This is Min-Jung’s story.
How to sell a state contracting business at the right time, to the right buyer, for the right price is the question Min-Jung Lee had been turning over for nearly three years before she picked up the phone. When the right time came, she called CGK Business Sales. Min-Jung ran a $19M state IT services firm headquartered in Maryland, focused on state Department of IT systems integration, state Department of Health protected-health-information work, and state Motor Vehicle Administration modernization programs across Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. Eighty-six employees, roughly seventy of whom carried active state-level security clearances (Maryland DOIT background checks plus state HHS clearance for protected-health-information work). A Maryland headquarters with regional offices in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, and Richmond, Virginia, and embedded teams at multiple state agency client sites. The firm held a Maryland State Master Services prime contract, an eMaryland Marketplace Advantage prime contract, Pennsylvania COSTARS, Virginia eVA prime, and a portfolio of agency-specific MOUs at Maryland Department of Health and the Maryland MVA. Top five state contracts ran about sixty-two percent of revenue. The firm was Maryland MBE certified through the Maryland Department of Transportation program and was scheduled to graduate from the program in 2026 after twelve years of participation, which was the inflection point Min-Jung had been planning around for two years. She was 56. She had founded the firm in 2007 after a Maryland state government layoff during the post-financial-crisis state-services contraction. Her husband, a federal civilian career employee, was retiring at the end of the calendar year. Both kids were tech engineers in California with no plan to come back to the Mid-Atlantic. The state-services consolidation thesis had become real over the prior eighteen months, with three peer firms in her revenue band acquired by regional state-services platforms in 2024 and 2025, and Min-Jung had been watching the buyer pool reshuffle around the Maryland MBE-graduation cycle. She came to us in spring 2025 because she was thinking seriously about what the next ten years needed to look like and did not know who else to talk to about how to sell a state contracting business at this size and this state-vehicle-portfolio profile in a market where the active buyer pool was different from federal-services M&A in every meaningful way. This page is what happened next, and what could happen for you. Min-Jung is a composite, not a single real CGK seller, but the patterns and details are pulled from real state IT, state civil engineering, state professional services, and state construction engagements. Three shorter sister stories below cover what is different when you sell a state civil engineering and DOT services firm (Ravi), a state-focused management consulting firm (Camille), and a state construction firm (Ana).
The night before Min-Jung called us.
Most owners who decide to sell a state contracting business have been thinking about it quietly for two or three years before they pick up the phone. Min-Jung was no different. She was 56. For eighteen years she had been the architect of every state recompete strategy the firm had ever run, the relationship person on every Maryland Department of IT contracting officer across two governors, the person who built the firm’s Pennsylvania COSTARS and Virginia eVA prime positions out of warm relationships with state procurement directors, the negotiator on every Maryland MBE compliance milestone, and the one her direct reports asked for by name when a state agency client was sliding sideways and the win team needed someone in the room who knew that agency’s procurement history going back twelve years. The business did $19 million in annual revenue, $4.4 million in EBITDA at state-IT-typical 23 percent margins, and roughly eighty-six employees, of whom about seventy carried active state-level security clearances. Top five state contracts ran about sixty-two percent of revenue, which Min-Jung had been working to bring under fifty-five through deliberate diversification across Maryland Department of Health, Maryland MVA, and the Pennsylvania and Virginia agency portfolios. The firm operated out of a Maryland headquarters with regional offices in Harrisburg and Richmond and embedded teams at multiple state agency client sites across the Mid-Atlantic.
Why owners decide to sell a state contracting business
Min-Jung’s son was a senior software engineer at a cloud infrastructure company in San Francisco. Her daughter was a product manager at a consumer-tech startup in Mountain View. Neither was coming back to the Mid-Atlantic to take over a state services firm with a Maryland MBE certification cycle wrapping up. Her husband, a federal civilian career employee with thirty-two years of service, was retiring at the end of the calendar year and had been waiting on Min-Jung to make a decision about her own next chapter. The bigger pressures were the Maryland MBE graduation timeline and the state-services consolidation thesis that had become real over the prior eighteen months: the Maryland Department of Transportation MBE program graduation was scheduled for 2026 after twelve years of participation, which would shift the firm’s competitive position from set-aside-eligible to full-and-open competition on Maryland state IT work for the first time. Three peer firms in her revenue band had been acquired by regional state-services platforms in 2024 and 2025, with the buyer pool actively shopping for Maryland MBE-graduate firms with established state vehicle portfolios. Min-Jung had been approached six times in the prior fourteen months: three times by privately-held regional state-services strategic acquirers building state-and-local government services platforms, twice by PE-backed government-services consolidator platforms with mixed federal-and-state portfolios, and once by a Maryland-based state-IT-services holding company that had been built over the prior nine years on a thesis of acquiring Maryland MBE-graduate firms at the inflection point. Min-Jung did not know what her firm was actually worth at nineteen million in revenue with the Maryland MBE graduation about to land. She did not know whether the buyers calling her were the right buyers for her cleared workforce of seventy. She did not know whether her state vehicle portfolio and her relationships across Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia state agencies were value-drivers or table stakes. She did not have a single peer in her life who had ever sold a state contracting business at this size and this state-vehicle-portfolio profile.
That is the night she found CGK and submitted the form. We called her back at 9:22 the next morning.
The conversation we had on the first call.
The first call was 51 minutes. We did most of the listening.
Min-Jung talked about the state-cleared workforce of seventy and the Maryland MBE graduation cycle she had been planning around for two years, the way each state agency client had its own contracting officer and program manager personalities and how those relationships had been built across three and four state procurement cycles, the difference between her commercially-priced Maryland State Master Services work and the cost-reimbursable state-cost-recovery work on her Maryland Department of Health task orders, the indirect-rate structure she had spent five months restructuring last year for state cost-reimbursable contracts (fringe at 33.8 percent, overhead at 26.4 percent, G&A at 12.6 percent, all validated through her state-cognizant audit team and within band for the state IT peer set), the StateRAMP authorization she had completed in early 2025 and the way that maturity reads to a regional state-services strategic buyer who is trying to harmonize StateRAMP postures across an existing state-services portfolio. She talked about the smaller protected-health-information bench on the Maryland Department of Health programs and the ways that subset of the workforce was harder to recruit and harder to retain in the post-2023 state cleared-talent market. She talked about the customer concentration profile: about sixty-two percent of revenue concentrated in the top five state contracts, with the largest (a Maryland Department of Health systems integration program) running about sixteen percent of revenue and up for recompete in fifteen months. We asked about the business in the way you would ask if you were trying to understand it, not in the way you would ask if you were trying to win the engagement. What we were listening for was not just the financials. We were listening for whether Min-Jung was actually ready to sell, what she was working toward, and whether her expectations on price were grounded in what the market would actually support.
At the end of that call, we set up a working session: an in-person conversation where one of our Managing Directors would walk Min-Jung through our valuation model and tell her honestly what her firm was likely to command. We did not promise her a written report. Written valuations involve substantially more work, and we charge for those when a seller actually needs one for estate planning, a partner buyout, a divorce, or another documentary purpose. The walkthrough was free because Min-Jung was clearly thinking seriously about selling, the way someone thinks about it before they actually do it. Whether that ends up being in a year, three years, or longer, we make the same call.
The valuation session was the following Wednesday at 8 a.m. at the Maryland headquarters, before the first state-agency-site standup of the day.
Min-Jung was not ready to sell a state contracting business yet. She went home and waited eleven months.
The valuation session showed Min-Jung that her firm was worth meaningfully less than she had been hoping, for two reasons that surprised her. The first was the Maryland MBE graduation timing. The largest contract in the firm’s portfolio (the sixteen-percent-of-revenue Maryland Department of Health systems integration program) was up for recompete in fifteen months, and going to market with a Maryland MBE-graduation event in flight (the program graduation was scheduled before the recompete) is one of the most penalizing situations in state IT M&A. Buyers price the post-graduation full-and-open recompete loss scenario aggressively into LOIs, and the discount is real. The second was the contract concentration. Sixty-two percent of revenue in the top five state contracts, with a single contract at sixteen percent, looks structurally fragile to a buyer’s diligence team even when each individual contract is performing. Regional state-services strategic buyers underwriting at the high end of the multiple range pay premium for diversification, and the path Min-Jung had been quietly planning (winning two new full-and-open state contracts in 2025 to push concentration below fifty-five percent) was the right path, but it had not landed yet.
We told Min-Jung honestly: she could go to market now and accept the discount, or she could spend nine to twelve months running the Maryland Department of Health recompete to win on a post-graduation full-and-open basis (and stabilizing that contract for the buyer’s underwriting team), winning at least one of the two new full-and-open Pennsylvania COSTARS targets she had in pipeline (which would push top-five concentration below fifty-five percent), tightening the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate package, completing the StateRAMP authorization at the next certification cycle so the state-IT security posture would be locked at the time of LOI, and packaging the state-cleared-workforce data (state clearance composition by agency, average tenure by state, attrition by program, recruiting funnel for the protected-health-information bench) into the kind of personnel-data report a buyer’s diligence team can rely on. We said the second path would likely command a meaningfully better number from a wider range of buyers, especially the regional state-services strategics and the patient-capital state-and-local government services platforms that pay premiums for stable, diversified, StateRAMP-authorized state IT firms with deep state-cleared bench.
This is the part most brokers skip. Most brokers would have signed Min-Jung that day, taken the firm to market with the Maryland MBE graduation in flight, and made the commission whether or not the deal was the best one for her. We told her to wait, even though it meant we did not get paid for eleven months and might never get paid at all if she changed her mind.
Min-Jung went home and waited. She spent the next eleven months winning the Maryland Department of Health recompete on a post-graduation full-and-open basis (a clean win without a protest, a real value-driver for her LOI conversations later), winning one of the two Pennsylvania COSTARS targets in pipeline (a Pennsylvania Department of Labor and Industry workforce-systems task order that pushed top-five concentration to fifty-four percent), completing the StateRAMP authorization renewal, finalizing the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate restructuring with her state-cognizant audit team, and packaging the state-cleared-workforce-and-clearance-composition data into a thirty-page report with attrition trends, recruiting-funnel metrics, and clearance-by-state-program breakdowns. She read up on what active acquirers were paying for state IT firms through resources at the National Association of State Chief Information Officers on state contract vehicle activity and tracked deal news in the state IT M&A press. Min-Jung called us back in early 2026 and said she was ready to sell a state contracting business that was finally in the shape it needed to be in.
What we did when Min-Jung came back.
What it takes to sell a state contracting business properly
When an owner is ready to sell a state contracting business with CGK, the discipline of the process surprises them. We took Min-Jung’s firm to market in just under five weeks once she got us her updated financials, the recompete-win documentation on the Maryland Department of Health post-graduation full-and-open award, the new Pennsylvania COSTARS task order, the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate-restructuring package validated by her state-cognizant audit team, the StateRAMP authorization renewal certificate, the state-cleared-workforce-and-clearance-composition report with attrition and recruiting metrics, the state vehicle-portfolio summary with recompete cadence and award-history per vehicle, the customer-concentration roll-forward to fifty-four percent in top five, the Maryland MBE graduation documentation, and the state procurement compliance posture summary. The blind teaser went out to 56 buyers we had pre-qualified across six buyer types: regional state-services strategic acquirers building state-and-local government services platforms on multi-decade horizons (the dominant active buyer category in this band), privately-held mid-market state-IT-services consolidators with state-only theses, PE-backed government-services consolidator platforms with mixed federal-and-state portfolios, Maryland-based state-IT-services holding companies with theses around acquiring state MBE-graduate firms at the inflection point, individual operators with state-services backgrounds and SBA-leveraged capital, and a small set of national federal services primes looking to add state-and-local government services exposure as a portfolio diversification play.
Thirty-four of those buyers signed NDAs and received the full Confidential Information Memorandum. Twenty-one entered our structured data room. Twelve submitted Indications of Interest. Seven advanced to Letters of Intent. We narrowed to four for management presentations. Three re-submitted refined LOIs after the management meetings.
Min-Jung decided between two of the top LOIs. They were materially different. One was a higher headline price from a PE-backed government-services consolidator platform with a mixed federal-and-state portfolio that wanted to absorb Min-Jung’s firm into a Mid-Atlantic state-and-federal civilian-services portfolio, with a conventional escrow structure, an earnout tied to recompete win-rate over three years (a structure Min-Jung found particularly uncomfortable because state recompete outcomes are not fully within the seller’s control once the integration begins, especially through a Maryland MBE graduation cycle), a state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate-harmonization mandate that would push Min-Jung’s rate structure toward the platform’s existing wraps (which would be dilutive to her state contract margins for the first eighteen months), and a fund hold horizon of four to six years before the platform itself would likely be sold to a federal-services strategic. The other was a slightly lower headline price from a privately-held regional state-government-services strategic acquirer with state-services subsidiaries in the Northeast and Midwest who was looking to add Mid-Atlantic state-IT bench; they were not PE-backed, had no fund timer, had permanent capital, and were planning to operate Min-Jung’s firm as a discrete Mid-Atlantic state-IT business unit under the combined platform with the existing leadership and state-agency contract relationships intact. We walked Min-Jung through what each LOI would actually deliver under realistic and pessimistic scenarios, including what the cultural continuity would look like for her seventy state-cleared employees under each owner, what the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate question meant for actual contract margins post-integration, what the Maryland MBE graduation cycle meant for the earnout under the PE structure, and what the cross-portfolio synergy would look like under the regional state-services strategic structure (the strategic had three Northeast state IT vehicles where Min-Jung’s bench would slot in cleanly). The regional state-services strategic deal was the better one for Min-Jung. The cash position day one was meaningfully stronger when normalized for the absence of an earnout, the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate-harmonization concession was significantly more favorable than the PE platform’s, the cultural fit with a permanent-capital strategic that valued long-hold operating performance over fund-cycle exits mattered to Min-Jung deeply, and the strategic’s existing Northeast state IT vehicles offered real growth pathways for her state-cleared workforce. She took it.
Through the whole process, the same CGK Managing Director who had taken Min-Jung’s first call eleven months earlier was the person walking her through every conversation.
What the deal actually looked like.
How the deal looks when you sell a state contracting business with CGK
Min-Jung’s deal closed roughly seven months after we restarted the engagement, with the state contract novation work and Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia procurement officer consent processes running in parallel for the final hundred days. The buyer was a privately-held regional state-government-services strategic acquirer with state-services subsidiaries in the Northeast and Midwest, building a state-and-local government services platform that already covered six states across IT, civil engineering, and professional services, funded with permanent capital and a senior secured credit facility from a state-services-experienced regional lender. The strategic was not PE-backed and had no fund-timer pressure to flip the business inside a defined hold period. They acquired the firm as a stock purchase, with the firm operating as a discrete Mid-Atlantic state-IT business unit under the combined platform, retaining its Maryland State Master Services prime, its eMaryland Marketplace Advantage prime, its Pennsylvania COSTARS, and its Virginia eVA prime contract vehicles, and integrating into the platform’s broader Northeast state-IT strategy.
The headline price was meaningful but not the highest LOI she received. About 85 percent of it came as cash at closing, funded by the strategic’s permanent capital plus the senior credit facility. About 5 percent was held back in escrow for 20 months (the 20-month duration reflected the state-contract-novation and procurement officer consent window across the Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia agency portfolios, which was the trade-off we negotiated for the favorable cash-at-close percentage) to cover indemnification claims, a working capital adjustment, and small carve-outs for any state-cost-disallowance or state-vehicle-novation issues that could surface during the transition window. About 10 percent was a rollover equity stake into the strategic’s combined state-services platform, which gave Min-Jung continued upside on the broader Northeast and Mid-Atlantic state-IT expansion thesis if the strategic executed on its plan to add additional state-IT bench across the next two years, and gave the buyer reassurance that Min-Jung would stay engaged through the integration. Wire hit on a Wednesday morning in June.
Min-Jung stayed on as a paid President of the Mid-Atlantic State IT Business Unit for the strategic’s combined platform for fourteen months after closing, which let her personally introduce her direct reports to the new ownership, walk through every state agency contract relationship with the relevant procurement officers and program managers across Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia, lead the integration of two follow-on Mid-Atlantic state-IT acquisitions the platform completed in the twelve months post-close, and shape the cross-state-vehicle harmonization playbook that the platform applied across its broader Northeast state-IT footprint. After fourteen months, Min-Jung stepped back to a quarterly strategic-advisor role that gave her room to be home for her husband’s first full year of retirement, finally accepted a board seat on a state-government-IT nonprofit she had been declining for three years, and started taking the long weekends she had not taken since 2007.
What happened to Min-Jung’s people.
Min-Jung cared most about her seventy state-cleared employees, the small protected-health-information bench on the Maryland Department of Health programs (eight engineers and analysts who had been with the firm for an average of nine years), the five direct reports running her business-development, contracts, finance, security, and HR functions, the bid-and-proposal team that had won the Maryland Department of Health recompete on a post-graduation full-and-open basis and the new Pennsylvania COSTARS task order in the prior eleven months, and the state agency client relationships at Maryland DOIT, Maryland Department of Health, Maryland MVA, and the Pennsylvania and Virginia agency portfolios that had been built across three and four state procurement cycles. The regional state-services strategic was a permanent-capital operator who would actually run the Mid-Atlantic state-IT business unit with the existing leadership rather than parachute in a corporate consultant from a Big Four playbook. That made the people part substantially cleaner than it would have been under a PE-backed government-services consolidator that would have absorbed Min-Jung’s bench into shared-services delivery functions and harmonized the state-cost-reimbursable indirect rates aggressively against state contract margins.
The buyer kept all 86 employees, honored the existing pay structure across the state-cleared and non-cleared workforce, and committed to keeping the five direct reports in their roles with expanded scope under the strategic’s combined Mid-Atlantic and Northeast state-services organization. The protected-health-information bench was preserved with formal stay-bonus packages tied to state-clearance retention and performance over the first eighteen months post-close (a structure both sides understood was essential given the state cleared-talent market dynamics). The bid-and-proposal team became the nucleus of the strategic’s Mid-Atlantic state-IT bid-and-proposal organization, with the win team that had landed the Maryland Department of Health post-graduation recompete leading the platform-wide cross-state recompete strategy post-close. The state agency client relationships were preserved by keeping Min-Jung in the Mid-Atlantic state-IT leadership role through the integration, with formal client-introduction meetings to her successor running for six months after the wire hit.
Min-Jung’s son flew in from San Francisco for closing weekend with his fiancée. Her daughter flew in from Mountain View for the closing dinner with her partner. Min-Jung and her husband took two weeks off in late June for the first time since 2007, used the time to fly to Seoul to visit her mother and to introduce her husband to the parts of her family’s history he had never been able to see in person, and started a quiet conversation about whether the work she wanted to do in the next decade would be inside the strategic, on the state-government-IT nonprofit board she had finally accepted, or somewhere new entirely.
What Min-Jung told us afterward.
Why owners who sell a state contracting business with CGK keep coming back
About five months after closing, Min-Jung called the Managing Director who had run her deal. She said two things that the Managing Director still tells new sellers about.
The first was about the eleven-month wait. She said: “Three of the buyers who had been calling me were ready to move in ninety days, and two different M&A advisors I talked to before you told me they could take me to market right then with the Maryland MBE graduation in flight and the Maryland Department of Health recompete only fifteen months out. The reason I sold with you is that you told me the truth about what going to market with the MBE graduation in flight would do to the buyer pool, not just to the price. You told me the truth about the customer-concentration story and what it would look like at fifty-four percent versus sixty-two. You told me what the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate-restructuring would buy me in LOI conversations a year later, and you were right within half a turn of multiple. I would have left a real number on the table and ended up with the wrong buyer.”
The second was about who she sold to. She said: “I almost signed with the PE-backed platform because the headline price was bigger and the deal team had a slick presentation. The fact that you walked me through what each buyer would actually do with my five direct reports, my protected-health-information bench at Maryland Department of Health, and the state-cost-reimbursable indirect-rate structure I had spent five months getting through my state-cognizant audit team, what each buyer’s hold horizon would mean for the firm three and five years out, and how an integrated transaction with a permanent-capital regional state-services strategic was structurally different from a fund-timer roll-up that wanted to harmonize my state contract rates against their broader portfolio margins, is a conversation I never even thought to have until you raised it. I sold to a buyer who is going to grow this business with the team I built it with and treat my state-cleared workforce as a strategic asset, not a cost line item.”
This is what we mean when we say we sit with you in the decision, not just the transaction. Min-Jung is one composite story, but the pattern is real. The owners we work with who decide to sell a state contracting business usually find their way to us through versions of Min-Jung’s situation, and the relationships start with a long listening session and a free walkthrough, not a pitch.
What is different when you sell a state contracting business in civil engineering and DOT services.
Ravi’s state civil engineering services firm, the buyer pool, and the deal that closed
Min-Jung’s story is one of four pathways most owners walk through when they sell a state contracting business with CGK. The other three are different in important ways. Here is the second pathway. Ravi Nair was 54 and had founded a civil engineering services firm sixteen years ago after leaving a senior technical leadership role at a national civil engineering firm. The firm did roughly $13 million in annual revenue and employed about fifty-eight licensed engineers and technical staff (registered Professional Engineers across multiple state boards, surveyors, CAD technicians, and project managers), serving Texas Department of Transportation projects, Oklahoma Department of Transportation, Arkansas Department of Transportation, plus state and county environmental engineering work across the three states. Ravi held Texas DBE certification, prime positions on multiple state DOT master service contracts, and a long-running TxDOT pre-qualification status that had taken eleven years to fully build. The firm had been approached three times: twice by PE-backed civil engineering consolidator platforms, and once by a regional Sun Belt civil engineering strategic acquirer.
The buyer pool for state civil engineering and DOT services firms is structurally different from state IT services. PE roll-ups are very active because civil engineering services have predictable revenue from state DOT master contracts, but the indemnification and PE pricing on master-contract pre-qualification transfer risk catches many sellers off guard. Active buyers tend to be: PE-backed civil engineering consolidator platforms in the $200M-$2B revenue band, larger publicly-traded engineering firms with state DOT acquisition theses, privately-held regional engineering strategics building Sun Belt or Mid-Atlantic platforms, and a smaller set of owner-operator first-time entrepreneurs from senior engineering backgrounds at national firms looking for their own platform. CGK ran a process for Ravi that surfaced eleven serious buyers and narrowed to four management-presentation finalists. The winning buyer was unconventional: a 45-year-old former senior engineer at a national civil engineering firm who had spent two years preparing to acquire his own platform with personal capital plus a senior credit facility from a regional Texas bank, with no SBA financing and no PE backing. He had been a peer of Ravi’s at a national firm twelve years earlier and had been quietly tracking Ravi’s firm for three years before the call.
The deal structure looked different from Min-Jung’s. About 82 percent of the consideration came as cash at closing, funded by the buyer’s personal capital plus the senior credit facility. About 5 percent was held back in escrow for 18 months for indemnification, a working-capital adjustment, and small carve-outs for any state-DOT pre-qualification transfer issues that could surface during the transition. About 13 percent was a rollover equity stake into the buyer’s newly-formed operating company, which gave Ravi continued upside if the buyer executed on the post-close growth thesis (a deliberate Texas-to-Louisiana state-DOT expansion in years two and three). Ravi stayed on as Executive Chairman for sixteen months while the buyer stepped into the CEO role with Ravi mentoring through the state DOT recompete cycle, then transitioned to a quarterly board-advisor role and started spending more time on the academic-advisory work at the engineering school where he had been a quiet donor for a decade.
What is different when you sell a state contracting business in professional services.
Camille’s state-focused management consulting firm, the buyer pool, and the deal that closed
The third pathway most owners walk through when they sell a state contracting business is the state-focused professional services pathway. Camille Beaumont was 51 and had founded a state-focused management consulting firm fifteen years ago focused on transformation programs at state Health and Human Services agencies, state corrections, and state Medicaid programs across three states. The firm did roughly $8 million in annual revenue with about sixty-five consultants on staff (a mix of management consultants with prior Big Four experience, state-program subject-matter experts, and former state agency staff who had moved to industry). The firm held state master service contract positions in three states, multiple agency-specific MOUs at state HHS and state Medicaid programs, and a portfolio of state corrections systems-modernization task orders. Camille had been approached three times: twice by larger state-focused management consulting firms looking to add agency-specific capability, and once by a private state-services holding company.
The buyer pool for state-focused professional services firms is meaningfully different from the state IT and state civil engineering pools. PE rollups are less active in pure state professional services at this scale because the unit economics depend more on consultant utilization, bill rates, and state agency relationship depth than on contract vehicles. The active buyers tend to be: larger state-focused management consulting firms (Public Consulting Group, Mathematica, NORC-tier and the next tier down) looking to add state agency-specific capability, private state-services holding companies, individual operators with prior state-government backgrounds, and an emerging buyer category we are seeing more of: SBA-leveraged buyers with state legislative or state executive-branch experience who left state government to acquire state-services consulting platforms they understood from the inside. CGK ran a process for Camille that surfaced nine serious buyers and narrowed to three management-presentation finalists. The winning buyer was unusual: a former state legislative aide (forty-three years old, twelve years of service in three different state capitols) who had left state government to acquire a state-services consulting platform with SBA-leveraged personal capital and no prior tie to Camille’s specific firm.
The deal structure reflected the SBA-leveraged buyer dynamic. About 80 percent of the consideration came as cash at closing, funded by the buyer’s SBA 7(a) loan plus personal capital. About 4 percent was held back in escrow for 12 months for indemnification and a working-capital adjustment. The remaining 16 percent took the form of a five-year subordinated seller note at a market interest rate, secured against a junior lien on the firm’s contract receivables, with the larger seller-note component reflecting the SBA buyer’s need for cash-flow runway during the transition. Camille stayed on as Executive Chairman through the first twelve months while the new CEO took over operations and the state-agency-client transition was managed, then transitioned to a quarterly strategic-advisor role and used the next year to start a small advisory practice helping other state-services consulting founders think through succession decisions.
What is different when you sell a state contracting business in state construction.
Ana’s state construction firm, the buyer pool, and the deal that closed
The fourth pathway most owners walk through when they sell a state contracting business is the state construction pathway. Ana Silva was 56 and had founded a state construction firm in Massachusetts twenty-six years ago, growing it from a small subcontracting outfit into a $12 million regional state construction firm serving Massachusetts state university building projects, Rhode Island state office renovations, and state highway construction across both states. Ana is a second-generation Portuguese-American whose parents emigrated from the Azores in the 1970s. The firm held Massachusetts WBE and DBE certifications, prime positions on multiple Massachusetts Division of Capital Asset Management master construction contracts, prime status on the Rhode Island state public works contract list, and a long-running pre-qualification with both state DOTs that had taken twelve years to fully build. The firm employed about seventy-five people with a heavy field-craft workforce (carpenters, electricians, plumbers, equipment operators, and a long-tenured project-management bench) plus an estimating, scheduling, and bonding-and-surety office. Ana had been approached three times: once by a large publicly-traded construction holding company, once by a regional Northeast commercial GC looking to vertically integrate into state work, and once by a privately-held state-construction-only holding company building a New England state-construction platform.
The buyer pool for state construction firms is structurally different from any of the state services pools. PE rollups are less common because state construction’s bonding requirements, project-based revenue recognition, and labor-intensive economics do not fit standard PE underwriting models cleanly. The active buyers tend to be: large regional commercial general contractors looking to vertically integrate into state work, larger publicly-traded state-construction holding companies, privately-held state-construction-only holding companies building regional state-construction platforms (the most active emerging category in this band), and select state-MBE-graduate strategic acquirers building state-construction portfolios. CGK ran a process for Ana that surfaced ten serious buyers and narrowed to three management-presentation finalists. The winning buyer was a privately-held mid-market state-construction-only holding company that had been building a New England state-construction platform over the prior eight years across Connecticut, Vermont, and New Hampshire and wanted to add Massachusetts and Rhode Island coverage. They valued Ana’s Massachusetts DCAMM relationships, her Rhode Island state public works pre-qualification, and the strength of her bonding-and-surety capacity, which was higher than the holding company’s existing portfolio average and would expand the combined firm’s bid-able project-size band.
The deal structure reflected state construction’s bonding-capacity requirements. About 84 percent of the consideration came as cash at closing, funded by the holding company’s senior credit facility plus committed equity. About 8 percent was held back in escrow for the standard 18-month indemnification and working-capital adjustment window. About 8 percent was a rollover equity stake into the combined firm’s New England state-construction operating subsidiary. The deal also included a separate 24-month bonding-and-surety carve-out (a structural element unique to state construction M&A): a portion of the rollover and escrow was tied to maintaining continued bonding capacity at Ana’s pre-close levels through the transition, because losing bonding capacity post-close would have collapsed the state-construction franchise the buyer was paying for. Ana stayed on as a paid President of the New England State Construction Division for twenty months, leading the integration of her Massachusetts and Rhode Island relationships into the combined firm’s New England state-construction organization, then transitioned to a quarterly board-advisor role to spend more time with her parents in southeastern Massachusetts and to start a small advisory practice helping other Portuguese-American business owners in New England think through state-MBE certification and succession decisions.
Ready to sell a state contracting business? Where are you in Min-Jung’s story?
If you are starting to think about how to sell a state contracting business, whether that is a state IT services firm like Min-Jung’s, a state civil engineering and DOT services firm like Ravi’s, a state-focused professional services firm like Camille’s, or a state construction firm like Ana’s, we should talk. There is no commitment and no pressure. The first conversation is free. The valuation walkthrough that follows is free when you are seriously thinking about selling, whether that is in a year, five years, or longer. We only charge for formal written valuations, and only when you actually need one for estate planning, a partner buyout, or another documentary purpose. Submit the form and a senior CGK Managing Director will reach out within one business day.
If you are Min-Jung at month 1: just exploring
You are not sure if you want to sell yet. The state recompete cycle keeps shifting, your state contract concentration is heavier than you would like, your state-cleared workforce is harder to recruit and harder to retain than it used to be, a state MBE/WBE/DBE graduation cycle is approaching, your kids have built careers elsewhere, your spouse is hinting at slowing down, you are curious about what your firm and your state vehicle portfolio might be worth, or maybe a regional state-services strategic or a PE-backed government-services consolidator has been calling you. Most of our best engagements start here. Submit the form and we will schedule a working session. You walk away with a real number and a clear sense of what to do next, with no obligation to do anything.
If you are Min-Jung at month 11: ready to go
You have done the work to clean up the business. Your financials and your state-cost-reimbursable indirect rates are tight. Your state customer concentration is below fifty-five percent in top five. Your state-cleared-workforce data is packaged. Your StateRAMP authorization (or state-equivalent security posture) is current. Your state procurement compliance posture is clean. Your major state recompetes are won and the next bracket is in pipeline rather than in flight. Maybe a buyer is already in the conversation. You want to run a real process. Submit the form and we will be in touch within a business day to talk about timing, scope, and what your first 30 days as a CGK seller would look like.
If you are not sure where you are
Most owners are not sure. Submit the form and start with the conversation. We will figure out together where you are. We are equally happy to tell you to wait twelve months as we are to take you to market in three weeks.
Or call us directly at (888) 858-7191.
Start your own story
A senior CGK Managing Director will respond within one business day. Strictly confidential. For owners of state contracting businesses doing $1.5M+ in annual revenue, including state IT services firms, state civil engineering and DOT services firms, state-focused professional services firms, and state construction firms. The first conversation and the valuation walkthrough that follows are free for any seller seriously thinking about selling, on any horizon.
Confidential. No obligation. Direct routing to a named CGK business broker, not a junior screener.
One of these eight people would lead your engagement.
When you decide to sell a state contracting business with CGK, one named senior Managing Director stays with you from the first call through the wire transfer, just like Min-Jung’s Managing Director stayed with her for eleven months and then for the engagement that followed. Our Managing Directors come from Wall Street investment banks, hedge funds, Fortune 500 corporate finance, and operating-business leadership. Cornell MBA. U Chicago Booth MBA. CFA. CMT. Naval Academy. Goldman Sachs. Merrill Lynch. Deutsche Bank. AIG. T. Rowe Price.








What sellers say after they sell a state contracting business (and other businesses) with CGK
I could not be happier with the experience I had selling my business with CGK. Greg did a detailed analysis of my business and helped me price and position it right for the market. After receiving multiple offers at full asking price, the rest of the process went very smoothly, and we closed in less than two months.
Hanna M.Selling my business was a once-in-a-lifetime experience, and I’m incredibly grateful to have had Wes by my side throughout the process. He brought perspective, pushed when necessary, and always had my best interests in mind. His experience and strategic approach allowed me to maximize the sale price while minimizing long-term risk and obligations. If I had to do it all over again, I wouldn’t hesitate to choose him as my broker.
Adam NevilleDerik located multiple interested strategic buyers that produced more than one serious offer. The negotiations were tough but Greg and Derik’s experience helped us overcome. We got a great result for our employees and for the owners. We would recommend them without reservation.
Bob TaylorWe sold a business that was 47 years old and being run by second generation within a year of working with Wes. CGK has a system that attracts serious prospects to review opportunities. Wes was able to make the overwhelming feeling of selling easy and to a certain extent enjoyable. I never felt alone or in the dark throughout the entire process.
Jennifer WilliamsWe decided to sell our company in 2025. Talked to another M&A company in the Houston area. We felt very comfortable with Greg and Matthew at CGK. Could not have made a better choice. From day 1 till final closing and even after 30+ days, they have been here helping us with documents and support during the transition. Thanks can not be said enough.
Rickey ThomasInside the Blueprint, on Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News.
Min-Jung’s son, the cloud-infrastructure engineer in San Francisco, is the one who first sent her a clip of CGK on Bloomberg. He had been catching the segment in the background during a Saturday-morning workout and recognized the firm name from a state-IT-industry trade article about how to sell a state contracting business he had forwarded to his mom three months earlier. He sent her the link with a note that read “Mom, this is the firm.” CGK Business Sales is featured on Inside the Blueprint, the syndicated business television series. Our episode aired on Bloomberg TV and Fox Business News. Watch the segment, then start a confidential conversation.
The CGK office Min-Jung called was in her local Mid-Atlantic market. Yours might be one of these.
When you sell a state contracting business with CGK, whichever office you reach, you get the entire firm. Min-Jung worked with a CGK Managing Director based out of the firm’s Washington-Baltimore corridor, but her deal benefited from a buyer pool we sourced firm-wide, including the regional state-government-services strategic acquirer that ultimately won the deal. Click any city to learn about our local presence and the named Managing Director leading that market.
Other Questions Min-Jung and Other State Contracting Sellers Ask Us
Practical answers to what comes up before, during, and after the kind of engagement Min-Jung, Ravi, Camille, and Ana went through, when you sell a state contracting business with CGK.