portfolio-management-pe
PE/VC portfolio management — value creation, monitoring, exits.
When to Activate
- Developing a post-acquisition value creation plan (100-day plan)
- Identifying and prioritizing operational improvement levers
- Structuring board governance and reporting for portfolio companies
- Evaluating add-on acquisition opportunities for a platform investment
- Assessing management team performance and considering changes
- Preparing a portfolio company for exit (vendor due diligence, exit readiness)
- Tracking fund-level performance metrics (IRR, MOIC, DPI, RVPI)
- Selecting the optimal exit route (IPO, trade sale, secondary, recapitalization)
Core Concepts
100-Day Plan
The first 100 days post-acquisition set the trajectory for value creation. The plan should be developed during due diligence and executed immediately upon close:
Weeks 1-4: Stabilize and assess
- Management alignment: confirm or replace key roles. Communicate ownership change to employees, customers, suppliers
- Quick financial diagnostic: validate working capital, cash position, near-term commitments versus diligence assumptions
- Customer and supplier risk assessment: identify concentration risks, at-risk relationships, contract renewals
- IT and systems review: assess reliability of financial reporting, ERP, CRM
Weeks 5-8: Plan and prioritize
- Finalize the value creation roadmap with specific initiatives, owners, timelines, and KPIs
- Prioritize quick wins: pricing adjustments, cost reductions, working capital improvements achievable in 3-6 months
- Establish the management reporting cadence: monthly board packs, quarterly deep dives, weekly KPI dashboards
- Launch strategic projects: commercial excellence programs, procurement optimization, organizational restructuring
Weeks 9-12: Execute and embed
- Track progress against the plan; adjust timelines and resources where needed
- Embed new governance: board meetings, committee structure, management incentive alignment
- Initiate longer-term projects: technology transformation, geographic expansion, product development
- First board meeting with full portfolio company reporting
Value Creation Levers
Revenue growth:
- Pricing optimization: cost-plus to value-based pricing, annual escalators, reduced discounting
- Cross-selling and upselling: leverage customer relationships for adjacent products
- Geographic expansion: new markets, channels, customer segments
- New product development: extend the product line to capture more wallet share
- Sales force effectiveness: CRM implementation, territory optimization, incentive alignment
Margin improvement:
- Procurement: centralize purchasing, renegotiate supplier contracts, competitive bidding
- Operational efficiency: lean manufacturing, automation, process reengineering
- Overhead reduction: headcount rationalization, facility consolidation, shared services
- Outsourcing: non-core functions to lower-cost providers
- Mix improvement: shift revenue toward higher-margin products or services
Working capital optimization:
- Receivables: shorten payment terms, improve collections, invoice factoring
- Payables: extend supplier terms (without damaging relationships), dynamic discounting
- Inventory: demand planning improvements, SKU rationalization, just-in-time practices
- Cash conversion cycle: target reduction of 5-15 days across the cycle
Capex efficiency:
- Distinguish maintenance capex from growth capex — scrutinize maintenance for deferral or elimination
- Lease vs. buy analysis for major assets
- Capital allocation framework: hurdle rates for investments, IRR-based prioritization
- Asset disposals: sell non-core or underperforming assets
Board Management
The PE-backed board serves as a strategic governance body, not just a compliance function:
- Composition: Typically 4-6 members — 1-2 PE deal team, CEO, CFO (or operating partner), 1-2 independent directors with industry expertise
- Cadence: Monthly or bi-monthly board meetings, with quarterly strategy sessions
- Board pack: Financial performance vs. budget and prior year, KPI dashboard, value creation initiative tracker, cash flow and liquidity, pipeline/backlog, risk register
- Decision rights: Define clearly what requires board approval (capex above threshold, hiring above level, contracts above value, M&A, financing)
- Operating partner involvement: PE firms increasingly deploy operating partners or functional experts to work alongside management between board meetings
Add-On Acquisitions
Buy-and-build strategies create value through multiple arbitrage and scale benefits:
- Thesis: Acquire smaller companies at lower multiples (4-6x) onto a platform valued at higher multiples (8-12x) — creating immediate value from the multiple differential
- Integration: Plan integration before signing. Priorities: finance and reporting systems, sales force alignment, procurement consolidation, brand architecture
- Synergies: Revenue synergies (cross-selling, geographic extension) and cost synergies (shared back-office, procurement, facility consolidation). Target 5-15% of add-on revenue in cost synergies
- Financing: Fund add-ons from a combination of existing cash flow, incremental debt (within covenant capacity), and tuck-in acquisition facilities
- Pipeline management: Maintain a rolling pipeline of 10-20 potential targets. Score by strategic fit, valuation, integration complexity, and availability
Management Changes
- Assessment framework: Evaluate management against the value creation plan. Can they deliver the required step-change, not just maintain the status quo?
- Typical changes: CFO replacement is the most common PE-backed change (40-60% of deals). CEO replacement in 30-40% of deals, often after 12-18 months
- Hiring approach: PE firms maintain networks of proven executives. Interim management can bridge gaps during recruitment
- Incentive alignment: Management equity plan (typically 10-20% of equity pool) with vesting tied to time and performance (IRR or MOIC hurdles). Ratchet mechanisms accelerate vesting at higher returns
Exit Readiness Assessment
Preparation should begin 12-24 months before the target exit date:
- Financial track record: At least 3 years of audited financials, preferably showing consistent growth and margin expansion
- Quality of earnings: Commission a sell-side QoE report. Normalize for one-time items, add-backs, and pro forma adjustments
- Vendor due diligence: Prepare VDD reports (financial, commercial, legal, tax, IT) — reduces buyer due diligence timeline and signals confidence
- Management presentation: Prepare the equity story — investment thesis, market position, growth drivers, financial projections
- Operational housekeeping: Resolve pending litigation, formalize key contracts, secure IP registrations, clean up corporate structure
- Carve-out readiness: If the business is a carve-out, ensure standalone capability (transitional services agreements, separated systems)
Exit Routes
IPO:
- Best for large, high-growth businesses with a compelling equity story
- Requires 2-3 years of audited financials, strong management team, investor relations capability
- PE sponsor typically retains a significant stake post-IPO with a lock-up period (90-180 days)
- Highest potential valuation but longest process and ongoing public company obligations
Trade sale (strategic buyer):
- Most common PE exit route (60-70% of exits)
- Strategic premium for synergies, market access, or technology
- Cleaner exit — full cash at close (or structured consideration)
- Run a competitive auction process to maximize price
Secondary sale (financial buyer):
- Sale to another PE fund. Common for platform companies that can continue to grow
- Requires a credible equity story for the next buyer — remaining value creation potential
- Continuation funds allow the same GP to retain the asset in a new vehicle
Recapitalization (dividend recap):
- Not a true exit but returns capital to investors. New debt is raised to fund a special dividend
- Reduces the equity at risk and improves IRR (earlier cash return)
- Typically returns 0.5-1.5x of invested equity while retaining the portfolio company
- Risk: increases leverage and constrains future flexibility
IRR / MOIC Tracking
- Gross IRR: Time-weighted annualized return before management fees and carried interest
- Net IRR: After management fees (typically 2% of committed capital) and carry (typically 20% above a hurdle rate, usually 8%)
- MOIC (Multiple on Invested Capital): Total value (distributions + remaining value) / invested capital. Does not account for timing
- DPI (Distribution to Paid-In): Realized returns. Cash returned / capital invested. The only metric that cannot be inflated by unrealized markups
- RVPI (Residual Value to Paid-In): Unrealized value / capital invested. Subject to valuation judgment
- TVPI (Total Value to Paid-In): DPI + RVPI. The total return multiple
Methodology
- Investment thesis review: Revisit the original investment thesis. What were the key value creation hypotheses? Are they still valid?
- 100-day plan execution: Track each initiative against timeline and impact. Escalate delays immediately
- Monthly monitoring: Review financial performance vs. budget, KPI trends, cash flow, and covenant compliance. Prepare board materials
- Quarterly strategy review: Assess progress on strategic initiatives, market developments, competitive landscape, and M&A pipeline
- Annual planning: Update the 3-5 year business plan. Recalibrate value creation targets based on actuals
- Exit preparation: Begin 18-24 months ahead. Commission vendor due diligence, prepare management presentation, engage advisors
- Exit execution: Select the optimal route, run the process (auction or bilateral), negotiate terms, execute
Templates
Value Creation Tracker
Initiative | Owner | Target Impact | Status | Actual | Timeline
| | (EBITDA, $M) | | ($M YTD) |
------------------------|--------|---------------|-----------|----------|----------
Pricing optimization | VP Sales| +$3.0M | On track | +$1.8M | Q1-Q4
Procurement savings | CPO | +$2.5M | Ahead | +$2.0M | Q1-Q3
Headcount optimization | CHRO | +$1.5M | Delayed | +$0.5M | Q2-Q4
Add-on #1 synergies | CFO | +$1.0M | On track | +$0.4M | Q2-Q4
New product launch | CTO | +$2.0M | At risk | +$0.2M | Q3 onwards
Working capital release | CFO | $4.0M (cash) | On track | $2.5M | Q1-Q3
Total plan impact: +$10.0M EBITDA, $4.0M cash
YTD achievement: +$4.9M EBITDA (49%), $2.5M cash (63%)
Portfolio Dashboard (Fund Level)
Company | Vintage | Invested | Current | MOIC | Gross | Net | DPI | Status
| | ($M) | Value($M)| | IRR | IRR | |
------------|---------|----------|----------|-------|-------|-------|------|--------
Platform A | 2021 | 85 | 255 | 3.0x | 32% | 25% | 1.2x | Harvest
Platform B | 2022 | 120 | 200 | 1.7x | 22% | 17% | 0.0x | Growth
Platform C | 2023 | 65 | 78 | 1.2x | 15% | 10% | 0.0x | Build
Platform D | 2023 | 50 | 45 | 0.9x | (8%) | (12%) | 0.0x | Watch
Platform E | 2024 | 90 | 95 | 1.1x | N/M | N/M | 0.0x | Build
Fund Total | | 410 | 673 | 1.6x | 18% | 14% | 0.25x|
Exit Readiness Checklist
Category | Item | Status | Owner | Due
--------------------|----------------------------------------|-------------|--------|-------
Financial | 3 years audited financials | Complete | CFO | Done
Financial | Quality of earnings (sell-side) | In progress | CFO | Q2
Financial | Management accounts (monthly, timely) | Complete | CFO | Done
Commercial | Market study / commercial VDD | Not started | CEO | Q3
Legal | IP registrations confirmed | Complete | GC | Done
Legal | Material contracts reviewed | In progress | GC | Q2
Tax | Tax structuring for exit | In progress | CFO | Q3
Management | Equity story / management presentation | Not started | CEO | Q3
Operational | Standalone IT systems | Complete | CTO | Done
Governance | Board minutes complete and organized | In progress | GC | Q2
Quality Gate