Over the past several months, I’ve written about two themes that consistently show up in every deal, regardless of size, industry, or outcome.
First, how transactions and engagements are structured — and how thoughtful structuring can materially improve outcomes.
Second, founder psychology — and the reality that decisions made under pressure, uncertainty, or misalignment often have a greater impact on outcomes than the underlying numbers themselves.
Both matter. A lot.
But they also share a common limitation:
— They tend to show up at the moment of transaction, not before it.
And that’s where most companies lose value.
The Missing Layer: Strategic Finance
What I’ve seen repeatedly — across capital raises, M&A processes, and advisory engagements — is that companies don’t struggle because they lack opportunity.
They struggle because they lack financial architecture.
They don’t have:
- A clearly defined capital strategy
- A structure that aligns incentives across stakeholders
- A roadmap for how decisions today impact optionality tomorrow
- A framework for how growth will actually be financed and sustained
So when the time comes to raise capital or pursue a transaction, they’re reacting instead of executing.
From Reactive to Intentional
Strategic finance is the discipline that sits between:
- Running the business and
- Executing a transaction
It is the difference between:
- Raising capital because you need it vs.
- Raising capital on terms that support your long-term objectives
Between:
- Selling a business when an opportunity appears vs.
- Positioning a business to be acquired on your terms
Between:
- Growth that creates complexity vs.
- Growth that creates value
Why This Matters Now
Most founders spend years building their product, their team, and their market position.
Very few spend the same level of time designing:
- How the business will be financed
- How ownership will evolve
- How value will ultimately be realized
As a result, by the time they engage in a meaningful capital event, many of the most important decisions have already been made — often unintentionally.
What This Series Will Cover
This series is focused on that missing layer.
Not finance in the traditional sense.
Not accounting.
Not reporting.
But strategic finance — the intentional design of how a business grows, is funded, and ultimately creates value.
Over the next several pieces, I’ll cover:
- What financial architecture is and why it matters
- How founders can build a capital strategy before seeking investors
- The role strategic finance plays in scaling a business
- When it actually makes sense to bring in strategic CFO support
The Goal
The goal isn’t to make companies more “financial.”
It’s to make them:
- More intentional
- More aligned
- Better positioned to achieve the outcomes they actually want
Because by the time you’re in a transaction, you’re no longer building leverage.
You’re using whatever leverage you already created.
Final Thought
If structuring improves outcomes, and psychology influences decisions, then strategic finance determines:
— Whether the outcome was designed in advance or negotiated in the moment
That’s the difference this series is meant to explore.
