Scaling Through Acquisitions and Strategic Growth
Saul outlines how small businesses can leverage mergers and acquisitions to fuel growth and long-term success. He shares actionable steps for navigating acquisitions, optimizing tax efficiency, and preparing for business succession with impactful financial planning.
Why Most Founders Misjudge the Leap from Operator to Investor
Seven-figure owners often stay busy and broke on paper—tied to payroll, key clients, and a single fragile asset. The trap is mistaking income for wealth. Saul Cohen shows how to flip the risk-reward profile by treating the company like an asset to optimise, not a job to protect. He breaks down the valuation levers that actually move multiples—recurring revenue, margin quality, customer concentration, working-capital discipline, and management depth—and why an early, clean exit can beat years of incremental grind. Then he maps the redeployment: moving from one big bet to a portfolio through acquisitions, passive stakes, and disciplined criteria that protect downside. Drawing on PwC training, buy-side and sell-side deals, and hands-on work helping founders scale and sell, Saul gives a precise, practical path: diagnose the operator trap, set a valuation target, execute pre-exit upgrades, structure tax-efficient terms, and build an investor’s playbook for compounding. The result is real freedom—time, optionality, and wealth that isn’t welded to a desk.
Run Your Business Like It’s Under Due Diligence and Buyers Will Pay Up
Deals are won or discounted in diligence, not in the pitch—and that’s where many seven-figure owners quietly lose six or seven figures. Most treat Quality of Earnings as a buyer’s audit; Saul reframes it as a year-round operating system that makes earnings repeatable and cash real. Drawing on PwC audit training and hands-on buy-side and sell-side work, he shows founders how a 6–12 month “sell-side QoE sprint” locks revenue definitions, normalises owner add-backs, proves cash conversion, stabilises working capital, and documents tax positions before a buyer ever looks. The payoff is hard: fewer surprises, stronger multiples, tighter working-capital pegs, and cleaner completion—freedom bought at the best price, not the fastest exit.