Most GovCon deals that fail in diligence don't fail because of the contracts. They fail because of what's behind the contracts — the financial infrastructure, the accounting systems, and the documentation that buyers expect and sellers can't produce under pressure.
The Five Failure Modes
The most common diligence killer. Sellers present total contract ceiling as funded backlog — two very different numbers. When the buyer's financial team validates the funded backlog against actual Task Order commitments, the number can drop by 40% or more. The deal re-prices immediately, and trust evaporates.
If your accounting system has never been DCAA-approved, every cost allocation in your business is potentially challengeable. Buyers will discount the EBITDA, extend the diligence timeline, and often walk away from deals below a certain revenue threshold rather than accept the compliance risk.
Undocumented wrap rates, inconsistently applied overhead pools, and fringe calculations that don't hold up to scrutiny create significant diligence risk. Buyers build their own indirect rate model and compare it to yours. Discrepancies become purchase price adjustments.
A change-of-control transaction triggers novation requirements on federal contracts. If the buyer's attorney identifies contracts that may not novate cleanly — or that have specific novation restrictions — the deal structure becomes significantly more complicated. Map your novation risk before the buyer maps it for you.
If DCAA has questioned costs in your indirect pools that have not been resolved, those create contingent liabilities that buyers will either price in, escrow against, or walk away from. Clean up open items before you go to market.
What Preparation Actually Looks Like
The GovCon founders who exit cleanly at premium multiples typically start their financial preparation 18 to 24 months before a transaction. They engage a CFO or advisor with direct GovCon transaction experience. They run a mock diligence on their own business. And they fix what they find before a buyer finds it.
The cost of that preparation is a fraction of the value it protects at the negotiating table.