Dawgen Decodes: The D.E.A.L.M.A.K.E.R. Series™

 

When owners think about selling a business, they often focus on one thing: price.

But in most transactions, the biggest risk to price—and the fastest trigger for deal stress—is what happens after you accept an offer:

Due diligence.

Due diligence is where buyers test your story, verify your numbers, and uncover risk. If you enter diligence unprepared, three things usually happen:

  1. the timeline slips,

  2. the buyer’s confidence drops, and

  3. the buyer comes back with a revised deal—a retrade.

This article explains why retrades happen, what buyers look for, and how sellers can run diligence as a controlled process rather than a fire drill.

What is a retrade (and why it matters)?

A retrade is when a buyer reduces price or changes terms after an offer is agreed, usually during or after due diligence.

Retrades are costly because they create:

  • lower purchase price,

  • higher earnouts/escrows,

  • tougher warranties and indemnities,

  • more conditions to closing,

  • and often, emotional fatigue that pushes the seller to accept worse terms “just to finish.”

The best protection is not “arguing harder.” It’s preparing better and running diligence with discipline.

Why deals become chaotic in due diligence

Due diligence becomes dramatic when:

  • documents are scattered,

  • reporting is inconsistent,

  • answers are delayed or contradictory,

  • tax/compliance items are unclear,

  • contracts are missing or informal,

  • key employees aren’t prepared,

  • or the seller is trying to clean up issues in the middle of the process.

Buyers interpret chaos as risk. And risk shows up as discounts and protection clauses.

The Dawgen approach: M — Manage Due Diligence (D.E.A.L.M.A.K.E.R. Framework™)

Within the Dawgen Global D.E.A.L.M.A.K.E.R. Framework™, the “M” is Manage Due Diligence.

This phase is designed to:

  • control information flow,

  • build confidence through evidence,

  • keep the buyer on schedule,

  • and prevent value leakage through late surprises.

Diligence isn’t just a checklist. It’s a trust-building process.

What buyers actually test in due diligence

Think of diligence in six workstreams:

1) Financial diligence

Buyers look for:

  • accuracy of revenue and margins,

  • sustainability of earnings,

  • normalization adjustments,

  • working capital patterns,

  • cash conversion and debt-like items.

Seller risk trigger: unexplained variances, messy reconciliations, or “trust me” numbers.

2) Tax diligence

Buyers want to know:

  • filings are current,

  • exposures are understood,

  • payroll and statutory payments are compliant,

  • disputes and audits are disclosed.

Seller risk trigger: late filings, unclear assessments, or undisclosed liabilities.

3) Legal and contracts

Buyers review:

  • corporate governance documents,

  • customer/supplier contracts,

  • leases, licenses, IP,

  • disputes, claims, compliance.

Seller risk trigger: major relationships without contracts, weak assignment clauses, or unresolved disputes.

4) Commercial diligence

Buyers test:

  • customer concentration,

  • churn and retention,

  • pricing power,

  • competitive position,

  • pipeline credibility.

Seller risk trigger: sales story not supported by data.

5) Operations and systems

Buyers evaluate:

  • process maturity,

  • reliance on owner/key people,

  • IT systems, controls, data quality,

  • scalability and resilience.

Seller risk trigger: “Only the owner knows how it works.”

6) People and HR

Buyers assess:

  • key employee dependency,

  • contracts and policies,

  • compensation and incentives,

  • retention risks post-close.

Seller risk trigger: key employees not secured or high turnover risk.

The Seller’s Diligence Playbook: how to prevent drama

1) Build a data room before you go to market

A proactive Virtual Data Room (VDR) tells buyers:

  • you are organized,

  • you are transparent,

  • and you can execute.

Seller advantage: speed + confidence + reduced retrade risk.

2) Create a “single source of truth” for financials

Provide:

  • consistent monthly financial statements,

  • reconciliations,

  • a normalization schedule,

  • and a clean bridge from reported profit to maintainable earnings.

Seller advantage: fewer buyer doubts and fewer price chips.

3) Anticipate buyer questions and answer them once, properly

Most diligence questions repeat across buyers. Prepare:

  • a short diligence narrative pack,

  • key explanations for variances,

  • and a clear summary of risks and mitigations.

Seller advantage: consistent answers reduce contradictions.

4) Control the cadence and workflow

Set:

  • a weekly diligence schedule,

  • agreed turnaround times,

  • who answers which questions,

  • and a central Q&A log.

Seller advantage: prevents buyer from dragging the deal out.

5) Surface issues early with context (surprises kill deals)

You don’t need to be perfect—but you must be credible.

If there’s an issue:

  • disclose it early,

  • quantify it,

  • explain mitigation,

  • and show a plan.

Seller advantage: early disclosure protects trust and prevents late renegotiation.

6) Keep the business performing while diligence runs

Many deals die because sellers get distracted and performance drops.

Maintain:

  • leadership rhythm,

  • sales activity,

  • KPIs and weekly operating cadence.

Seller advantage: no deterioration = no justification for a retrade.

The real objective: confidence and certainty

A buyer pays more (and demands less protection) when they feel:

  • the business is real,

  • the numbers are reliable,

  • risks are known and controlled,

  • and the seller is capable of executing.

That confidence reduces the buyer’s need for:

  • earnouts,

  • heavy escrows,

  • and harsh indemnities.

In other words: good diligence improves price and terms.

Diligence is not a phase you survive—it’s a process you run

If you treat diligence like an interrogation, you’ll experience it as stress.
If you treat diligence like a controlled process, you’ll experience it as leverage.

The seller who runs diligence well often wins the deal—even when competitors have similar businesses.

Next Step: Request the Confidential M&A Readiness Diagnostic

If you’re considering a sale in the next 6–24 months, Dawgen Global can help you build diligence readiness, prevent retrades, and protect value.

Book a Confidential M&A Readiness Diagnostic

You’ll receive:

  • A Seller Readiness Scorecard

  • A due diligence readiness review

  • A prioritized data room build plan

  • Key actions to improve price and terms

To request the diagnostic:
🔗 dawgen.global
📧 [email protected]
📞 USA: 855-354-2447
📞 Caribbean: 876-9293670 | 876-9293870
💬 WhatsApp Global: +1 555 795 9071

About Dawgen Global

“Embrace BIG FIRM capabilities without the big firm price at Dawgen Global, your committed partner in carving a pathway to continual progress in the vibrant Caribbean region. Our integrated, multidisciplinary approach is finely tuned to address the unique intricacies and lucrative prospects that the region has to offer. Offering a rich array of services, including audit, accounting, tax, IT, HR, risk management, and more, we facilitate smarter and more effective decisions that set the stage for unprecedented triumphs. Let’s collaborate and craft a future where every decision is a steppingstone to greater success. Reach out to explore a partnership that promises not just growth but a future beaming with opportunities and achievements.

✉️ Email: [email protected] 🌐 Visit: Dawgen Global Website 

📞 📱 WhatsApp Global Number : +1 555-795-9071

📞 Caribbean Office: +1876-6655926 / 876-9293670/876-9265210 📲 WhatsApp Global: +1 5557959071

📞 USA Office: 855-354-2447

Join hands with Dawgen Global. Together, let’s venture into a future brimming with opportunities and achievements

by Dr Dawkins Brown

Dr. Dawkins Brown is the Executive Chairman of Dawgen Global , an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm . Dr. Brown earned his Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.) in the field of Accounting, Finance and Management from Rushmore University. He has over Twenty three (23) years experience in the field of Audit, Accounting, Taxation, Finance and management . Starting his public accounting career in the audit department of a “big four” firm (Ernst & Young), and gaining experience in local and international audits, Dr. Brown rose quickly through the senior ranks and held the position of Senior consultant prior to establishing Dawgen.

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Dawgen Global is an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm in the Caribbean Region. We are integrated as one Regional firm and provide several professional services including: audit,accounting ,tax,IT,Risk, HR,Performance, M&A,corporate recovery and other advisory services

Where to find us?
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Dawgen Social links
Taking seamless key performance indicators offline to maximise the long tail.
https://www.dawgen.global/wp-content/uploads/2023/07/Foo-WLogo.png

Dawgen Global is an integrated multidisciplinary professional service firm in the Caribbean Region. We are integrated as one Regional firm and provide several professional services including: audit,accounting ,tax,IT,Risk, HR,Performance, M&A,corporate recovery and other advisory services

Where to find us?
https://www.dawgen.global/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/img-footer-map.png
Dawgen Social links
Taking seamless key performance indicators offline to maximise the long tail.

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© 2024 Copyright Dawgen Global. All rights reserved.