Selling Your Business in the Next Year: Legal Prep to Start Now with M&A Attorney
If you plan to sell your professional service firm within the next 12 months, the sale will feel less like a sprint if you start the legal prep now. Buyers don’t just buy revenue, they buy certainty: clear ownership, enforceable contracts, and manageable risk.
This post is Part 1 of a 3-part series for owners planning a sale in the following year. The promise is simple: reduce deal friction, protect purchase price, and shorten due diligence by starting legal work early. M&A is short for “mergers and acquisitions,” which is the process of selling a company (or buying one) through a negotiated deal.
Working early with a mergers and acquisitions attorney helps you spot the issues that buyers and their counsel will flag later, when fixes are slower and costlier.
Series preview
Part 1 (this post): legal cleanup and diligence prep
Part 2: deal terms and negotiations
Part 3: closing, transition, and post-close risk
This is general information, not legal advice. If you’re planning to sell in the next year, book a discovery call or contact Company Counsel to map out a practical plan.

Start with a sell-ready legal checkup so buyers do not find surprises
A buyer’s diligence process is like a home inspection, except the inspector is a team, and the “house” is your corporate history, contracts, and compliance. When your records are clean, buyers move faster, ask fewer questions, and have fewer reasons to discount the price.
If you can, start 9 to 12 months before you plan to go to market. If you’re closer than that, even 90 days of focused legal prep can remove major obstacles. The goal is to tell a clear story of who owns what, what the company has promised to clients and vendors, and the risks (and how they’re handled).
Confirm ownership, entity records, and authority to sell
Ownership confusion is one of the fastest ways to slow a deal. A buyer wants proof that the seller has the legal power to sign and deliver what’s being sold.
For most professional service firms, buyers often ask for:
- Formation documents (articles or certificate of formation)
- Bylaws or an operating agreement
- Stock ledger or membership ledger, plus past issuances and transfers
- A current cap table (even if simple)
- Board, member, or shareholder consents for significant actions
- Signed meeting minutes (or written consents)
- Officer authority documents, bank resolutions, and signing authority
- Equity grants, vesting terms, and repurchase rights
- Buy-sell terms, rights of first refusal, or any redemption obligations
Common problems that show up late:
Undocumented owner loans
, “side” equity promises to early helpers, old partners still listed on paper, and unclear decision rights (for example, a missing consent requirement in the operating agreement). These issues don’t always kill a deal, but they can force a buyer to pause and push risk back on you.
AnM&A attorney can often fill gaps before a buyer asks by papering missing consents, correcting ledgers, addressing past issuances, and documenting related-party items in a way that holds up under scrutiny.
Get your contracts into a buyer-friendly shape
Buyers don’t only look at revenue; they look at the agreements that produce it. If your firm runs on “we’ve always done it this way” contracting, diligence becomes slower and more expensive.
Expect requests for:
- Customer master service agreements (MSAs) and statements of work (SOWs)
- Renewals, amendments, and change orders
- Vendor and subcontractor agreements
- Leases (office, equipment, vehicles)
- Loan documents, guarantees, and security agreements
- IP licenses (inbound and outbound)
- Referral, affiliate, and partnership agreements
- Independent contractor agreements
Red flags that commonly slow deals:
Non-assignable contracts, change-of-control clauses, expired terms still being performed, auto-renewal traps, most-favored-nation pricing, exclusivity, and vague scope or deliverables that cause client disputes later.
One practical step that pays off quickly is building a simple contract list. Keep it clean and consistent:
contract name
parties, effective date, term, renewal date, termination rights, assignment language, and whether any third-party consent is required for a sale.
Also, if key business relationships remain informal, it helps to understand the risks of relying on verbal agreements. Seehttps://www.companycounsel.law/are-handshake-deals-valid for a plain-language overview of when handshake arrangements can create problems.
Build a due diligence file that speeds up the deal
Due diligence is a stress test. Buyers assume missing documents mean hidden risk, even when nothing is wrong. A tidy, organized file reduces last-minute requests and helps you keep control of the timeline.
Think of it as preparing for an open-book exam. You want the answers easy to find, consistent, and backed by documents.
Organize a clean data room with the documents buyers ask for first
You don’t need a perfect data room on day one. You need a structure that makes sense, then you add documents as you go.
Most buyers start with these categories:
- Corporate records
- Financial statements and tax returns (coordinate with your CPA)
- Material contracts
- HR files and payroll summaries
- Insurance policies and claims history
- Compliance permits and licenses (as applicable)
- Litigation history and demand letters
- Privacy and security policies (especially if you handle client data)
- Real estate and leases
- Key assets (equipment lists, software subscriptions, domains)
Small details matter. Use clear naming conventions (for example, “ClientName MSA 2023-06-01 (Signed).pdf”), avoid multiple versions floating around, and keep one source of truth.
A helpful add-on is a one-page business overview that matches the documents. If the overview says your top client is on a three-year term, but the data room shows a month-to-month agreement, the buyer will assume the worst.
Fix the issues that trigger price cuts and special escrow holds
In professional service firms, the most expensive diligence findings are often fundamental operational legal issues. Buyers price them in through holdbacks, special escrows, narrower indemnity limits, longer survival periods, and greater pressure on your reps and warranties. In more challenging cases, they walk.
Issues that often show up:
- Missing written client agreements (or missing signatures)
- Shaky contractor classifications (1099 vs W-2)
- Unpaid sales tax or local taxes (where applicable)
- Weak timekeeping or messy revenue recognition support
- Undocumented related-party deals (owner-owned entities, family hires)
- IP owned by contractors, not the company
- Non-compliant marketing claims (results claims, endorsements, industry rules)
- Gaps in required notices or policies
The fix is rarely “do everything.” The more innovative approach is triage: what affects value and closing risk in your deal type, industry, and state footprint.
A mergers and acquisitions attorney can help sort what’s urgent, what can be disclosed and managed, and what should be cleaned up before you go to market.
Protect your people, your IP, and your risk profile before you go to market
Buyers want continuity. In a service business, that usually means clients stay, key staff stay, and the work product belongs to the company. Legal prep supports that story, without announcing a sale before you’re ready.
Lock down IP and confidentiality so the buyer knows what they are buying
Even service companies have meaningful intellectual property. It may not be a patent, but it’s still valuable: your brand name, logo, website content, proposals, templates, training materials, playbooks, software scripts, and domain names.
Before the buyer talks, get serious:
Confirm IP assignments
Check third-party license terms for employees and contractors, verify domain ownership, and tighten confidentiality practices for sensitive files and client data.
You’ll also want a clean NDA process for early conversations with potential buyers. Share enough to confirm interest, but limit what you provide until you know the buyer is serious and qualified.
For a deeper look at why intangible assets matter in a sale, see https://www.companycounsel.law/safeguarding-your-intangible-assets.
An M&A attorney can review NDAs, IP assignments, and licensing risks early, so diligence doesn’t turn into a surprise debate about who owns your work product.
Reduce employment and benefits risk that buyers price in
People risk shows up in almost every acquisition, and it’s one area where minor fixes can change how a buyer views the business.
Focus on the basics:
Offer letters, enforceable non-solicit and non-compete terms (state-specific), bonus plans, commission terms, handbook essentials, harassment training records, wage and hour compliance, contractor vs employee review, and benefits plan documents.
Also, plan for retention and continuity. Buyers worry about a revenue drop when the owner steps back. Consider stay bonuses for key staff, transition agreements for the seller’s post-close role, and a clear leadership plan that doesn’t depend on you being available every hour.
Clean HR files also reduce reps and warranties exposure, since you can state facts with confidence, backed by consistent records.
If you want to discuss your timeline and the likely diligence pressure points for your firm, you can start by reviewing the background of someone who handles these matters at
https://www.companycounsel.law/jon-thielen.
Conclusion
Selling within the next year becomes easier when your legal foundation is in place. Start with a sell-ready checkup, build an easy-to-review diligence file, then clean up the people, IP, and risk items that buyers price in.
Part 2 of this series will cover the terms that shape your outcome, including the LOI, purchase price structure, earnouts, and negotiation tactics that protect value. Part 3 will cover closing steps, third-party consents, transition planning, and post-close protection.
If you’re selling in the next 12 months, book a discovery call or contact Company Counsel to map out a practical 90-day legal prep plan with a mergers and acquisitions attorney.








