
Ep 520 How Chris Hutchins convinced Google to buy Milk—and Wealthfront to acquire Grove—despite not generating much revenue (and no EBITDA)
A strategic acquirer is a company buying to advance its own roadmap, distribution, or capabilities—unlike financial buyers (private equity, family offices) who buy primarily for cash flow. To a strategic, value may sit in what you've built, not what you've earned.
Chris Hutchins' story makes the point. He co-founded Milk, acquired by Google, and later founded Grove, acquired by Wealthfront. Both saw assets they could plug in—product, team, IP—even when revenue and EBITDA weren't impressive.
If you want a strategic acquirer to pay for what you've built rather than how much money you make, this episode of Built to Sell Radio is for you. You'll discover how to:
• Define and prioritize the assets a strategic may value now (team, product, customer list, roadmap, even your lease)
• Reframe your pitch so a distribution-rich buyer may see an immediate lift from your assets
• Run a fast, momentum-led process that invites quick noes and surfaces real interest
• Split assets across buyers when it improves the overall outcome
• Protect employees and customers while you move quickly toward a decision
If a strategic exit is on your radar, this playbook helps you create options when EBITDA won't carry the deal.
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