An exit strategy is the planned mechanism by which a business owner or investor converts their ownership stake into cash or other liquid value. It answers the question that sits beneath every investment: how does the money come back?
Common exit strategies in American business practice include acquisition (another company buys the business), initial public offering or IPO (the company sells shares on a public stock exchange), franchise expansion (the business model is licensed to independent operators), management buyout (existing managers purchase the owner’s stake), and long-term dividend payout (the business distributes profits to owners over time without a liquidation event).
Each exit type implies a different trajectory. Acquisition-oriented businesses optimize for features that make them attractive purchase targets — customer base, intellectual property, market position, or technology. IPO-oriented businesses optimize for growth metrics that satisfy public market expectations. Franchise-oriented businesses optimize for replicability — standard operating procedures, brand consistency, and transferable systems. Dividend-oriented businesses optimize for steady profitability rather than growth.
Investors require an exit strategy because their return depends on it. A venture capital fund has a fixed lifespan (typically ten years) and must return capital to its own investors within that window. An angel investor may be more flexible but still needs a credible path to liquidity. The exit strategy shapes every prior decision — corporate structure (C-Corps accommodate most exit types), financial projections (growth curves must match the exit timeline), and operations (scalability is irrelevant for a dividend play but essential for acquisition or franchise).
The requirement to specify an exit strategy at inception encodes a distinctive feature of American business: the assumption that a business is an asset to be built and liquidated rather than an ongoing enterprise embedded in a community. Many businesses — family restaurants, local shops, professional practices — operate without an exit strategy in this formal sense, sustained by ongoing relationships rather than by the prospect of a terminal transaction.
Related terms
- Corporate structure — the legal form must accommodate the chosen exit
- Franchise — one specific exit and growth strategy
- Financial projections — must model the timeline and metrics relevant to the exit
- Standard operating procedures — replicability is required for franchise and acquisition exits
- Use of funds — investor capital allocation is shaped by the exit timeline