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You’ve finally got a buyer on the hook. Maybe it’s a strategic acquirer that loves your SaaS product, or a private equity fund that sees potential in your e-commerce brand. The term sheet is signed, champagne corks are almost popping… and then, it hits:
Due diligence.
If the deal process is a marathon, due diligence is mile 20—grueling, detail-heavy, and the point where many founders stumble. But it doesn’t have to be that way.
We’ve helped hundreds of founders sell their online businesses, and if there’s one consistent truth it’s this: how you prepare for due diligence can make or break your exit.
Here’s what you need to know—and do—before DD starts.
Buyers aren’t just checking your numbers. They’re looking for confidence—in your financials, your tech stack, your contracts, and your ability to scale without blowing up.
Here’s what’s on their checklist:
Think of due diligence like an X-ray. Everything you’ve done—good, bad, or messy—will show up. So your job before DD starts? Make sure there are no surprises.
Let’s be real. Most founders run lean. Docs are scattered across Google Drive, Slack, Notion, email attachments—and maybe one sacred desktop folder titled “IMPORTANT.”
That’s not gonna fly in DD.
What to do:
A well-organized dataroom screams, “We’re serious, we’re ready, and we know what we’re doing.”
If your P&L looks like a junk drawer—half-filled rows, Stripe screenshots, and Shopify exports—it’s not just a bad look. It’s a deal killer.
Buyers want:
Bonus points if you can explain any weird dips or spikes. (Pro tip: they’ll find them, so don’t try to hide anything.)
What happens if you don’t? At best, buyers will get nervous and lower the valuation. At worst, they walk.
This one hits SaaS founders especially hard. Buyers will poke deep into your product architecture and ask questions like:
If you’re still running on outdated libraries or you “kind of” own your IP because your dev contractor never signed anything—fix it now. Buyers hate risk, especially in software and e-commerce infrastructure.
What to do:
If it’s not defensible, it’s not valuable.
You wouldn’t believe how many deals stall (or blow up) over legal paperwork.
Things that scare buyers:
It doesn’t matter how great your metrics are—if your contracts are a mess, your deal is at risk.
What to do:
Remember: surprises in DD don’t just reduce trust. They reduce the check size.
If you’ve been running your business in “hustle mode,” you’re likely used to making fast decisions, cutting corners, and wearing every hat. But buyers don’t want hustle. They want predictability. Systems. Proof.
Before you enter due diligence:
Your goal isn’t just to survive due diligence. It’s to come out looking like a machine—one they can confidently invest in.
Due diligence isn’t the time to get your house in order—it’s the inspection that determines if the house is worth buying at all.
Start preparing before you go to market. Fix your financials. Clean up your legal. Systematize your ops. Document your tech. Organize your dataroom.
The more buttoned-up you are, the smoother your deal—and the higher your valuation.
Thinking of selling your tech business?
We help SaaS and e-commerce founders prepare, price, and position for premium exits. Book a free strategy call with our M&A team and let’s talk about getting your business due-diligence-ready.