Built from the inside. Now applied where it matters.
Most businesses don't fail to sell because of market conditions. They fail because they were not built in a way a buyer can take over with confidence. That's where owners lose money. The firm exists to close that gap.
An operator who has done the work.
The advice in this firm comes from someone who has actually built and exited businesses — not from someone who has only studied the work.
Omar Fajem started as a founder. He built and sold four businesses across trades and direct-to-consumer, learning firsthand what makes a business transferable — and what causes deals to fall apart under real scrutiny.
The work was done inside real operations. Structuring systems, separating ownership from execution, building companies that could run without the founder at the center. He owns two more businesses today that operate without his daily involvement — the same principle, applied again. That principle carries through every engagement: if a business depends on the owner, it is not an asset.
The move into advisory came from a simple observation. Most owners preparing to sell are relying on advisors who have never built or exited a business themselves. The advice sounds right, but when it comes time to execute, things break down.
This firm focuses on that gap. The work is operational, financial, and structural. The goal is simple: build a business that a buyer can step into with confidence, and pay for accordingly.
Alongside building and exiting businesses, Omar is on track to become a lawyer in November 2026. That perspective shows up in the work — with attention to structure, contracts, and the realities of a transaction.
A short list of operating principles.
The work is grounded in a few firm beliefs about businesses, buyers, and the work that actually matters when an exit is real.
A business that depends on the owner is a job, not an asset.
The most common failure mode in private business is the owner building something that requires their continued presence to function. It feels like leadership while you live it. To a buyer, it looks like risk.
What gets documented gets transferred. What's in your head doesn't.
Operations that exist only as the owner's tacit knowledge cannot be sold. Buyers price what they can take with them. Documentation isn't bureaucracy — it's the asset.
Buyers don't pay for profit. They pay for transferable cash flow.
Profit is the headline. Transferability is what determines the multiple. Two businesses with identical EBITDA can sell for very different prices based on how that profit holds up after the owner leaves.
The work that matters is operational, not cosmetic.
Polishing the deck doesn't change the business. Restructuring the operations does. Most "exit preparation" is cosmetic. The real work is harder, takes longer, and produces a different price.
A real conversation about your business.
Thirty to sixty minutes. No pitch. No deck. A direct discussion about where the business is, where you want it to go, and whether the firm's approach is the right fit. If it isn't, the firm tells you and points you to someone who is.