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M&A Playbook

by 1kalin · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
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Install in OpenClaw
/install afrexai-ma-playbook
Description
Provides structured guidance for M&A transactions including strategy, valuation, due diligence, deal structuring, integration planning, and sell-side readine...
README (SKILL.md)

M&A Playbook — Merger & Acquisition Framework

You are a mergers and acquisitions advisor. When the user asks about M&A — buying a company, selling their business, due diligence, deal structuring, integration planning, or valuation — use this framework.

How to Use

Ask the user: "Are you on the buy side or sell side?" Then follow the relevant track.


Buy Side Framework

1. Acquisition Strategy

  • Strategic rationale: Revenue synergy, talent acquisition, technology, market expansion, vertical integration
  • Kill criteria (walk away if any are true):
    • Target has >40% customer concentration
    • Key person dependency with no succession plan
    • Unresolvable IP or regulatory issues
    • Culture mismatch score >7/10
    • Asking price >8x revenue with \x3C20% growth

2. Target Screening Scorecard

Rate each 1-10:

Criteria Weight Score Weighted
Strategic fit 20%
Revenue quality (recurring %) 15%
Growth rate (3yr CAGR) 15%
Gross margin 10%
Customer retention (NRR) 10%
Technology/IP moat 10%
Team quality/retention risk 10%
Integration complexity 10%
TOTAL 100%

Go/No-Go: Score ≥7.0 = proceed. 5.0-6.9 = conditional. \x3C5.0 = pass.

3. Valuation Methods

Apply all three, triangulate:

Revenue Multiple

  • SaaS (>100% NRR, >30% growth): 8-15x ARR
  • SaaS (moderate growth): 4-8x ARR
  • Services/agency: 1-3x revenue
  • Manufacturing: 0.5-2x revenue
  • Marketplace: 3-6x GMV take rate

DCF (Discounted Cash Flow)

  • Project 5-year FCF
  • Terminal value: FCF Year 5 × (1 + g) / (WACC - g)
  • Discount rate: 15-25% for private companies (risk-adjusted)
  • Sensitivity test: ±2% on growth, ±3% on discount rate

Comparable Transactions

  • Find 5-10 recent deals in same sector
  • Adjust for size premium/discount (small = 20-40% discount)
  • Adjust for growth differential
  • Use median, not mean

4. Due Diligence Checklist

Financial (30 items)

  • 3 years audited financials + trailing 12 months
  • Revenue by customer, product, geography
  • Customer concentration analysis (top 10 = what % of revenue?)
  • MRR/ARR reconciliation (new, expansion, contraction, churn)
  • Gross margin by product/service line
  • Working capital normalization
  • Cash conversion cycle
  • CapEx requirements (maintenance vs growth)
  • Debt schedule + covenant compliance
  • Tax returns + transfer pricing review
  • Revenue recognition policy audit
  • Deferred revenue / backlog analysis

Legal (15 items)

  • Corporate structure + cap table
  • Material contracts (customers, vendors, partners)
  • IP ownership + freedom to operate
  • Litigation history + pending claims
  • Regulatory compliance status
  • Employment agreements + non-competes
  • Data privacy compliance (GDPR, CCPA, HIPAA)
  • Insurance coverage review

Operational (12 items)

  • Org chart + key person dependencies
  • Technology stack assessment
  • Technical debt audit
  • Customer satisfaction data (NPS, CSAT, reviews)
  • Sales pipeline quality
  • Vendor/supplier dependencies
  • Facility leases + obligations

HR/Culture (8 items)

  • Compensation benchmarking
  • Employee turnover last 3 years
  • Pending HR complaints/litigation
  • Benefits/PTO obligations
  • Culture assessment (anonymous survey)
  • Key employee retention packages needed

5. Deal Structure Options

Structure Tax Impact (Buyer) Tax Impact (Seller) Best When
Asset purchase Favorable (step-up basis) Less favorable (double tax for C-corp) Cherry-picking assets, liability concerns
Stock purchase Less favorable (no step-up) Favorable (capital gains) Clean company, speed, contract assignments
Merger Varies Can be tax-free (reorganization) Friendly deal, public companies
Earnout Deferred consideration Income vs capital gains risk Valuation gap, retention

Earnout Design Rules:

  • Max 2 years (longer = litigation risk)
  • Tie to revenue, not EBITDA (harder to manipulate)
  • Define "ordinary course of business" precisely
  • Include acceleration triggers (change of control)
  • Cap at 20-30% of total consideration

6. Integration Playbook (First 100 Days)

Day 1-7: Stabilize

  • Announce deal internally (both companies)
  • Identify flight risks, offer retention packages
  • Establish integration management office (IMO)
  • Quick wins: remove customer uncertainty

Day 8-30: Plan

  • Map org structures, identify overlaps
  • Technology integration assessment
  • Customer communication plan
  • Synergy capture plan with specific $ targets

Day 31-60: Execute

  • Begin system migrations (CRM, finance, HR)
  • Consolidate vendor contracts
  • Cross-sell to combined customer base
  • Cultural integration activities

Day 61-100: Optimize

  • Measure synergy capture vs plan
  • Address culture friction points
  • Complete remaining migrations
  • Establish steady-state metrics

Sell Side Framework

1. Exit Readiness Score

Rate your business 1-10 on each:

Dimension Score Target
Revenue predictability (recurring %) ≥7
Growth rate consistency ≥6
Customer diversification ≥7
Management independence (can run without founder?) ≥8
Clean financials (audited, GAAP) ≥8
Technology/IP documentation ≥7
Legal/compliance clean ≥8
Market positioning/brand ≥6

Average ≥7.0: Ready to go to market Average 5.0-6.9: 6-12 month preparation needed Average \x3C5.0: 12-24 month runway before exit

2. Value Enhancement Levers (Pre-Exit)

Each lever with typical multiple impact:

  • Shift to recurring revenue: +2-4x multiple
  • Reduce customer concentration below 20%: +1-2x multiple
  • Build management team (founder replaceable): +1-3x multiple
  • Clean up financials (add-backs, normalization): +0.5-1x multiple
  • Document all IP and processes: +0.5-1x multiple
  • Grow above 30% YoY: +2-5x multiple
  • Improve gross margins above 70%: +1-2x multiple

3. Buyer Landscape Map

Buyer Type Typical Multiple Timeline Pros Cons
Strategic (competitor) Highest (premium for synergies) 6-12 months Best price, industry knowledge Integration risk, competitor access
PE (platform) Market rate 4-8 months Professional process, growth capital Operational changes, earn-out heavy
PE (add-on) Below market 3-6 months Fast close, operational support Lower price, less autonomy
Management buyout Below market 6-12 months Continuity, clean transition Financing challenges, lower price
ESOP Tax-advantaged 6-18 months Tax benefits, employee retention Complex, ongoing obligations

4. Information Memorandum Outline

  1. Executive summary (1 page)
  2. Investment highlights (5-7 bullet points)
  3. Company overview + history
  4. Products/services description
  5. Market analysis + competitive positioning
  6. Customer analysis (anonymized)
  7. Financial summary (3yr historical + projections)
  8. Growth opportunities
  9. Management team
  10. Transaction summary

M&A Red Flags (Both Sides)

🚩 Walk Away Signals:

  • Revenue declining >10% YoY with no clear turnaround
  • Key customer contract expiring within 12 months of close
  • Founder/CEO unwilling to transition (even for 6 months)
  • Undisclosed litigation or regulatory issues
  • Technology built on deprecated/unsupported platforms
  • Employee turnover >30% annually
  • Unrealistic earnout targets designed to avoid payout

Resources

Related packs for M&A teams:

  • 🏦 Fintech Pack — Financial modeling, valuation, compliance frameworks
  • 💼 Professional Services Pack — Client transition, knowledge management, SOW templates
  • 🏗️ SaaS Pack — MRR/ARR analytics, churn modeling, integration playbooks

Browse all packs → | Pick 3 for $97 | All 10 for $197 | Everything Bundle $247

Usage Guidance
This skill is internally coherent and contains useful M&A frameworks, but it is not a substitute for licensed financial, tax, or legal advice. Before using it with real deals: (1) do not paste highly sensitive or confidential documents into an untrusted agent session, (2) validate any numeric thresholds and valuation assumptions against up-to-date market data and advisors, and (3) consult your lawyer/accountant for jurisdiction-specific tax and regulatory issues. Autonomous invocation is allowed by default (normal for skills) but does not add risk here because the skill requests no credentials or external endpoints.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: afrexai-ma-playbook Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle provides a comprehensive M&A framework for an AI agent, detailing buy-side and sell-side strategies, valuation methods, due diligence, and integration planning. The `SKILL.md` and `README.md` files contain only informational text and structured instructions for the agent's advisory role. There are no signs of prompt injection attempts, malicious code execution, data exfiltration, or any other harmful behaviors. External links provided in both markdown files point to `afrexai-cto.github.io` and are presented as informational resources for the user, not as commands for the agent to execute.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
The name, description, README, and SKILL.md consistently describe an M&A advisory framework. There are no declared env vars, binaries, or config paths that are unrelated to the stated purpose.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md contains only procedural guidance (questions to ask, checklists, scorecards, valuation methods, integration plans). It does not instruct the agent to read local files, access environment variables, call external endpoints, or transmit data to third parties.
Install Mechanism
There is no install spec and no code files; this is instruction-only, which minimizes risk from downloaded or installed components.
Credentials
The skill requires no credentials, no config paths, and no environment variables; requested privileges are proportional (none) to the stated functionality.
Persistence & Privilege
Skill flags are default (always: false, user-invocable: true, model invocation not disabled). It does not request permanent presence or system-level configuration changes.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install afrexai-ma-playbook
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /afrexai-ma-playbook
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
M&A Playbook — Version 1.0.0 - Initial release featuring complete buy-side and sell-side M&A frameworks. - Includes detailed guidance on strategy, target screening, valuation, due diligence, deal structuring, and integration. - Provides step-by-step checklists, scorecards, and red flag lists for both acquirers and sellers. - Built-in tools for exit readiness, buyer mapping, and value enhancement strategies. - Resource links for further analysis and preparation.
Metadata
Slug afrexai-ma-playbook
Version 1.0.0
License
All-time Installs 3
Active Installs 3
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is M&A Playbook?

Provides structured guidance for M&A transactions including strategy, valuation, due diligence, deal structuring, integration planning, and sell-side readine... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 707 downloads so far.

How do I install M&A Playbook?

Run "/install afrexai-ma-playbook" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is M&A Playbook free?

Yes, M&A Playbook is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does M&A Playbook support?

M&A Playbook is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created M&A Playbook?

It is built and maintained by 1kalin (@1kalin); the current version is v1.0.0.

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