Value Capture in GovCon: The 10 Dimensions Buyers Price Before You Do
Most GovCon founders start preparing for a sale 90 days before the banker engagement. The companies that command premium multiples start 18 months earlier. Here is what they build — and why each dimension moves the number.
There is a number sitting inside your business right now that you don’t control yet. A buyer’s quality of earnings (QoE) team will find it during diligence — the gap between what your EBITDA looks like at the start of a process and what it looks like after their accountants have spent four weeks in your books. In a well-prepared GovCon company, that gap is small. In an unprepared one, it can be two to four turns of EBITDA.
You built the business. The financial infrastructure is the last thing that gets built — and the first thing a buyer prices. This article covers the ten dimensions a QoE team examines first, what they’re looking for, and the specific findings that re-trade deals between LOI and closing.
The six-tier seller ladder
GovCon sellers sit somewhere on a six-tier ladder that runs from Pre-Institutional to Banker-Ready. Where you sit determines the achievable multiple — not just at the high end, but at every step. Moving one tier costs about 12 to 18 months of focused remediation work. Most founders discover which tier they’re on during the first week of a banker engagement, when it’s too late to fix anything.
The gap between Tier 4 and Tier 6 is typically 2 to 4 turns of EBITDA in achievable multiple — and 12 to 24 months of preparation work. Most companies that run a process before building the back office leave that multiple on the table permanently.
The ten dimensions buyers examine first
A QoE team works through these dimensions systematically. Each one can produce findings that reduce the purchase price, increase escrow holdbacks, or expand the reps & warranties exposure. The order below roughly matches the sequence a buyer’s accountants follow — starting with the books themselves, moving through the compliance infrastructure, and finishing with diligence readiness.
What a Premium Seller looks like in practice
A Premium Seller — Tier 5 on the ladder, one step below Banker-Ready — has scores of 4.0 or above across most dimensions. The top strengths are typically GAAP and compliance, because those are the dimensions founders address first when they begin thinking about an exit. The persistent gaps are usually DCAA system configuration, ICS history, and diligence readiness — because those require sustained operational work, not just policy documentation.
This profile sits roughly one turn of EBITDA below a Banker-Ready seller. The specific upside: tighten the DCAA system configuration, close the ICS history, and pre-build the QoE supporting schedules. At a $20M EBITDA company, that work is worth $20M or more in additional proceeds.
The board-ready narrative for where you are now
The right framing for a board or sponsor conversation about financial readiness is not “are we ready to run a process?” It is “what does our back office score across the ten dimensions a buyer prices — and what is the specific upside available with a sequenced remediation plan?”
A company that scores 4.4 overall should be telling its board: “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 places us in the Premium Seller profile. Our strengths are GAAP books and compliance infrastructure. Our priority gaps are DCAA system configuration and diligence readiness. With a sequenced 12–18 month plan, we can close those gaps and position the company for a Banker-Ready process.”
A company that scores 3.2 overall is telling a different story — but it should still tell it clearly and build the remediation plan before a banker is engaged, not after.
The sequencing that matters
Not all ten dimensions have equal urgency. The sequence that produces the most value in the shortest time starts with the dimensions that create existential risk — and finishes with the dimensions that optimize an already-defensible position.
First priority: compliance and timekeeping. False Claims Act exposure and DCAA system findings can kill a deal entirely. These are not purchase price adjustments — they are process terminations. Address them first, regardless of how far the exit horizon is.
Second priority: ICS history and DCAA approval. Outstanding ICS years and open audits become escrow holdbacks. Every year of outstanding ICS that enters a process unresolved is a negotiating lever for the buyer. Resolve them on your timeline, not theirs.
Third priority: GAAP conversion and indirect rate structure. These are the foundation of the EBITDA number a banker will argue. If the books are on cash basis, the first thing a QoE team does is restate them — conservatively. Build the accrual history on your terms.
Fourth priority: NWC baseline and diligence readiness. The NWC peg and the data room are where deals leak value between LOI and closing. Build the rolling 12-month NWC analysis 12 months before the process begins. Pre-build the QoE supporting schedules. The goal is a data room that validates, not one that raises questions.
The diagnostic that scores where you are
The GovCon CFO Readiness Diagnostic scores your company across six of these dimensions — DCAA compliance, indirect rates, backlog quality, finance infrastructure, and exit readiness — in 15 minutes. It produces a prioritized action plan showing exactly where the finance function is exposed and what to address first.
If you want a deeper assessment across all ten dimensions — including a full review of the ICS history, rate structure, contract portfolio, and diligence readiness — that is the work the Sync-to-Sale engagement covers. It produces the GAAP-compliant books, accrual revenue recognition, NWC baseline, and QoE supporting schedules a Banker-Ready process requires.
The question worth answering now, before a banker asks it: what tier are you on? And what is the specific upside available if you move up one?
Steve Radanovic is the Partner and CFO Practice Lead at Sync CFO — a corporate finance executive with 27 years of success across PE-backed and founder-owned government contracting businesses, including multiple successful exits. He leads the GovCon CFO practice and advises defense sector companies on financial readiness, DCAA compliance, and exit preparation. Reach him at stever@sync-exec.com.