The market has changed in a fundamental way. It's harder to get money, harder to make money, and harder to sell. What carries weight now is performance that shows up clearly in the numbers, holds together under scrutiny, and can be explained without a lengthy narrative. Proof, not positioning.
Key Themes
Operational execution is carrying more of the return than at any point in the past decade. High entry prices require precision in execution, not optimism in projections. LP expectations are shifting decisively toward realized outcomes.
Embed exit plans at acquisition; establish exit governance early; map the buyer universe before you need it; build the VCP with room for the next buyer's thesis; launch value-capture sprints; highlight AI readiness with proof, not narrative.
Talent as primary lever; profit over growth; investor lens on every major decision; clean-sheet the org design; governance as value creation; time as capital; long-term mindset with short-term execution discipline.
AI adoption remains shallow beyond pilots in most companies; but AI is now actively shaping exit readiness for the companies that have moved past experimentation. The constraint is execution capability, not technology.
Scale and track record matter more than ever. LPs are concentrating commitments. Mid-market differentiation is critical — and the differentiation that matters is operational, not narrative.