Construction Business: Buying A

Once a target is found, the process enters a "draining" 10-month period of due diligence. This is where most deals succeed or fail.

A government-backed loan to cover the bulk of the cost. buying a construction business

The real work starts after the ink dries. New owners often find that "speed compresses diligence," and hidden expenses might surface once the previous owner is gone. Success depends on maintaining the company's "backlog" of work, keeping the existing crew’s trust, and ensuring that safety incident rates and project timelines stay on track. Once a target is found, the process enters

Financing a multi-million-dollar acquisition rarely happens with cash alone. It typically involves a "capital stack": Usually 10% of the purchase price. The real work starts after the ink dries

The journey often begins with an "Entrepreneurship through Acquisition" mindset. Instead of starting from scratch, a buyer looks for an owner ready to retire. For example, you might find a long-established glass work or paving company with a solid local reputation. The initial goal is to find a business that doesn't just look profitable on paper but has a "backlog"—a list of signed contracts for future work—that ensures revenue visibility for the next 6 to 12 months. 2. The Diligence Rollercoaster

You move past top-line revenue to look at real EBITDA (Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation, and Amortization). You verify tax returns against bank statements to ensure the profits are real.