Deal or No Deal: Unscripted and Unhinged Drama
Mergers and acquisitions are often presented as crisp, linear processes that are carefully managed from first meeting to closing with precision, discipline, and a spreadsheet that suggests everything will happen exactly when it’s supposed to.
In reality, they’re more like buying a beautifully restored vintage sports car. It looks flawless, sounds amazing, and you’re already imagining yourself driving it home. Then the mechanic opens the hood and discovers wiring held together by hope, mismatched parts, and leaks everyone insists are “normal.”
At some point, every deal reaches a fork in the road:
- We’ve come this far, let’s keep going.
- Or…how did we get here, and why are we still doing this?
That’s M&A in its purest form.
The Opening Move: Optimism Meets Selective Memory
Every deal begins with enthusiasm.
Buyers see “strategic expansion.”
Sellers see “well-earned liquidity.”
Advisors see a long road ahead and a dangerous amount of caffeine.
At first, everything looks perfect:
- Valuations are solid
- Synergies are abundant
- Everyone is aligned
At this stage, everything looks clean. Valuations are solid. Synergies are abundant. Everyone is aligned…at least in the way people are “aligned” at weddings before anyone checks the seating chart.
Minor realities tend to get overlooked:
- Sellers aren’t always sure they actually want to sell
- Buyers are juggling several “top priority” deals at once
- And most alignment is built on assumptions nobody has stress-tested
This is not a flaw in the process. It’s tradition.
The Narrative: Turning Reality Into a PowerPoint
As the process evolves, the focus shifts to storytelling:
What is this business worth and how convincingly can we sell the story?
Companies built over decades suddenly have to compress 20 years of chaos, improvisation, and “temporary fixes” into 25 polished slides.
This is where investment bankers become part storyteller, part magician.
The process is a little like staging a house for sale:
- The lights get brighter
- The clutter disappears
- And nobody mentions the weird smell in the basement unless directly asked
By the end of the presentation, buyers are ideally thinking:
This is exactly what we’ve been looking for.
While sellers are thinking:
That was the nicest anyone has ever described this company.
Due Diligence: Where Optimism Goes to Get Questioned
If the early stages are about potential, diligence is about proof. This is where things get…personal.
This is the phase where buyers ask:
- For more data
- Then more data about the data
- Then clarification on the data explaining the data
Suddenly:
- “Strong customer relationships” become “concentration risk”
- Margin fluctuations become “volatility trends”
- And one unusual contract becomes a full-page discussion topic
Entire data rooms are built. Then expanded. Then reorganized because someone labeled a folder: Final_v7_ReallyFinal_THIS_ONE
At some point, you’ll spend an hour explaining a contract from 2017 to someone who discovered it yesterday and now considers it critically important.
For sellers, diligence starts feeling less like a transaction process and more like a forensic review of every business decision they’ve made since the Obama administration.
The Twist: Sometimes Reality Shows Up Uninvited
Almost every deal has a moment where the tone changes.
Not necessarily because anyone did something wrong. More often because reality enters the room.
Sometimes:
- The company misses a quarter
- A customer delays spending
- Financing markets tighten
- Or the buyer’s CEO gets replaced and suddenly all acquisitions are “under review”
Which is corporate language for:
Nobody knows what’s happening right now.
The buyer gets quieter. Meetings get rescheduled. Everyone starts using phrases like:
- “We’re taking a closer look”
- “We just need a little more time”
- Let’s revisit this next week”
Sometimes the process pauses. Sometimes structures evolve. Sometimes everyone pretends the delay was strategic all along.
And sometimes…the whole thing just dies quietly on a Tuesday afternoon.
The Endgame: Where Everyone Is Tired but No One Can Quit
By the final stretch, everyone is exhausted.
Unfortunately, this is also when things become incredibly detailed.
Legal documents multiply like rabbits.
Working capital becomes a philosophical debate.
A comma in the purchase agreement suddenly matters deeply to everyone involved.
At this point:
- Management is still running the business
- Buyers are still asking questions
- Advisors are still saying “we’re almost there” with increasingly less conviction
Small issues become enormous:
- A minor accounting adjustment becomes a three-day negotiation
- Employment agreements become personality assessments
- And email responses become noticeably shorter and more aggressive
These are the moments where everyone briefly wonders if opening a beach bar would have been a better career choice.
Closing: The Most Anti-Climactic Finish Line in Business
Then somehow it closes.
Funds move. Documents are signed. Press releases appear featuring phrases like:
- “Strategic partnership”
- “Exciting next chapter”
- “Strong cultural alignment”
None of which mention:
- The 11 p.m. conference calls
- The near walk-aways
- Or the existential crisis everyone had somewhere around week 14
Externally, it looks polished.
Internally, everyone is mostly thinking:
That’s it? After all that?
The Takeaway: This Is Somehow Considered Normal
No two deals follow the same path.
Some are smooth.
Most are messy.
All are educational in ways nobody asked for.
The winners in M&A aren’t the people who avoid chaos. They’re the people who learn how to function inside it:
- Keeping stakeholders aligned
- Adapting when reality shows up uninvited
- And calmly saying, “This is normal,” while internally reconsidering their career choices
Because M&A isn’t a straight line.
It’s a chaotic mix of strategy, timing, personalities, caffeine, legal fees, spreadsheets, and occasional emotional instability.
And somehow, despite everything, the deal still gets done.