From a control point of view, and maybe a salary or job viewpoint, this isn't too good.
But enlighten me how a 40% odd share distribution of a now PE-owned and operated company would be a bad thing? Surely they're going to try and increase the company's value for their own self interest?
PE and Founder interests are not as aligned as many would assume at face value.
Founders often care about doing good by their customers, vendors, employees... while the average PE firm will happily screw everyone over the moment there's a monetary incentive to do so.
If a founder has the same time horizon for an exit as the PE/VC and if the founder is emotionally detached from the business/product/customers/employees, then all incentives are aligned. But that's usually not the case which is why you often see CEO's ousted and replaced by a "professional CEO" to "take the company to the next level". In reality founder-CEOs are ousted most often because their passion for the business gets in the way of maximizing profit.
> In reality founder-CEOs are ousted most often because their passion for the business gets in the way of maximizing profit.
In this scenario then, it might be a kick to the ego, but if the original founder retained a large minority stake in the company, this profit-driven approach should result in an increased share price (over time) right?
But enlighten me how a 40% odd share distribution of a now PE-owned and operated company would be a bad thing? Surely they're going to try and increase the company's value for their own self interest?