquisitions, - what makes a good business model, - partnering with operators, - and buying seller-dependent companies. Sponsors This episode is brought to you by CapitalPad. A marketplace that connects acquisition entrepreneurs who need capital with investors who want exposure to small-business deals. Standardized terms, governance, and distributions included. If you’re raising for a deal - or want to back operators - check out https://capitalpad.com/ Our sponsor Spacebar Studios builds and runs your newsletter so you stay top-of-mind with founders, brokers, LPs, and talent - without adding to your workload. HoldCo Builders listeners also use their two-week free trial. Go to https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire and get started for free. We cover: 0:00 Nick Hatchka on 12+ acquisitions and a California generator platform 0:35 Background: MIT → McKinsey → 2 startups → Fortune 500 clean tech 1:54 Founding Cube (2016): SBA and personal capital for the first deal 2:49 Scaling: 12+ acquisitions across interior plants and landscaping, later divested 4:09 New platform thesis: generators in California and why the model is capital intensive 5:27 Investing focus: market and model selection over operator heroics 8:16 Capital discipline: self-funded pace vs raising outside capital 9:18 Sponsor CapitalPad: standardized terms, governance, and distributions for acquirers and investors 12:03 Generator business explained: sell, install, maintain, and test backup power (monthly, quarterly, annual PMs) 13:22 Sponsor Spacebar Studios: done-for-you newsletters with a two-week free setup 20:11 Partnering with Dylan Ferguson: 20-30 interviews and complementary skills 25:54 First acquisition Conti: sourced direct, LOI-to-close ~6 months, closed Jan 2024 28:16 Post-close playbook: replace owner-operator and rebuild systems for scale 33:39 Early lessons: grew fast to replace 4–5 seller hats and would build recruiting pipeline earlier 34:38 Results: revenue ~$3M → ~$6M and team 7 → ~14 42:13 Second acquisition PowerGen: 5–6 months later with larger C&I footprint in Bay Area and Sacramento 45:04 Capital and operating philosophy: seller note fixed ~8 years, target ≥3x DSCR, keep strong cash reserves and focus on service quality 51:32 Book and wrap: The Science of Success and expanding the circle of competence Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    53 min
  3. How to Raise $450 Million at 31 with No Track Record (and Do 90+ Deals) | Urs Wietlisbach Research

    30 SEPT

    How to Raise $450 Million at 31 with No Track Record (and Do 90+ Deals) | Urs Wietlisbach Research

    Imagine being in your early 30s, launching a private equity fund, and raising $450 million for your first fund. (No track record. No rich father or uncle.) Urs Wietlisbach, one of the three co-founders, led client relationships and fundraising, pushed proactive deal sourcing and thematic research, and kept the team focused on pensioners as the ultimate client. Sponsors This episode is brought to you by CapitalPad — a marketplace that connects acquisition entrepreneurs who need capital with investors who want exposure to small-business deals. Standardized terms, governance, and distributions included. If you’re raising for a deal—or want to back operators—check out https://capitalpad.com/ ETA Europe — sharp weekly curation of European acquisitions, operators, and deals. Sign up, it's free: https://legacy-partners-newsletter.beehiiv.com/ You'll learn: 00:00 Why this episode & who it’s for 00:36 From “stocks & bonds are boring” to real assets; early AUM context 01:25 Independence as the goal; raising $450M with no track record 02:20 Three complementary founders is better than one “perfect” entrepreneur 03:12 Leaving Goldman: the coffee invite, risk, and family pushback 04:35 “Fill your backpack”: learn aggressively, then have the courage to leave 05:43 The costly fundraising mistake: paying an upfront “rainmaker” (and why never again) 06:08 Sponsor: CapitalPad (a marketplace for investors and acquisition entrepreneurs) 06:40 Why they IPO’d in 2006: talent, direct deals, and Asian credibility 10:05 Operating public, thinking private: ignore the ticker, focus long term 10:30 “We are responsible for dreams”: pensions as the true client 11:05 Proactive diligence: working 12–36 months before a sale is announced 12:05 Urs’s role today: fundraising, client relationships, and a 100+ person marketing team 12:45 The PE model now: ~53% equity / 47% debt; returns from business building 13:35 Edge vs. competitors: thematic sourcing and pre-work win auctions 14:40 Example: German deal log, 582 days of prep before the bank book 16:05 Returns stack vs. mega-peers; tailwinds, management being everything 16:36 Sponsor: ETA Europe newsletter (weekly EU ETA deal flow & analysis) 17:13 Four thematic teams: Healthcare, IT, Goods/Products, Services 18:00 Healthcare thesis in action: U.S. physiotherapy roll-up playbook 19:10 From 100 to 600+ clinics; EBITDA from ~$38M to ~$110M in four years 19:56 Why PE has outperformed publics: information, incentives, not leverage 21:00 Compensation design: “eat what you kill” + shared carry across teams 21:50 Hiring from industry, not just finance; sweat equity for managers 22:40 Heavyweight chairs matter: PCI Pharma example (4x MOIC) 23:40 What makes entrepreneurs succeed 24:45 Play to strengths, fix fast: people business above all Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ ETA Europe: https://legacy-partners-newsletter.beehiiv.com/ Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    26 min
  4. 9 Figure Exit How I Built and Sold to Private Equity (Alexis Sikorsky Interview)

    27 SEPT

    9 Figure Exit How I Built and Sold to Private Equity (Alexis Sikorsky Interview)

    My guest today is Alexis Sikorsky. An entrepreneur who bootstrapped, scaled, and ultimately sold a company in a 9-figure exit. Sponsors This episode is brought to you by CapitalPad — a marketplace that connects acquisition entrepreneurs who need capital with investors who want exposure to small-business deals. Standardized terms, governance, and distributions included. If you’re raising for a deal—or want to back operators—check out https://capitalpad.com/ ETA Europe — sharp weekly curation of European acquisitions, operators, and deals. Sign up, it's free: https://legacy-partners-newsletter.beehiiv.com/ We cover: 00:00 Sponsor: CapitalPad 01:36 Who is Alexis Sikorsky 02:03 Early entrepreneurship 03:59 First ISP & internet café in West Africa 05:12 Conflict with government & partner’s death 07:05 Buys training company 07:43 1999–2000: founding the software dev firm 09:20 Buying assets of Logical Access 09:37 On failures & lessons (politics, client concentration) 12:35 “I can’t be employed” mindset / drive to continue 13:06 2008 peak: €11–12M revenue, €3M profit 14:31 “The grind” years: cuts, mortgages, survival 15:17 Private equity calls 16:35 The very optimistic 2-year plan 17:22 The deal: ~11x EBITDA, 85% cash now / 15% later 18:59 Final personal exit; later strategic sale (undisclosed 9 figures) 19:30 Sponsor: ETA Europe newsletter 20:41 “If I had 2023 wisdom in 2003…” 21:22 How much runway to hold; agility for black swans 22:23 Fear, resilience, and hiring “good people” too late 24:59 Personality under stress; heart attack joke 28:07 Why post-PE period was the best 28:13 “Did you sell to the right people?” 28:29 Strengths & weaknesses 30:00 Life after exit 34:31 What retirement actually felt like 35:01 Happiness, safety, safari/diving; minimal “stuff” 39:52 Founders often don’t know their own company 40:52 Know your numbers monthly 43:28 “Fire yourself” from most tasks as CEO 44:51 “What’s your number?” conversation 45:37 Grow to sell vs. morphing into a bank 47:50 Growth vs. lifestyle businesses 50:16 Execute phase cadence 51:08 Best growth levers (context-dependent) 52:03 M&A focus for this audience 52:17 Why M&A is the fast/cheap shortcut 54:01 Leverage math in euros (LBO example) 56:08 PE myths 1:01:05 Negotiate your own contract & non-compete 1:01:23 Managing time during diligence 1:02:21 Readiness test: 1-week no-phone vacation 1:02:37 How to diligence PE (ask for 5, call the others) 1:06:59 What buyers saw that he didn’t 1:10:41 Why founders often under-sell 1:10:55 Nominal EBITDA explained 1:12:13 Over-management at €100M valuations 1:12:35 Where clients fail in execution 1:14:21 Black swans & an online pivot to €100M 1:16:28 Quickfire wrap 1:17:33 Best investing advice (fundamentals over price) Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ ETA Europe: https://legacy-partners-newsletter.beehiiv.com/ Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    1h 19m
  5. How to Buy 4 Small Businesses CHEAP With Zero Finance Background | Nikolai Dimitrov Interview

    23 SEPT

    How to Buy 4 Small Businesses CHEAP With Zero Finance Background | Nikolai Dimitrov Interview

    Nikolai Dimitrov went from pro football to building Unity Investment Partnership, where he buys small, reliable, everyday businesses, paying 3–4× cash flow with seller-aligned structures, and has closed 4 acquisitions so far. We cover his rocky start (including a Facebook group against him), four acquisitions, why “terms more important than price,” post-acquisition reporting, incentives, and how culture and a real CEO will power Unity’s next stage. CapitalPad: the SMB investment platform for accredited investors & searchers. Join now: https://capitalpad.com/ (Not investment advice.) Spacebar Studios writes your company newsletter—strategy, writing, design, distribution. Try it free for 2 weeks. Go to: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire We'll cover: 00:00 Intro: Who is Nikolai Dimitrov & Unity Investment Partnership 00:26 From pro football to acquisitions: quitting and what came next 02:04 Why buying companies: passion, team skills from sport 06:22 First strategy: veterinary roll-up 09:51 Sponsor: Capitalbat (SMB investor ↔︎ searcher platform) 10:36 12-18 months with no deal: iterate, don’t quit 11:50 First acquisition: 4× cash flow; 25% down, 75% seller-financed 13:35 Year 1 reality: building reporting from scratch in a mom-and-pop 14:53 “Terms over price”: negotiating when you’re the only buyer 17:34 Closing the first deal: proof the model works in CEE 18:34 Seller pipeline tailwind: retiring baby boomers in small business 19:17 Sponsor: SpaceBar Studios (done-for-you newsletters) 21:35 Raising from LPs: doctors, lawyers, real estate pros 22:50 Second acquisition; time allocation across businesses 23:33 Third deal: dental clinic 25:15 Incentives and the shift from deal-making to asset management 26:58 What a “good deal” looks like; buying right at low multiples 32:31 Growing the portfolio: sector differences, ops cadence 33:59 Diversified vs focused holdco: trade-offs in reporting & speed 35:10 Holdco vs fund: why avoid a limited-life vehicle (for now) 37:55 Best advice: a few winners drive returns (Buffett lesson) Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    41 min
  6. I Raised $11.7M To Back 13 Self-Funded Searchers | Grant Hensel Interview

    20 SEPT

    I Raised $11.7M To Back 13 Self-Funded Searchers | Grant Hensel Interview

    Grant Hensel has started 10 companies (7 failed, 2 sold, 1 scaled), bought a business his wife now operates, and then got obsessed with backing self-funded searchers. He’s the founder of Entrepreneurial Capital, raising ~$11M to invest in “cockroach” SMBs at 3–5x earnings alongside gritty owner-operators. If you’re buying or backing boring, profitable businesses, this is a playbook episode. CapitalPad: the SMB investment platform for accredited investors & searchers. Join now: https://capitalpad.com/ (Not investment advice.) Spacebar Studios writes your company newsletter—strategy, writing, design, distribution. Try it free for 2 weeks. Go to: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire You'll learn: 00:00 Grant’s path: 10 starts, 2 exits, 1 scaled; now backing self-funded searchers 00:32 Grant’s background & living the “buy vs. build” debate 02:26 Buying a business for his wife to run (4 LOIs, funny diligence misses) 05:24 First 90 days: installing EOS, weekly scorecard, real traction 06:52 Portfolio before the fund (one built, one bought) 07:08 Sponsor — Capitalbat (SMB investor ↔︎ searcher platform) 07:59 Holdco vs. minority investing; why operator quality dominates 09:32 Why self-funded search is a built-in grit test 10:14 From personal checks to raising a fund (organic evolution) 12:23 The four screens: low concentration, low capex, low cyclicality, history of profits 13:53 Cyclicality lesson: cheap isn’t worth macro sensitivity 15:52 Fund timeline: Oct ’24 idea → Feb ’25 start → Jul ’25 close 16:39 Fundraising tactics: “ask for advice,” webinars, soft-circle snowball 18:41 Sponsor — SpaceBar Studios (done-for-you newsletters) 20:27 Looking at deals while raising; confidence once ~$5M soft-circled 21:16 How Grant picks winners: on-site diligence, non-spreadsheet reality 22:51 Sourcing searchers: Searcher.com, webinars, “This Week in ETA” newsletter 26:15 Day-to-day now: LOI diligence, marketing, advisor feedback (pre-first deal) 27:17 Deployment pace: 13–18 deals over 2–3 years (~1 every other month) 27:38 Deal flow volume: ~1 LOI/day; be ultra-selective 28:03 The five pre-LOI seller questions (and why they matter) 32:26 What to buy (and avoid): home/B2B services, light mfg (with chops); no e-comm/retail/restaurants 33:58 The real investor value-add: resilience through the ugly middle 35:18 Roll-up skepticism; single-asset cash flow is better than multiple-expansion bets 37:53 First-90-days playbook: live in the trenches; avoid “academic” fixes 39:45 Inventory cautionary tale: don’t break the value prop you can’t see on a P&L 44:19 Game-changer hire: Chief of Staff as force multiplier 46:10 Failure as teacher; base rates favor buying over building 48:23 Where to find Grant (Twitter & LinkedIn) 49:05 Favorites: Switch, Good to Great, Traction; best advice—circle of competence 50:51 Wrap-up & close Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    51 min
  7. 60+ Search Fund Investments: What Industries Excite Him The Most TODAY

    16 SEPT

    60+ Search Fund Investments: What Industries Excite Him The Most TODAY

    A deep-dive on the operator-first path to buying a small business. Told through the lessons of investor-turned-operator Tim Ludwig (60+ portfolio companies; now co-runs Majority Search). Learn how search funds actually work, which industries to invest in, which searchers to back, why EQ beats IQ in a first-time CEO, and the exact playbook from LOI → close → the first 100 days. Want a newsletter that builds trust—but have zero time? Spacebar Studios handles strategy, writing, design, and distribution end-to-end so you stay consistent. Turn expertise into a lead-warming “trust engine.” Claim your 2-week free trial: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire CapitalPad delivers accredited investors a highly curated pipeline of sponsor-led deals from proven acquisition entrepreneurs. CapitalPad invests in searcher and independent sponsor deals. Connect with value-add investors, fund your acquisition, and build an enduring business. It's free. Get started here: https://capitalpad.com/ What you’ll learn: 00:00 Intro - buy, run, and compound 02:03 Why study Tim & the origins of search funds 03:40 Tim’s path: from MBA case study to investor 05:18 60+ investments, market gets crowded, lessons learned 06:54 Flipping to buyer/operator; control & alignment 07:59 Search fund 101: traditional vs. self-funded vs. committed capital 09:53 Sponsor: CapitalPad 10:54 Why search funds work: hungry operator × resilient business 12:08 First-time CEO profile: EQ is better than IQ, sales, coachability 14:28 What to buy (and avoid): the “easy to run, hard to break” box + weird niches 15:57 Sponsor: SpaceBar Studios 16:56 from LOI to close: diligence, QoE, papering the deal, seller roll/seller note 19:03 First 100 days: make payroll, listen, cadence & KPIs 20:05 Months 3-12: hire a sales leader, CRM, pipeline & talk tracks 21:56 Post-close priorities: top accounts, upgrade tools, data culture 23:03 Returns math: 4× equity without multiple expansion 24:15 Hold vs. sell; should the seller stay? 24:58 How big is the opportunity? supply/demand & off-market 26:08 Bezos vs. Musk test: singles % doubles are better than moonshots 26:53 Final advice & next steps 27:26 Outro Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    28 min
  8. How I Left PE, Bought 2 SaaS Businesses (Raising a Fund Next?) | Donza Worden Interview

    12 SEPT

    How I Left PE, Bought 2 SaaS Businesses (Raising a Fund Next?) | Donza Worden Interview

    Former institutional investor Donza Worden (co-founder, Clear Peak Capital) breaks down why many private equity pros aren’t truly investors—and what he’s doing differently as an independent sponsor who closed two platforms in year one (IT services & vertical SaaS). Sponsored by CapitalPad—deal flow for serious investors. Built by world-class engineers and PE operators. Apply here: https://capitalpad.com/ This episode is also sponsored by Space Bar Studios. If you’re an investor, holdco, or PE firm that needs media that drives outcomes, they’ll build the newsletter, strategy, and production system for you. Right now they’re offering a free campaign for businesses doing $1M+ in revenue. Get your 2 week free trial: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Timestamps: 00:00 Intro & who Donza is (2 platforms, Capitalpad) 00:25 The spicy tweet: “Most PE investors aren’t really investors” 00:56 Why PE ≠ investor training: incentives & slow feedback loops 02:24 Donza’s origin story: island → banking → PE 04:27 The hangar conversation that changed his life 06:05 PE associate programs, fund velocity & early reps 07:27 Investment philosophy setup (industry → company → price) 07:51 Partnership — Capitalpad 08:31 Building conviction: Five Forces, 2–4 thesis pillars, price last 10:50 What he kept/ditched from institutional PE before launching 12:02 Why 2024 to launch Clear Peak; co-founding with Luke 14:55 Model choice: independent sponsor now, fund optionality later 16:24 Deal #1: cruise/maritime maintenance software—core thesis 18:10 Capital reality on Deal #1: family offices & cold-start relationships 18:58 Deal #2: faster process; staged diligence & value-creation session 20:29 Partnership — Spacebar Studios 21:08 Operating the portfolio: GTM at IT Sync; financial visibility at Entara 23:55 Back to market for Deal #3; discipline on timing 24:08 Highest-ROI levers post-close (company-specific, no cookie cutter) 25:17 Choosing investors: family offices vs. SBIC; red flags 27:20 Superpower & weakness: depth of work vs. time trade-offs 29:33 Taking risk: leaving institutional PE; AI’s coming impact 31:18 Hardest skill shift: decision-making rests with you 32:16 Hours & lifestyle now vs. institutional PE 33:12 Happiness & autonomy; what “winning” (MOIC/IRR) looks like 34:18 What he’s studying now (IT services, vertical SaaS, mental models) 35:12 Practicing intellectual curiosity; inviting dissent 36:22 Favorite book: Behave (Robert Sapolsky) 37:15 Wrap-up & future check-in Support our Sponsors: CapitalPad: https://capitalpad.com/ SpaceBar Studios: https://www.spacebarstudios.co/inquire Subscribe on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6lr5bE3SNZF2uEE7Nb0DHh?si=cP_nAarhRmep1lvnR6uk5g Subscribe on Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/holdco-builders/id1695713724 Follow Mikk/PrivatEquityGuy on Twitter: ⁠⁠https://x.com/PrivatEquityGuy This podcast is for informational purposes only and should not be relied upon as a basis for investment decisions.

    37 min

About

The HoldCo Builders Podcast with PrivatEquityGuy is a place where you can find meaningful conversations about holding companies, entrepreneurship, small businesses, investing, and more.Be sure to follow the podcast, so you never miss an episode!

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