OUR EXECUTION PLAYBOOK
Hands on the asset. Eyes on the exit.
A practical, repeatable operating system that takes an asset from Day 0 to cash-flowing and ready for exit—with accountability, clear rhythms, and tight control.
At a Glance
- Day 0 through 30/60/90: a clear plan with named owners and measurable key performance indicators.
- Cash-control discipline: thresholds, reserves, and audits that protect the downside.
- Governance and triggers: early warning signals and decision rules that keep exits clean.
What This Is—and Why It Matters
We do not manage exposure; we manage assets. The Playbook is how we do it: checklists, operating cadences, key performance indicators, cash controls, and intervention triggers that compress time, reduce execution risk, and preserve options for a clean exit.
Guiding principles
- Cash first; upside second.
- Control the cadence. Weekly operating reviews, monthly Investment Committee meetings, quarterly board sessions.
- Show, don’t theorize. Show the asset, the numbers, and the plan.
- Local where it counts. In-market partners and on-site verification.
- Judgment first; artificial intelligence as leverage. Human oversight at every step.
The Operating Timeline
Pre-Close → Day 0 → Days 1–30 → Days 31–60 → Days 61–90 → Steady State → Exit-Ready
1) Pre-Close (about 30 days to 1 day before closing) — Lock the Ground Truth
- On-site verification: site visits, interviews with operators, references with vendors, and contract checks.
- Operating and governance hygiene: organization charts, decision rights, authorized bank signers, and a map of financial covenants.
- Cash map: starting receivables and payables, vendor terms, payroll rhythm, and working-capital gates.
- Day 0 readiness: banking, insurance, access rights, data room, and communications plan.
- Risk register: top risks, named owners, mitigations, and early-warning signals.
Materials shared during review: diligence memo, Day 0 checklist, vendor-reference grid.
2) Day 0 to Day 3 — Stabilize Control and Visibility
- Access and control: banking in place, dual-signature rules, disbursement thresholds, and cash-sweep policy.
- Communications: Day 0 notice to teams, key vendors, lenders, and partners.
- Data intake: baseline key performance indicators, cohort pulls, lease or inventory files, and a cash ladder.
- Ninety-day draft: quick wins, constraints, and “first-do-no-harm” holds.
Materials: Day 0 control checklist, communications template, cash-control procedures.
3) Days 1–30 — Prove the Engine
- Thirty-day operating plan with named owners, due dates, and measurable key performance indicators (weekly operating review).
- Quick wins: pricing moves, procurement resets, staffing grid, maintenance backlog, and service levels.
- Vendor resets: terms, service-level agreements, and a termination queue.
- Key performance indicator tree and first dashboard: lead indicators, lag indicators, and alert thresholds.
Materials: thirty-day plan, weekly review agenda, first dashboard.
4) Days 31–60 — Structural Fixes
- Operating-model redesign: clear roles and responsibilities (who is responsible, who is accountable, who is consulted, who is informed), spans and layers, and decision rights.
- Unit-economics diagnostics: contribution margins, occupancy and churn for real assets, throughput for operating businesses.
- Capital-expenditure and operating-expenditure gates: hurdle rates, stage-gate reviews, and approval owners.
- Governance rhythm: monthly Investment Committee pack, variance analysis, and mitigation plans.
Materials: roles-and-responsibilities map, unit-economics workbook, Investment Committee deck template.
5) Days 61–90 — Lock Performance and Optionality
- Second-version dashboard: refined alerts, amber and red playcards, and automatic roll-ups to portfolio view.
- Cash discipline: reserves policy, disbursement matrix, and exception log.
- Exit-readiness: data-room structure, buyer-set hypotheses, and the skeleton of a diligence pack.
- Value-creation memo: what was fixed, what is being watched, and the options ahead.
Materials: ninety-day scorecard, reserves policy, exit-readiness checklist, value-creation memo.
Measurement and Review Rhythm
- Lead and lag indicators: actions drive results; both are owned and reported.
- Weekly operating review: forty-five minutes, exceptions only, decisions recorded.
- Monthly Investment Committee: profit-and-loss and cash variance, covenant posture, risk register, and the plan for the next month.
- Quarterly board session: strategy, capital allocation, and exit gates.
Standard families of key performance indicators
- Real assets: occupancy and turnover, net operating income bridge, capital-expenditure burn versus plan, yield on cost.
- Operating companies: revenue quality, unit economics, delivery service levels,
- Credit and structured positions: debt-service-coverage ratio, cushion to triggers, timing of recoveries, counterparty status.
Cash-Control Discipline
- Disbursement thresholds with dual-signature rules.
- Cash ladder (daily or weekly), thirteen-week cash flow, and variance bands.
- Reserves policy for maintenance, taxes, and contingencies.
- Vendor risk tiers with an exception log and a monthly audit trail.
Governance and Decision-Making
- From weekly review to Investment Committee to board: no surprises and defined escalation paths.
- Decision rights: what is approved, by whom, at which thresholds, and on what timeline.
- Documentation: every decision recorded, owner assigned, and date committed.
Risk Signals and Intervention Triggers
- Behavioral and time-based signals: operator drift, liquidity stress, and adverse momentum.
- Trigger playcards: amber (course-correct) and red (pause capital, leadership change, or prepare for sale).
- Portfolio watch: leading indicators across holdings to sequence interventions and exits.
Use of artificial intelligence with human oversight
- Opportunity filter: pre-market and off-market scans with anomaly flags.
- Valuation guardrails: comparable sets and cash-yield reasonableness checks.
- Signal layer: pattern breaks in operating data.
- Human review: every alert is reviewed by an accountable owner before action.
Local Partners and Vendors
- When we engage: language or regulatory needs, facility intensity, or temporary surge requirements.
- How we govern: clear roles and responsibilities with approval paths and signature rules.
- Performance rhythm: service-level agreements, measurable indicators, monthly reviews, and termination rules if needed.
Illustrative Outcome (Redacted)
A flagged anomaly led to a distressed entry; a fourteen-month repositioning stabilized operations; yield normalized to 9.3%; a partial exit was completed at 2.1 times equity.
Illustrative only; not indicative of future results.
Engagement and Access
- Who it is for: limited partners and co-investors, operating partners, and qualified counterparties.
- Materials: detailed templates, checklists, and dashboards are shared during review; some materials may require a non-disclosure agreement.
- Data and governance: verified operational and market data; no material non-public information is processed without consent; all access is logged and auditable.
Contact Us to Review the Playbook
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