The valuation multiple is applied to EBITDA. But which EBITDA? That is the question a Quality of Earnings review answers. QoE reviews evaluate the sustainability and reliability of earnings — and the difference between reported EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA often surprises sellers.
What Is a Quality of Earnings Review?
A QoE review is an independent analysis of a company's earnings quality — evaluating whether reported EBITDA reflects sustainable, ongoing business performance. The ultimate question is: what is this business likely to earn after closing?
"Transactions are not won in diligence. They are won before diligence begins."
Why GovCon Companies Receive Additional QoE Scrutiny
Government contractors face complexities that increase the importance of QoE reviews. Buyers frequently evaluate contract mix, indirect rates, labor utilization, recompete exposure, backlog quality, billing practices, and compliance infrastructure. Because earnings can be influenced by contract structures and government regulations, buyers often perform deeper analysis than in traditional commercial businesses.
Area 1: Revenue Quality Analysis
The first objective is understanding how sustainable revenue really is — customer concentration, contract concentration, backlog analysis (funded vs unfunded), and pipeline review. Strong backlog creates confidence. High customer concentration creates risk that buyers price into their offers.
Area 2: EBITDA Quality Analysis
This is often the heart of the QoE process. Common EBITDA adjustments include:
- Owner compensation: Many founder-led companies pay compensation above or below market rates — normalized to market.
- One-time legal expenses: Non-recurring legal events are typically removed.
- Extraordinary consulting costs: Transformation initiatives may be adjusted.
- Non-recurring revenue: Revenue unlikely to continue after closing may be excluded.
- One-time bonuses: Special compensation events are frequently normalized.
The valuation multiple is generally applied to adjusted EBITDA — not reported EBITDA. Understanding this distinction before going to market is critical.
The Five Most Common QoE Findings
Sell-Side QoE Reviews
Increasingly, sellers perform their own QoE review before going to market. Benefits include identifying issues early, improving buyer confidence, reducing surprises, and strengthening negotiation leverage. Many PE-backed transactions now include sell-side QoE reports as standard practice.
Frequently Asked Questions
Know where you stand — before buyers do.
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