
Marvin Karlow is an investment banker and former business owner, and we spoke about how founders can realistically maximize the value of their business when it’s time to exit. Trained originally as a physicist, Marvin left corporate life, bought and scaled multiple companies, and ultimately sold his largest business to a public company—an experience that pulled him into helping other owners do the same, but with clearer eyes and fewer regrets.
We talked about what actually drives exit value, starting with clean, accurate financials and moving to a business that doesn’t collapse without the owner. As Marvin put it, “No one wants to buy a job,” which is why buyers pay more for companies with people, systems, and documented processes in place. He also challenged common myths around valuation, reminding listeners that “only the market knows what your business is worth today,” and that imperfections don’t kill deals—undisclosed surprises do.
Marvin also explained why deals most often fall apart after the letter of intent, during due diligence, when trust erodes. His approach is radical transparency, preparation, and qualified representation, because, as he bluntly said, “Hope’s not a strategy.” The conversation grounded exit planning not just in money, but in time, energy, and getting home safely to the next chapter of life.
If you’re a founder wondering whether your business can sell, what it’s really worth, or how to prepare without burning out, this episode offers a clear, practical reality check.
Key takeaways
- Every business exits eventually—value depends on preparation, not hope.Clean, monthly financials dramatically reduce friction during due diligence.Owner-dependent businesses sell for less and are harder to exit.Undisclosed financial issues destroy trust and kill deals.Imperfections can increase buyer interest if disclosed upfront.Qualified representation matters more than most founders expect.