You built an MSP from scratch. You survived late nights, network outages, and clients who believe their inability to print is your fault. For years, your MSP has essentially been your other marriage. Now, whether you’re eyeing retirement in Key West or simply done with your daily serving of “Did you try turning it off and on again?”, you’re considering selling. What comes next? More importantly, how do you ensure you get the value you deserve for the empire you built (without giving it away like last year’s donated laptops)?
This guide lays out the recovery phase of selling your MSP with sharper strategy, less drama, and just enough wit to make the spreadsheets tolerable. Expect insights from industry experts, practical steps for maximizing your business value, and a few gentle reminders that “winging it” is never a proper exit plan.
Some owners sprint toward the exit, fueled by burnout or an urgent offer. Others approach more like chess grandmasters, planning each move years in advance. Wherever you land, you’re probably asking yourself – is now the right time? Why now? The “why” is critical. Maybe you’re transitioning before the next market consolidation, maybe you’re tired of patching Windows at 2 AM, or maybe, just maybe, you’re ready for a break from client emails flagged as “urgent.” Be honest with yourself.
Whatever your reason, anchoring your sale with the right motivation clarifies your next steps and ensures you won’t undersell your years of work just to escape. If you’re feeling overwhelmed, you’re in good company. Selling an MSP is a multi-faceted process that taxes even the best operators.
Think your MSP is valuable just because it exists? The market begs to differ. Buyers have spreadsheets, due diligence teams, and a healthy skepticism of anything described as “low-hanging fruit.” Your business needs tangible strengths.
Buyers love predictability. The higher your recurring revenue percentage and customer retention rates, the better. If you can show sticky, long-term contracts and clients who didn’t flee after the first price increase, you’re in good shape.
Handing over shoeboxes full of receipts is not an exit strategy. Well-organized, audited financials are a must. Expect buyers to scrutinize your EBITDA, profit margins, and recurring revenue rates with the intensity of an IT admin reading a ransomware notification. The stronger your numbers, the fatter your multiple.
Efficient, documented processes mean less key person risk. If your lead tech is the only one who can restart the firewall and you have no SOPs, this is the time to fix it. A business that runs without the founder on speed dial is a business ready for sale.
MSPs who rely on one big client or a single vendor channel scare buyers. Diverse revenue streams and a spread-out customer base signal stability.
Buyers expect security best practices and a modern toolset. If your RMM platform hasn’t been updated since Obama’s second term, upgrade now.
A quick “For Sale” post in your local IT Facebook group won’t fetch the right buyer, nor the value you deserve. The steps below ensure you’re prepared not just to sell, but to sell smart.
Begin exit planning at least a year in advance (ideally two or three). Use this time to:
Uncover revenue leaks by reviewing service delivery and billing. Implement tools for service and time tracking if you haven’t already, and review contract terms for upsell and renewal opportunities. Every line item counts.
Ramp up your recurring revenue, shore up your service agreements, and automate renewals. A spike in one-off projects before sale may impress nobody, but steady subscription increases are gold dust for buyers.
Show evidence of an engaged, capable staff who aren’t all family members on the payroll. Document training, certifications, and cross-training efforts. If your business falls apart without you, buyers will sense it.
Buyers pay top dollar for companies that run smoothly with or without the founder. Institutionalize client relationships, delegate leadership, and ensure no single person holds all the vital secrets.
Perhaps the hardest step. There’s more fish in the M&A sea than you might think, but not all are keepers.
Assess alignment on culture, values, technology, and client care. Don’t be the seller who gets charmed by a thick stack of cash and later learns the buyer plans to gut your team and client base for “efficiency.” Ask tough questions, request references, and do due diligence in return. Negotiations may resemble a marathon contract redlining session. Bring an advisor (or a stiff drink).
Your MSP isn’t just ARR and SLA uptime. Tell the story of your battles, your wins, your evolution. A well-articulated narrative humanizes your business and attracts buyers who value team culture, not just cash flow.
Now we reach the fun part (lawyers may disagree). Selling is part art, part paperwork-heavy marathon. Ignore one, and you’ll pay the price.
Prepare your documentation. Sloppy records lose deals or drive prices down at the 11th hour.
You might hope for a clean break, but the post-sale period often requires training, steadying hands, and more than a few “just checking in” emails. Set clear handover milestones, provide thorough documentation, and support your team and the buyer. A smooth transition means less disruption for clients and more favorable post-sale terms for you.
Reward yourself by watching the new owners make the same mistakes you did… and resisting the urge to say, “I told you so.” Seriously though, part of your transition may be to complete a 6-12 business forecast plan for the new owners. If that’s the case, check out our blog on MSP Business Models Explained: Which Is Best for Profitability?
Selling a Managed Service Provider business is one of the biggest (and possibly most stressful) decisions you’ll make. There’s nuance, opportunity and, yes, some dark humor in the process. If you take one thing from this guide, remember that the groundwork laid now will determine whether your long years of hard work pay off or barely cover a holiday in Daytona.
If you’re seeking to maximize your MSP value, avoid rookie mistakes, and secure a future that reflects your effort, expertise, and vision, connect with experienced partners. Bering McKinley specializes in guiding MSPs through the recovery phase—from exit planning to closing the deal.
Your business is worth more than a quick transaction. Get personalized advice, actionable strategies, and industry expertise for the outcome your MSP, your clients, and you deserve. Book a confidential call with Bering McKinley today.