The GovCon Value Capture Diagnostic
Ten dimensions a buyer’s QoE team prices before you do — and how to know your number before someone else sets it.
Most GovCon founders walk into a banker conversation without knowing their number. Not the revenue number — everyone knows that. The value capture number: the gap between what your business could be worth and what a buyer will actually pay after their quality of earnings (QoE) team finishes pricing your back office.
That gap is not theoretical. In a well-prepared GovCon transaction, it is close to zero. In a poorly prepared one, it is typically one to two turns of EBITDA — lost between LOI and closing to re-trades on the NWC peg, EBITDA adjustments from unsupported indirect rates, open audit findings that become escrow holdbacks, and compliance gaps that expand indemnification scope.
At a $20M EBITDA company transacting at a 9x multiple, two turns is $40M. Not hypothetical. Not recoverable after close. Gone.
The diagnostic that follows covers ten dimensions. They are the same ten dimensions a GovCon buyer’s QoE team examines first. Score yourself honestly. The result tells you where you stand and what it is worth to fix it.
The value capture framework
Before the dimensions, the framework. GovCon sellers sit on a six-tier readiness ladder that runs from Pre-Institutional (books are not banker-ready and a process would be damaging) through Premium Seller (defensible at premium multiples with no material re-trade risk). The tier determines the multiple range a company can credibly command — and the distance between adjacent tiers is typically one turn of EBITDA.
The value capture potential scales with EBITDA. At $20M EBITDA, the difference between a Tier 3 and Tier 6 seller is roughly $120M to $240M in total enterprise value — the spread between a 6x and a 12x multiple. That math does not change because the seller is busy or because the banker says the market is good.
| EBITDA | 6x (Tier 1–2) | 9x (Tier 3–4) | 12x (Tier 5–6) | Value Capture Potential |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $10M | $60M | $90M | $120M | up to $60M |
| $20M | $120M | $180M | $240M | up to $120M |
| $35M | $210M | $315M | $420M | up to $210M |
| $50M | $300M | $450M | $600M | up to $300M |
Dimension 1: GAAP & Accrual Conversion
- Books are full accrual GAAP — not cash, not hybrid
- Revenue recognized under ASC 606 with documented performance obligations
- 24–36 months of restated, audit-ready historical financials exist
For GovCon companies, accrual conversion is more complex than for commercial businesses because of the interaction between contract billing, WIP, unbilled receivables, and DCAA compliance. A company on cost-plus contracts that books revenue on a cash basis is systematically understating earned revenue and overstating its cash position relative to contract performance. Restatement is possible but expensive — done under diligence pressure, it creates exactly the kind of QoE finding that gives buyers a lever to re-trade.
Dimension 2: DCAA-Approved Accounting System
- System segregates direct, indirect, and unallowable costs at the transaction level
- Running on a DCAA-recognized platform configured for GovCon (Costpoint, Unanet, JAMIS)
- Could pass an SF1408 pre-award review today without remediation
The system question is frequently underestimated by founders who have managed DCAA relationships successfully for years without a formal pre-award survey. A history of no adverse findings is not the same as a system that is demonstrably compliant. The difference matters in a transaction because a buyer’s QoE team will test the system configuration, not just the audit history.
Dimension 3: Indirect Rate Structure
- Fringe, overhead, and G&A pools are clearly defined with documented allocation bases
- Provisional, forward pricing, and actual rates are reconciled at least quarterly
- FAR 31.205 unallowables are systematically segregated and excluded
Indirect rate structure is where GovCon finance diverges most sharply from commercial finance. A commercial PE buyer who has not done GovCon transactions before will price undocumented indirect rates as a blanket risk discount. A GovCon-experienced buyer will model the specific exposure — which is why GovCon-experienced QoE teams find things that commercial teams miss, and why having a GovCon CFO prepare the rate documentation before process is so materially valuable.
Dimension 4: Timekeeping & Labor Distribution
- All employees enter time daily in an electronic system — no batch entry
- Time is charged at project, task, and CLIN level with supervisor approval
- System maintains a complete audit trail with reason codes for corrections
False Claims Act exposure is the single most deal-threatening compliance risk in a GovCon transaction. Batch timekeeping, supervisor-entered time, or missing audit trails for corrections are findings that generate FCA liability questions no acquirer will leave unaddressed. The remediation cost is low — fix the timekeeping practice before process. The cost of finding it in diligence is a different order of magnitude.
Dimension 5: Incurred Cost Submissions & Audit History
- ICS submissions are current and compliant for every applicable year
- No open DCAA audits, questioned costs, or rate settlement issues
- Final indirect rates are settled, or on a clear documented path to settlement
- Audit history shows no material findings, defaults, or cure notices
ICS currency is one of the two or three most binary items on a GovCon transaction checklist. If filings are not current, the process will surface it. Buyers will model the exposure, escrow against it, or — in cases of significant delinquency — walk. The filing itself is not difficult. The pattern of non-filing is what creates the problem, because it raises questions about what the filed years would show.
Dimension 6: Contract Portfolio & Novation
- No single contract or customer exceeds 25% of trailing revenue
- Novation requirements under FAR 42.12 are mapped and a plan exists
- Backlog is supported by funded options and a defensible recompete strategy
Contract transferability is a question commercial buyers frequently underestimate and GovCon buyers obsess over. A company whose primary revenue vehicle is an IDIQ task order that requires novation — and whose customer agency has a history of slow novation approvals — is carrying a revenue continuity risk that buyers will price. The mitigation is not legal gymnastics. It is early engagement with the contracting officer and a documented novation readiness plan that gives buyers confidence the revenue survives the transaction.
Dimension 7: Compliance Infrastructure
- Current written policies for FAR, DFARS, and applicable CAS standards
- CMMC 2.0, NIST 800-171, and Section 889 compliance documented with evidence
- CASB DS-1 (if applicable) is filed, current, and accurate
CMMC 2.0 is increasingly a transaction condition, not just an operational requirement. A company pursuing DoD contracts that cannot demonstrate NIST 800-171 compliance documentation is either carrying material contract risk or material compliance fabrication risk — and buyers will find either. Section 889 representations that have been signed without a documented review process are a similar exposure: the certification was made, but the evidence of compliance is absent.
Dimension 8: Cash Conversion & Working Capital
- DSO tracked monthly with root-cause analysis
- Unbilled receivables reconciled monthly with a disciplined conversion cycle
- Rolling 12-month normalized NWC analysis a banker could defend
GovCon working capital is structurally more complex than commercial because of the unbilled receivable cycle. Cost-plus contracts create a lag between cost incurrence, billing, and collection. A company that does not track unbilled receivables at the contract level, does not have a documented conversion cadence, and has not built a trailing 12-month normalized NWC analysis is sitting on a re-trade risk that is entirely preventable. Sync-to-Sale addresses exactly this gap.
Dimension 9: Financial Reporting
- Monthly contract-level P&L with full margin detail
- EBITDA bridge with documented adjustments for owner comp, one-time, and M&A
- Backlog, pipeline, and book-to-bill reported at least quarterly
The EBITDA bridge is where sellers leak value most reliably. An undocumented owner compensation add-back gets discounted. A one-time expense that cannot be supported with documentation gets rejected. A normalized EBITDA that a banker cannot defend gets haircut by the buyer’s model, not accepted at face value. Every dollar of EBITDA that cannot be defended in the bridge is worth the transaction multiple in enterprise value. At 9x, a $1M unsupported add-back costs $9M in proceeds.
Dimension 10: Diligence Readiness
- Financials and contracts (with all modifications) organized in a cloud-based system
- QoE supporting schedules — revenue, margin, NWC, rate reconciliation — pre-built and current
- Finance can respond to diligence requests within 72 hours without disrupting operations
Diligence readiness is the dimension that most directly determines whether a seller controls the process or the buyer does. A data room that is organized, pre-populated, and current signals operational discipline and gives the seller leverage. A data room that is assembled under pressure after LOI signals risk and gives the buyer a reason to slow the process, expand the QoE scope, and push on price. The preparation cost is minimal. The leverage is significant.
What your score tells you
A score below 3.0 across any dimension is a specific remediation priority — not a general suggestion to “improve the finance function.” Each dimension has a cost to remediate and a value that remediation protects. The sequencing matters: GAAP conversion first (it underlies everything else), DCAA system second (it is a process gate for cost-reimbursable work), ICS currency third (it is a structural deal condition). Compliance, timekeeping, and diligence readiness can run in parallel.
A score of 4.0 or above across all ten dimensions places a company in the High Multiple tier. The marginal cost of getting from 4.0 to 5.0 on the remaining gaps is almost always less than the value it protects at closing — often by a factor of ten or more.
“We assessed our valuation readiness against ten dimensions of back-office discipline that buyers, lenders, and bankers examine in any institutional GovCon process. Our overall score is 4.4 of 5.0, placing us in the Premium Seller profile. GAAP books, DCAA-approved systems, clean ICS history, defensible rate structure, organized data room. The risk now is complacency between LOI and closing — that is where deals leak value through re-trades on the NWC peg, EBITDA adjustments, and indemnification scope.”
What to do with this
Run the diagnostic honestly. The ten dimensions do not require consultant interpretation — the behavioral anchors are specific enough that a CFO or controller can score each one without ambiguity. The output is a readiness tier, a value capture potential in dollars, and a sequenced remediation list.
If the score places you in Tier 3 or below, the conversation is about timing: how long before a planned exit, and what is the remediation sequence that moves the most value in the available window. Twelve to eighteen months is enough to make a material difference across most dimensions. Six months is enough to move the highest-value items.
If the score places you in Tier 5 or above, the conversation is about protecting what you have: maintaining the score through the diligence process, not just achieving it before process launches. The NWC peg, the EBITDA bridge, and the compliance representations all need to be current at closing — not just at the time the banker deck was built.
The GovCon CFO Readiness Diagnostic covers these dimensions in a 15-minute scored format. If the score surfaces gaps that need a finance operator to address, a GovCon fractional CFO is the right deployment model for most companies 12 to 24 months from a planned event. If the financial readiness program itself needs to be built, Sync-to-Sale is the structured engagement for that work. Reach out directly if you want to start the conversation.
Steve Radanovic is the GovCon CFO Practice Leader at Sync Executive Partners — a 27-year finance veteran with 20 years in GovCon, defense, and PE-backed companies with multiple successful exits. Scott Engler is the Founder & CEO. Reach them at stever@sync-exec.com and scott@sync-exec.com.