Maximizing value is a primary goal for Davis Householder, Managing Director of MycoManagement, when working with financial advisory practices to navigate acquisitions, succession planning, practice transitions, and exits. Having sourced, negotiated, and closed over 27 acquisitions in just 10 years, representing over $3.5 AUM, Householder knows that a key part of achieving that goal is helping his clients understand that the headline price, derived from the initial valuation, is often the wrong component to focus on.
“Headline price matters, but the only scenario where it should be the sole focus is an all-cash deal when the seller is assuming little to no ongoing risk,” he says. “Simply put, there are far more moving parts in these transactions than a single dollar figure.”
Householder is a financial advisory practice acquisition and succession planning specialist with more than a decade of experience working inside the financial advisory industry. He works with both buyers and sellers, focusing on the practical mechanics of transactions, including operational readiness, deal structure, transition risk, and continuity rather than theoretical models or high-volume dealmaking. Currently, Householder works directly with advisors and their teams to help them prepare their firms for an acquisition or sale, assess whether a transaction makes sense, and execute transitions in a way that preserves long-term value and client continuity.
“What tends to confuse the advisors buying or selling books of business is that these transactions don’t function like the sale of a physical asset,” explains Householder. “You can’t hand over the keys and walk away. The value of the business is largely determined by what happens after the close.”
Shifting the conversation from price to risk in financial advisory practice acquisitions
Helping clients manage the mechanics of transactions involves explaining the role risk plays in acquisitions and how it’s reflected in the deal structure. Because post-close performance matters so much, most financial advisory practice acquisitions are structured with a down payment followed by monthly, quarterly, or annual installments that ideally pay off the balance. However, sellers can be blindsided when the remaining installments suddenly decrease due to an adjustment or other factors.
Householder says these structures aren’t accidental. They exist specifically to account for uncertainty around client transitions, asset retention, and ongoing performance, with provisions that divide the risk between buyer and seller.
“Once you get to the deal structure, headline price becomes less meaningful on its own,” Householder says. “As a general rule, the valuation multiple decreases as buy-side risk increases. Conversely, sellers who assume more risk will get much higher multiples, which can meaningfully increase the total purchase price. Valuations typically render a range rather than a set dollar figure. When sellers see how deal structure affects their multiple and the net proceeds, the conversation naturally shifts from headline price to risk allocation.”
Understanding and balancing transactional risk in advisory practice acquisitions
The risk factors considered most important in advisory practice acquisitions vary based on perspective. From the buyer’s perspective, key person risk is often the first thing on their mind.
“The buyer relies on the primary advisor, advisor team, or leadership at the practice to maintain client relationships and successfully transition those relationships to the buyer or their successor advisors,” Householder explains. “In practical terms, the buyer places significant trust in the seller’s ability to follow through because asset retention and client continuity are the most important drivers of value.”
From the seller’s side, the risk profile is much simpler. Their core concern is whether the buyer will ultimately pay what they’ve agreed to pay. Although post-close anxiety is common for a lot of sellers, they actually retain significant leverage over the outcome of the deal.
To balance these competing risks, deal structures often include purchase price adjustments. Commonly known as a “clawback,” the adjustment reduces the final purchase price if performance measures such as retention rate don’t meet the numbers specified in the contract.
Staying engaged during all phases of advisory practice acquisitions
Householder strongly believes that both buyers and sellers should commit to being directly involved in shaping the deal structure. Firsthand engagement, he explains, allows all parties to clearly understand how the deal structure will affect the total purchase price beyond the close.
“In my experience, one of the most common failure points is delegating the structure entirely to third parties and only engaging once the numbers feel final,” Householder says. “At that stage, it’s harder to meaningfully change outcomes. Being involved early allows both sides to understand how value is actually created or lost within the structure.”
Even when heavily involved, financial advisor teams can easily get confused by the legalese used in contracts. To provide clarity, Householder steps in to decode the provisions into easy-to-understand relationships or other formats that resonate with the advisors.
“When you strip away the legal formality, most structures boil down to a handful of variables interacting over time,” Householder explains. “Once the structure is reduced to its core mechanics, it becomes much easier to evaluate. Clarity improves after the advisor has a straightforward model they can use to test different scenarios. Being able to plug in hypothetical outcomes and see how they affect total value also helps to surface issues, tradeoffs, and risks much earlier in the process in a more interactive and less conceptual way.”
The acquisition market has become much more active in recent years, pushing prices higher and creating more competition. In the new landscape, Householder warns that the distinction between headline price and deal structure is more important than ever. While small practices may be able to count on settling close to the headline price, larger and more complex practices will need to carefully consider the deal structure.
“As complexity increases, more of the economic reality shifts to how the transaction is financed, how risks are allocated, and how performance is measured over time,” Householder says. “Without understanding those mechanics, it’s easy to overestimate what a headline price actually represents. For example, a $5 million valuation stated in the purchase agreement does not, on its own, define the seller’s economic outcome as it’s actually driven by how the deal structure unfolds over time and the underlying mechanics.”








