What the engagement looks like from first conversation through to formal introduction, and why the advisor you choose has more influence over your outcome than almost any other decision you'll make.
M&A Concierge works in three steps: a paid 90–120 minute advisory call, a recommendation of the advisors best matched to your transaction, and a formal introduction with ongoing support through to engagement. The advisory call is designed to equip you to engage an advisor intelligently: how a sale process works, how advisors are paid and what their fee structures mean, what to look for in a pitch meeting, and where you stand today relative to what the process demands. Most Australian business owners don't know that only one in three businesses that go to market actually transact — and that among the variables within your control, advisor selection has the greatest influence on whether that outcome changes.
Most business owners spend years building something valuable, and when they decide to sell, their focus lands on valuation. What's my business worth? What multiple will I get? That's a reasonable question, but it's the second question. The first question is more confronting.
Approximately one in three businesses that go to market in Australia successfully transact. Two in three do not. They either fail to find a buyer, fail to agree on terms, or run a bad process that stalls and is abandoned by the potential buyers. The owners involved rarely understand why it happened. They had a real business. They had a number in their head. They had an advisor.
They had the wrong advisor.
Businesses that go to market in Australia successfully transact. The other two walk away without a deal.
Close rate achieved by quality M&A firms with the right industry knowledge, relationships, and results running a quality process.
The approximate improvement in deal probability when the right advisor is matched to the right transaction, compared to the market average.
Not all M&A advisors are created equal, and the differences are rarely visible from the outside. A firm's ability to close a transaction, and the outcome it achieves, depends on whether it understands your industry well enough to design the right strategy from the start: how to prepare and position your business, which buyer types are most likely to see strategic value in it, and critically, which specific buyers are active in your sector right now, what they are looking for, and how to approach them.
A generalist firm will run a process, produce documentation, and make calls. But without deep sector knowledge and active buyer relationships, the strategy is generic, the positioning is flat, and the buyers most likely to pay a strategic premium may never be identified, let alone reached. The difference between a financial offer and a strategic premium is not luck. It is preparation, positioning, and the relationships to open the right doors.
Valuation does not equal price. The valuation that an accountant calculates does not translate to an advisor going out to the market and finding it. The price ultimately achieved is shaped by preparation, positioning, which buyers are approached, and whether those buyers perceive strategic value or purely financial return.
The same business, run through two different sale processes with different advisors, can produce materially different outcomes. Strategic buyers, acquirers who see your business as a platform, a capability acquisition, a bolt-on, or a market entry, routinely pay premiums that financial buyers do not. Getting those buyers to the table requires an advisor with the right relationships and the credibility to make a compelling case.
This is a high-touch relationship, not a matching algorithm. It begins with a direct conversation and ends when you are ready to engage the advisor we've introduced. Everything in between is included.
A paid, confidential 90–120 minute conversation.
This is not a sales call. It is a structured session with two purposes: to give you the foundation to understand and navigate the process ahead, and to gather the information needed to identify the right advisor for your specific transaction. The call covers five areas.
Based on the advisory call, we identify the advisors whose specific track record, sector relationships, deal size experience, and process approach align with what your transaction requires.
This is a considered recommendation drawn from Australia's most comprehensive M&A advisor database, with AI analytics cross-referencing your profile against advisor history across 100+ industries.
Five dimensions of advisor quality are central to how we match.
We make a warm, formal introduction, a video call or in person with the recommended advisor or advisors.
This is a genuine introduction between two parties who have been briefed on each other, not a cold referral. We stay available through the back-and-forth that follows.
Most advisor recommendations are based on relationships and instinct. Ours are based on both: deep market relationships cross-referenced against structured data on advisor performance, sector focus, deal size history, and buyer network composition.
Our database covers the Australian mid-market M&A advisory landscape across 100+ industry sectors, not the largest firms by revenue, but the specialists by transaction. It is continuously updated and analysed, so recommendations reflect current performance, not historical reputation.
Completed transaction records: closed deals, not mandates or engagements.
Sector coverage mapping: which advisors are genuinely active in which industries.
Deal size distribution: where each firm's experience actually sits.
Buyer network analysis: the types of acquirers each advisor regularly transacts with.
Every sector recommendation is matched to advisors with verified activity in your specific industry, not adjacent ones.
The mid-market segment where advisor selection has the greatest influence on outcome, and advisor firms are fragmented in their hundreds.
A Google search, an LLM, or a directory gives you some options. A recommendation gives you the right answer.
Everything flows from the first conversation. Book a confidential advisory call, 90 to 120 minutes, and leave equipped to engage an advisor intelligently, with a recommendation of the firms best suited to your transaction.
How a sale process actually works: the stages, the documentation, the timeline, and what to expect from the experience.
Advisor fee structures: success fees, retainers, lehman-scale variations, and what is reasonable at your deal size.
Advisor types and process approaches: the difference between a broker and an M&A advisor, between a boutique specialist and a larger firm, and what each means for how your process will run.
Your objectives, timeline, and personal priorities, and how those shape the preparation, process design, deal structure, and the advisor who will execute it.
How your business will be assessed, not just by a buyer, but by the advisors too, and what that means for your recommendation.
$490 + GST · No ongoing retainer required
"We are paid by the advisor you ultimately engage, a uniform referral fee. Our only interest is in the quality of the match."
You will receive a booking confirmation with a short pre-call brief, a few questions to help us understand your situation before we speak. No lengthy forms. Five minutes at most.
90–120 minutes. We cover the process, the fee structures, the selection criteria, your situation, and your objectives. You leave knowing what you didn't know before. A recommendation follows.
Based on the call, we identify the advisors best matched to your transaction and your objectives. Within a few days you receive the recommendation with our rationale for each.
A warm formal introduction by video call or in person. We remain available through the back-and-forth that follows until you have chosen your advisor and are ready to begin.
Most business owners make the most significant financial decision of their life with less information than they deserve. The advisory call exists to change that.
Start the Conversation →Confidential · Paid advisory engagement · No ongoing obligation