Adam Coffey

The Private Equity Playbook

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
Private equity firms are on the rise and rapidly changing the game. Today more than 5,500 P.E. firms own tens of thousands of companies, so it is essential for CEOs and senior management executives to understand exactly how private equity firms operate. This invaluable resource can help you devise a winning P.E. game plan for your own company that offers you greater freedom and financial success.

CEO Adam Coffey has almost twenty years of experience building businesses for

private equity companies. In this authoritative yet approachable handbook, he covers:

· The history and landscape of private equity

· Ground rules for finding the right firm to partner with

· Techniques for navigating the new governance

· Strategies for continued growth in the private equity space

· And more.

The Private Equity Playbook provides all the coaching you'll need to compete and win on this new playing field.
This book is currently unavailable
119 printed pages
Have you already read it? How did you like it?
👍👎

Quotes

  • ladidadi81has quoted6 years ago
    are several key questions to ask:
    What is the model for investment? The private equity firm should be able to spell out what specifically they are going to do over a three- to seven-year period to increase the value of the company and when they hope to sell it. Whenever this liquidity event takes place, every three to seven years, there will be a payday.
    What is the equity structure? Explain to me what I get at your different levels of return that you’ve modeled.
    Do you have a preferred yield on equity investments?
    Do you charge management fees that are paid by the company?
    Ask for specific examples at different return levels. “Show me your base case, upside case, and downside case.” All firms typically model three cases: the base case, a scenario if there is a home run, and a scenario for if something goes wrong.
  • ladidadi81has quoted6 years ago
    with Class A shares valued at $1,000 a share, so in this case, there would be 10,000 shares of Class A stock issued
  • ladidadi81has quoted6 years ago
    it costs $10 million of equity to buy a company, then there will be Class A shares issued that equal $10 million—every company I have seen starts out

On the bookshelves

  • Jonas Blaabjerg Larsen
    Jonas
    • 3
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)