by Jack Griggs
Corporate Finance Director
23 March 2026
Articleby Jack Griggs
Corporate Finance Director
For many business owners, exit planning only becomes a priority when a buyer appears. By that stage, pressure is high, options are limited, and value can easily be left on the table.
At James Cowper Kreston, we believe the strongest exits are built long before a transaction is on the horizon.
Exit readiness is not about selling tomorrow. It is about building a business that is resilient, valuable and attractive whenever the time is right, whether an exit is planned or unexpected.
An exit is an outcome - readiness is a strategy.
Why exit readiness is important
Some exits are carefully planned, however, many are not.
Burnout, health issues, changes in market conditions or personal circumstances can force decisions sooner than expected. When timing is limited:
Exit readiness planning protects against these risks. It gives owners control over timing, improves deal certainty, and helps ensure the value built over years of hard work is realised.
Crucially, exit readiness is not just for those actively planning a sale. The same disciplines that make a business attractive to buyers also make it easier to manage, more resilient, and better positioned for growth today.
What does “exit ready” really mean?
Buyers don’t just buy growth projections - they buy confidence and clarity.
A key part of building that confidence is demonstrating you understand the real drivers of success in your business - and that you have distilled them into a small set of meaningful KPIs that track and monitor performance over time. When buyers can see that the key levers are clearly defined, measured consistently and reviewed regularly, they gain comfort that you can evidence progress and ultimately demonstrate sustainable growth in the areas that matter most.
An exit-ready business typically has:
If value sits with one individual, buyers see risk. Exit readiness is about embedding value in the business itself.
Some of the key areas to address early
Structure and assets - Group structures often evolve without an exit in mind. Early review helps ensure the structure supports a future sale and clarifies which assets should, or should not, be included, such as property or surplus investments.
Tax efficiency and compliance - Tax is often one of the most important drivers of net exit value. Reviewing compliance, historic risks, shareholdings and available reliefs early avoid surprises and improves outcomes.
Share schemes and incentives - Employee and management share schemes can significantly impact an exit. Understanding triggers, entitlements and buyer expectations well in advance prevents disruption later.
Data and reporting - Reliable, clearly structured data underpins a smooth transaction and helps maximise and protect value. Ensuring financial, operational and people data is accurate, consistent and easily retrievable enables fast buyer analysis and reduces the risk of challenges during due diligence — and, more broadly, gives better oversight of business performance and the drivers behind it.
Commercial readiness review - Looking at the business through a buyer’s lens before going to market helps identify material issues early - allowing them to be fixed on your terms, not under deal pressure.
Future strategy planning - Buyers want clarity on where the business is heading, how scalable it is, and how dependent it is on the owner. Exit readiness brings focus to these questions early.
How we can help
We work alongside business owners long before a transaction is on the table, helping them prepare with confidence and clarity.
Our team can support business owners by:
Whether you are considering an exit in the next few years or simply want to future-proof your business, early preparation can make a measurable difference to value, timing and outcomes.
An exit is an outcome - readiness is a strategy.
For more information on how James Cowper Kreston can help your business maximise it's potential, please click here.