For many technology CEOs and founders, the idea of an exit lives somewhere in the future. Not urgent. Not immediate. Something to think about “when the time is right.”
Reality is less forgiving.
Exits are not events. They are intensive processes that begin 12–24 months before a transaction ever takes place. And the founders that achieve the best outcomes are rarely the ones reacting to the current market; they are the ones prepared before the opportunity shows up.
As we move through 2026, the conversation is shifting. Buyers remain active, but expectations are greater, due diligence is deeper, and selectivity is higher. The question is no longer if opportunities will arise, but who will actually be ready for them.
1. Stop Waiting for the “Perfect Market”
There is no perfect window. Markets open and close faster than most companies can prepare for.
Founders who wait for ideal conditions often find themselves rushing for time when interest appears, which weakens their negotiation position. Preparation creates optionality. Without it, timing becomes a constraint instead of an advantage.
2. Understand What Buyers Are Really Evaluating
Growth still matters, but it is no longer the entire story.
Buyers are looking closely at:
Revenue quality and predictability
Customer concentration and retention
Profitability or a clear path to it
Strength of the leadership team
Positioning within a defined market
A company that looks strong from the outside can quickly unravel under scrutiny if these elements are not in place.
3. Your Story Matters as Much as Your Numbers
Data alone does not drive a transaction. Narratives do.
Why this company? Why now? Why this market?
Founders who can clearly articulate their positioning, growth story, and strategic value create momentum when exiting their business. Those who cannot often leave value on the table, even if the company has solid financials.
4. Preparation Happens Earlier Than You Think
The most overlooked part of an exit is the groundwork:
Clean, organized financials
Clear KPIs and reporting consistency
Defined growth strategy
Alignment among shareholders
These are not last-minute fixes. These processes take time, and directly impact valuation metrics and deal certainty.
5. Optionality Is the Real Goal
The strongest position a founder can have is choice.
Whether you decide to sell, raise capital, or continue scaling, being prepared gives you leverage. It allows you to engage with opportunities on your terms, not under pressure.
Without preparation, the dynamic shifts. Decisions become reactive; timelines compress, and leverage moves to the other side of the table.
Optionality isn’t just flexibility; it’s control over both timing and outcome.
Final Thought
Most founders don’t miss exit opportunities because they weren’t interested. They miss them because they weren’t ready.
2026 will continue to reward companies that are prepared and well ahead of the curve. The question is not whether you plan to exit today, but whether you are building the foundation to do so when the moment arises.
For founders looking to go deeper into how the M&A process works and what it takes to prepare effectively, our Tech M&A Master Class brings together practical insights, real-world perspectives, and direct access to the key elements involved in a successful exit.


