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⇱ The 22 Factors That Shape Software Exit Outcomes | Software Equity Group | Software Equity Group


The buyer-aligned framework

The 22 Factors That Shape Software Exit Outcomes

Buyer interest follows strong performance. But once attention turns into engagement, the evaluation changes fast. Metrics that felt secondary become central. Qualitative elements you rarely think about start influencing valuation, deal structure, and timing. This guide explains exactly what buyers are looking at, and why outcomes diverge even among companies that look similar on the surface.

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Discover what buyers prioritize.

Each factor is presented with its definition, benchmark ranges, why it matters to buyers, how it influences valuation multiples, and what improvement looks like in practice.

Know what buyers are evaluating.

Each factor is presented with its definition, benchmark ranges, why it matters to buyers, how it influences valuation multiples, and what improvement looks like in practice.

Find out where you stand before they do.

Some factors act as readiness thresholds. Others shape deal structure and competitive tension. Understanding which ones apply to your business, and where you sit on the spectrum, changes how you prepare.

Then put your numbers to the test.

After reading the guide, use the SEG SaaS Scorecardβ„’ to see exactly where your business lands across all 22 factors, and where buyers are most likely to push back.

What's inside the guide

The 22 Factors are split across two dimensions, qualitative and quantitative, because buyers evaluate both. Strong financials without structural alignment invite skepticism. Strong positioning without supporting metrics limits credibility. The guide covers both and shows you how they interact.

These are the questions active buyers ask themselves about every company they evaluate.

Do you know how yours would answer them?

QUALITATIVE FACTORS

  • Product & Position
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    Can we immediately see why customers rely on this, or will we need to explain it to our investment committee?
  • Delivery Model
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    Will serving more customers require proportionally more cost and effort, or does this scale cleanly?
  • Pricing Model
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    How confident can we be about what this revenue will look like 12 months from now?
  • Competitive Positioning
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    Is this company winning consistently, or is it exposed to a better-funded competitor taking share?
  • Technology
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    How much engineering investment will we need to make before this platform is where it needs to be?
  • Management Team
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    Does this business run because the founder is brilliant, or because the team is built to scale without them?
  • Market Growth
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    Is demand working in this company's favor, or does every dollar of growth require fighting for it?
  • Total Addressable Market
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    Is there enough room to grow from here, and can this company credibly access it?
  • Assessment of Trends
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    Is this business getting stronger in the ways that matter, or are the best numbers already in the rearview?

QUANTITATIVE FACTORS

  • Gross Revenue Retention
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    Is this revenue durable, or will it decay after close?
  • ARR Growth
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    Is this business growing fast enough to justify the multiple we'd need to pay?
  • EBITDA Margin
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    Is this business generating real profit, or is growth masking an efficiency problem?
  • Rule of 40
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    Is this business balancing growth and profitability well enough to warrant a premium?
  • Gross Margin
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    How much of each dollar of revenue actually flows through to fund growth and returns?
  • Revenue per Employee
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    Can this business scale without just adding headcount?
  • LTV:CAC
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    Does the economics of winning a customer actually make sense over time?
  • Payback Period
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    How long does it take to recover what was spent to acquire each customer?
  • Customer Concentration (Top 10)
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    If one or two customers left after close, would this business still work?
  • Total ARR
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    Is this business at a scale where we can underwrite a real return?
  • Net Revenue Retention
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    Are existing customers growing their spend, or do we need to keep selling just to stay flat?
  • Revenue Growth
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    Is the overall trajectory of this business moving in a direction we can build a thesis around?
  • Logo Retention
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    Are customers staying, or is churn being masked by new sales volume?

Founders who understand these dynamics early are better positioned.

The strongest outcomes are rarely driven by a single factor. They’re shaped by how prepared a business is when buyer attention increases, and assumptions begin to be tested. This guide helps you get there first.

Frequently Asked Questions

What factors do buyers look at when valuing a software, SaaS, or AI company?

Buyers evaluate software, SaaS, and AI companies across 22 factors that fall into two categories: quantitative and qualitative. Quantitative factors include metrics like Gross Revenue Retention, ARR Growth, EBITDA Margin, Rule of 40, Net Revenue Retention, and Customer Concentration. Qualitative factors include Product and Position, Pricing Model, Delivery Model, Competitive Positioning, Technology, Management Team, Market Growth, Total Addressable Market, and Assessment of Trends. No single factor determines the outcome. Buyers assess how these factors interact and what they collectively signal about the business's durability, scalability, and risk profile.

How do buyers decide what a software company is worth?

Software company valuations are typically expressed as a multiple of ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue) or TTM (Trailing Twelve Months) revenue. The multiple a buyer is willing to pay is shaped by how the business performs across key financial and operational factors. Companies with high gross revenue retention, strong ARR growth, efficient unit economics, and clear competitive positioning command higher multiples. Companies with customer concentration risk, weak retention, or unclear AI positioning tend to trade at discounts. In 2025, the average EV/TTM revenue multiple for SaaS M&A transactions was 6.9x, with top-tier assets transacting well above that level.

What is the difference between quantitative and qualitative factors in a software valuation?

Quantitative factors are measurable financial and operational metrics, including revenue retention, growth rate, margins, and unit economics. They validate whether the business performs as well as its story suggests. Qualitative factors describe how the business is built and positioned, covering things like product differentiation, pricing model, delivery model, and management team depth. Both matter. Strong financials without structural alignment invite skepticism. Strong positioning without supporting metrics limits credibility. The strongest outcomes come when both sets of factors reinforce each other.

Why do buyers care so much about Gross Revenue Retention?

Gross Revenue Retention (GRR) measures how much of your existing revenue base stays intact before any expansion or upsell. It is one of the clearest signals of revenue durability. A buyer acquiring your business is essentially betting that the revenue you have built will still be there after close, and GRR tells them how confident they can be in that assumption. GRR above 95% is considered excellent. Below 85% raises serious concerns about churn risk and the stability of the revenue base they are underwriting.

What is the Rule of 40 and why does it matter in a sale process?

The Rule of 40 combines a company's revenue growth rate and EBITDA margin. The sum should equal or exceed 40% for a healthy SaaS business. It is used by buyers as a single efficiency benchmark that balances growth against profitability. A company growing 30% with 15% EBITDA margins scores 45, which is above the threshold. A company growing 15% with negative 10% EBITDA margins scores 5, which is well below it. In 2025, public SaaS companies that cleared the Rule of 40 threshold consistently commanded higher revenue multiples than those that did not. Buyers use it to quickly assess whether a company is efficiently converting growth into value.

How do I know if my SaaS company is ready for a sale process?

Readiness is less about hitting a specific revenue threshold and more about how your business holds up when someone starts asking hard questions. The clearest signals of readiness are gross revenue retention above 90%, ARR growth that is stable or accelerating, low customer concentration, a management team that can operate without the founder at the center of every decision, and a clear and defensible answer to where AI fits in your product and strategy. Companies that score strongly across most of the 22 factors tend to generate competitive processes with multiple buyers, which is what creates valuation leverage.

Which factors have the biggest impact on SaaS valuation multiples?

Based on SEG's transaction data, the factors with the most consistent impact on valuation multiples are Gross Revenue Retention, ARR Growth, Net Revenue Retention, and Rule of 40. These are the first metrics buyers look at and the ones that most directly shape how aggressively they will compete for a deal. Qualitatively, Product and Position and Competitive Positioning have an outsized influence. Companies with clear, differentiated positioning move through diligence faster and face less valuation pressure than those that require extensive explanation. Assessment of Trends also matters significantly. Improving metrics from a lower base often support better outcomes than flat metrics from a higher one.

What can I do to improve my SaaS company's valuation before going to market?

The highest-leverage improvements are typically in the factors buyers weight most heavily. Reducing customer concentration, improving gross revenue retention, tightening your AI narrative, and building management depth below the founder level tend to have the most direct impact on both valuation and deal structure. Pricing model transitions from non-recurring to contracted recurring can also materially improve how revenue is underwritten. The key is identifying which specific factors are weakest for your business and addressing them with enough lead time that the improvement shows up in your metrics, not just your story. Early preparation almost always produces better outcomes than last-minute positioning.

How does SEG use the 22 factors in a real M&A process?

SEG uses the 22 factors framework as the foundation for every strategic assessment and transaction process. It helps identify where a company's strengths are most compelling to buyers, where vulnerabilities need to be addressed or contextualized before going to market, and how to position the business to generate competitive tension among multiple buyers. The framework is also used to benchmark each company against SEG's transaction history, giving founders a realistic, data-grounded view of likely outcomes rather than theoretical ranges. Companies that understand and have addressed their weakest factors before going to market consistently achieve better outcomes than those that surface issues during diligence.

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The 22 Factors Guide

This guide equips you with insights into the 22 factors influencing your company’s valuation. Download your copy now.