Sit in the acquirer's chair for a moment. A buyer evaluating an expertise business is not buying your last twelve months of revenue. They are buying their confidence that the revenue keeps arriving after you hand over the keys. Everything in diligence — every question about contracts, churn, systems, and key people — is a version of that one question.
Here is the uncomfortable part: by the time a buyer asks that question, your answer was locked in years earlier. A consultancy wired around the founder's personal delivery cannot suddenly present itself as a platform. A network with no technology spend cannot reposition as a tech-enabled marketplace during a sale process. Exit architecture is a Day 1 decision wearing a Year 5 costume. John Warrillow's advice cuts both ways: design the business as though a sale is coming, even if it never does, because that design discipline — systems, documentation, recurring revenue, a founder the business doesn't need — makes the company better whether or not anyone ever writes a cheque.
For methodology and service-platform businesses, there are three viable exit architectures, and each one attracts a different kind of buyer at a different multiple. This piece walks through all three — what the buyer wants, what you must build, how long it takes, and where it can go wrong — then closes with the levers and the monthly audit that raise the multiple no matter which door you walk through.
01 — Three Buyers, Three Businesses
The Acquirer You Want Dictates the Asset You Build
Strip away the deal mechanics and there are three categories of acquirer for an expertise business built around a methodology. Consulting firms buy talent and branded IP — they want your certified practitioners and your method on their shelf. Technology and enterprise software companies buy data and market position — think of how a Salesforce-type acquirer values a data asset that enriches its ecosystem, or how a McKinsey-type firm absorbs methodology platforms to extend its toolkit. Private equity buys unit economics and a credible route to multiplying its money — typically looking for 3-5x on its investment inside five years, sometimes by rolling up several services networks and selling the consolidated whole at a richer multiple than it paid for the parts.
Each buyer category maps to an architecture. The premium services network is built for the consulting acquirer and the services roll-up, and trades at roughly 3-6x revenue. The technology-enabled platform is built for the software acquirer and growth-oriented PE, and trades at roughly 8-15x revenue. The hybrid sits between them at roughly 5-10x and — usefully — appeals to all three buyer types at once.
So the first strategic question is not "what do I want to build?" It is "who do I want across the table in five years, and what will they be paying for?" Answer that, and most of your build decisions answer themselves. Let's take the three architectures one at a time — starting with the leanest.
02 — Architecture One: The Curation Business
A Premium Expert Network, Valued at 3-6x Revenue
The premium network is the capital-light route. You are not building software; you are building scarcity. A guarded gate, a respected brand, a methodology with proof behind it, and a community of certified experts who charge premium fees because membership signals quality. The asset a buyer acquires here is curation itself — the years of judgment about who gets in, who stays, and what standard the badge represents.
What this path looks like in practice:
- The multiple: 3-6x revenue. That is a professional services valuation lifted by a recurring-revenue premium — well above the 1-2x that ordinary services businesses fetch. The lift comes from annual certification fees that renew and practitioners who demonstrably stay. A network doing EUR 2M in revenue can plausibly exit in the EUR 6-12M range.
- The buyer: consulting firms and services roll-ups. A mid-tier consultancy that acquires your network gains a branded methodology and 200+ certified practitioners overnight — capability that would take them years to grow internally. PE roll-up funds buy several such networks at around 4x and aim to sell the combined entity at around 8x.
- The clock: 3-5 years to exit-readiness. The fastest of the three paths, because there is no heavy technology build standing between you and value creation. A network of 100+ active certified members holding 85%+ retention can be a credible acquisition target within three years.
- The exposure: people, not code. Your defensibility rests on brand, community bonds, and the methodology itself. Those are genuine assets — but they are easier for a determined competitor to imitate than a data-rich platform would be. Practitioner quality and retention carry the entire valuation case.
The defining design choice on this path is exclusivity. A network anyone can join is a directory; a network that only the qualified can join — and only the performing can stay in — is a brand. That means rigorous admission standards, visible consequences for underperformance, and a deliberate cap on how fast you let membership grow. Your technology footprint stays light: certification management, a community space, basic analytics. The serious money goes into selection, standards, and relationships.
"Warrillow's logic applies directly here: hold 90% practitioner retention, push recurring revenue to 80% of the total, prove the founder is replaceable, and you reach the top of the services-multiple range without writing a line of meaningful software. Recurring fees turn a services firm into something a buyer reads as a subscription business — and subscription businesses get paid for like subscription businesses."
This is the right path for founders whose superpower is community, not product. And the trade can be rational even though the ceiling is lower: an EUR 8M exit after four years may beat a theoretical EUR 30M exit after seven that demands EUR 2M of technology spend and carries far more ways to fail.
03 — Architecture Two: The Marketplace Business
A Technology-Enabled Platform, Valued at 8-15x Revenue
At the opposite end sits the full platform play: a marketplace where practitioners and clients transact, where every assessment feeds a benchmarking database, and where network effects compound year over year. The buyer here is not purchasing a services firm at all. They are purchasing your data, your network, and your position in the market — and they price it the way they price technology, not consulting.
What this path looks like in practice:
- The multiple: 8-15x revenue. Genuine technology-platform pricing. The premium pays for the data asset, the network effects, and the scalability of the model. At EUR 3M of revenue, that maths produces an exit somewhere in the EUR 24-45M range.
- The buyer: enterprise software companies, large consulting firms, or private equity. Software acquirers want the data to enrich their own ecosystem. Big consultancies want the platform to extend their offer. PE wants the unit economics and a believable path to 3-5x their money within five years.
- The clock: 5-7 years. The longest runway of the three. The technology investment is substantial, and network effects do nothing for you until the network crosses critical mass — only then do they become self-reinforcing.
- The exposure: the build itself. If the platform fails to create real value for the people using it, it is a cost centre wearing a strategy's clothing. And if network growth stalls short of critical mass, the effects you priced the whole journey on simply never arrive.
Choosing this path means committing serious technology investment from Year 1 — and aiming the build correctly. A platform that merely hosts content and tracks certifications is a tool. The valuation case requires a marketplace: practitioner-client matching, automated assessment delivery and benchmarking, data products, and an experience compelling enough that participants transact on the platform instead of around it. The distinction between tool and marketplace looks subtle on a roadmap, but it is precisely the line between services multiples and technology multiples.
"Geoffrey Parker's framing is the cleanest test: platforms beat pipelines because they harness network effects. A consulting firm is a pipeline — value moves in one direction, from firm to client. A methodology platform is a network — value moves between practitioners, between clients, between data points, all at once."
The platform is the most ambitious architecture and pays the most when it works. It demands patient network building, sustained capital, and the nerve to protect long-term platform value against short-term revenue temptations. Not every founder should attempt it — but every founder should know exactly what it costs, because that knowledge sharpens whichever path you actually take.
04 — Architecture Three: The Blend
Network Plus Data Engine, Valued at 5-10x Revenue
Most successful methodology businesses end up here: a genuine practitioner community amplified by meaningful technology and an accumulating data asset. The hybrid never quite reaches pure-platform pricing, but it clears services pricing comfortably — and it has one structural advantage neither pure path enjoys.
What this path looks like in practice:
- The multiple: 5-10x revenue. The blend of recurring services revenue and technology-enabled scale. At EUR 2.5M of revenue, the range implies an exit between EUR 12.5M and EUR 25M.
- The buyer: all of them. This is the structural advantage. Consultancies value the network. Technology companies value the data. PE values the economics. When three buyer categories show up to the same process, the competitive tension between them tends to push the realised price above the theoretical range.
- The clock: 4-6 years. Between the network's speed and the platform's scale — enough technology to make the data defensible, enough community to make retention durable, enough time for both to compound.
- The exposure: needing to be good twice. The hybrid founder must run a community and ship technology, two disciplines that rarely live in one skill set. The failure mode is double mediocrity: a platform not quite strong enough for tech multiples bolted to a network not quite exclusive enough for premium services multiples.
The hybrid works when the technology exists to serve the network, not to impress a pitch deck. Automated assessment delivery, benchmarking insight, practitioner collaboration, data products that would be impossible by hand — all of it amplifying a foundation of relationships, trust, and shared identity that the software could never generate on its own.
And the defining design choice here is sequence. Community first, technology second. A platform without an active network is an empty mall; a thriving network without technology is valuable but brutally manual. Build the community, watch what it actually needs and does, and let those behaviours write your technology roadmap — rather than shipping software first and praying the community adopts it.
The hybrid is the honest path for the honest founder. Most people building methodology businesses are neither pure technologists nor pure community builders — they are some mixture of both. A business that reflects that mixture, executed well on both fronts, is hard to copy and attractive to the widest possible field of acquirers.
05 — The Five Levers Under Every Multiple
What Moves Valuation Regardless of Architecture
Whichever architecture you choose, the same five forces decide where you land inside its range. They are ranked here by impact, and the ranking matters: a founder with limited hours should work the top of this list before the bottom.
- 1. Recurring revenue share. The heavyweight. A business where 90% of revenue recurs can command multiples 3-8x higher than one where 90% comes from projects. Warrillow built a whole methodology on this single observation, and the mechanism is plain: recurring revenue is predictable, predictability is low risk, and buyers pay more for low risk. If your revenue counter resets to zero each January, you own a job with staff.
- 2. Network effects. The buyer's question is brutal: could a competitor rebuild this network? If the honest answer is "only by recreating the whole ecosystem from nothing," you have a moat worth paying for. The effects stack — practitioners referring practitioners on the same side, practitioners and clients attracting each other across sides, and every assessment making the benchmark database more valuable for everyone in it.
- 3. Founder independence. Warrillow puts it bluntly: nobody buys a company that cannot function without its owner. If you are simultaneously the rainmaker, the relationship holder, the quality gate, and the brand in human form, the business is worth roughly your salary — not a multiple of revenue. Every additional month the business demonstrably runs without you adds to the price.
- 4. The data asset. The benchmarking database appreciates with every assessment completed. It does not depreciate like equipment and cannot be copied like code — replicating it requires rebuilding the network that generates it. An acquirer gets years of accumulated industry data on day one, an advantage that would otherwise cost them years and millions.
- 5. Practitioner retention and quality. Retention is the ecosystem's pulse. High practitioner retention plus high client satisfaction tells the buyer the revenue will still be there after closing — which is, remember, the only question they were ever really asking.
"Size is not what earns the premium. A EUR 1M business with 90% recurring revenue, real network effects, and full founder independence is worth more than a EUR 3M business that depends on its founder's delivery and renews nothing."
Run every significant decision through these five. Does it raise recurring revenue? Strengthen the network? Reduce dependence on you? Feed the data asset? Improve retention? Five noes does not automatically make a decision wrong — but it does mean the decision builds nothing a buyer will pay for.
06 — The Monthly Valuation Audit
Eight Lines, Each With a Cheap End and an Expensive End
The five levers tell you what matters; this audit tells you where you stand. Eight factors, each with a low-multiple position and a high-multiple position. Once a month, mark where you sit on each line and name one action that moved you rightward since the last review.
- Recurring revenue share: below 50% of total revenue is the cheap end; above 85% is the expensive end. Still the single biggest lever on the list.
- Founder dependency: a business that wobbles after one founder-free week sits at the cheap end; one that runs three months or more without you sits at the expensive end.
- Practitioner retention: below 70% annually says the ecosystem leaks; above 90% says people who join do not leave.
- Data asset: no aggregated data means no moat; an industry-defining benchmark database is a moat competitors cannot cross without years of investment.
- Network effects: none — the pure franchise position — offers no defensibility; strong cross-side and data effects compound defensibility as you scale.
- Client retention: below 50% annually means clients are not finding lasting value; above 70% means the methodology keeps earning its renewal.
- Revenue growth: under 10% year over year reads as a stall; over 30% reads as momentum buyers pay extra for.
- Gross margin: under 50% signals a structural cost problem; over 75% means almost every incremental euro of revenue becomes profit.
No single line decides your fate — the pattern across all eight does. But beware the dependency line in particular: score brilliantly on seven and badly on founder dependency and the discount still lands hard, because the buyer knows the business might not survive your exit from it. Acquirers commonly discount 30-50% when a business cannot run without its founder for at least three months.
Treat this as an operating ritual, not a someday exercise. The founders who review these eight lines monthly are the ones holding premium-multiple businesses when the moment comes — in three years, in seven, or never. A business scoring well on all eight is not just sellable. It is simply a better business.
07 — Build So You Can Still Choose
Four Investments That Every Path Rewards
Here is the relief at the end of all this: you do not have to commit to one architecture today. The smarter move is optionality — building the four things every path values equally, so the final choice can wait for real information: market conditions, your own preferences, and which buyers actually come knocking.
The four investments no path punishes:
- Convert revenue to recurring. Annual certification fees, platform subscriptions, licensing agreements — these count. Project income does not. Every euro moved from project to recurring raises your multiple on every one of the three paths simultaneously.
- Accumulate data relentlessly. Each completed assessment, each benchmark, each identified pattern adds to an appreciating asset. The platform buyer reads it as technology, the network buyer reads it as differentiation, the hybrid buyer reads it as both. No exit scenario exists in which more accumulated data made you worth less.
- Make yourself removable. The hardest of the four and the most consequential. Gerber, Harnish, and Warrillow converge on the same conclusion from three different directions: the founder who becomes dispensable builds the most valuable company. Document, delegate, and prove the absence — months of demonstrated independence, not promises of it.
- Defend quality with numbers. Practitioner retention above 90%. Client satisfaction above 4.5/5. Underperformance with visible consequences. These metrics are how a buyer verifies that the revenue, the delivery, and the ecosystem all persist after the deal closes.
A founder who compounds these four investments for three years ends up courted from three directions at once — technology acquirers eyeing the platform story, services consolidators eyeing the network, private equity eyeing the economics. Multiple buyer types in one process is what pushes realised prices past the textbook ranges.
"Build it like you are going to sell it — Warrillow's line — even if you never do. A business designed for sale is a business designed for excellence, and excellence is the only outcome worth three years of your life either way."
The sale was never the point. The discipline is. Recurring revenue, an appreciating data asset, a removable founder, and defended quality produce a company that generates wealth, freedom, and impact whether you exit next year, next decade, or never. Design for the buyer you may never meet — and you end up with the business you actually wanted.