Your technology maturity directly affects how buyers price your business. Companies with modern, documented IT infrastructure and strong cybersecurity posture command valuation premiums of 15 to 25%, while businesses carrying hidden technical debt or security gaps face price discounts, deal delays, or lost buyers altogether.
Most business owners think about valuation in terms of revenue, EBITDA, customer concentration, and market position. Technology rarely makes the list. Until the deal falls apart because of it.
The uncomfortable truth is that technology is one of the most material factors in how acquirers price risk. And unlike a dip in revenue, technology problems are often invisible until a buyer's diligence team starts asking questions you didn't expect.
A technology maturity score is an assessment of how well your business manages, secures, and leverages its technology infrastructure. At Sentry Technology Solutions, we measure this through our Technology Maturity Model (TMM): a four-stage framework that identifies where your business stands today and the specific steps required to advance.
The four stages are:
Buyers, private equity firms, and strategic acquirers increasingly use frameworks like this to evaluate targets. The further along the maturity curve your business sits, the more predictable, scalable, and de-risked it looks to a prospective buyer.
Technology due diligence has evolved from a checkbox into a core component of deal evaluation. According to Bain & Company, technology capabilities frequently represent 30 to 40% of unrealized value in acquisition targets, particularly in industries undergoing digital transformation.[1]
Buyers are not just pricing what you earn today. They are pricing what they will need to spend tomorrow to fix what you left behind. A 2024 PwC report found that 61% of executives said a company’s cybersecurity posture directly influenced their investment decisions.[2] That’s not a soft preference. That’s a deal lever.
The cautionary tale that still gets cited in boardrooms: when Verizon acquired Yahoo, the discovery of data breaches affecting billions of accounts resulted in a $350 million reduction in the purchase price.[3] The breach was not a secret. The decision to not disclose it was. And it cost Yahoo the equivalent of a small acquisition.
For more context on how technology shapes deal dynamics, see our post How Does IT Impact Mergers & Acquisitions?.
Here is the practical reality: where your business sits on the TMM has a direct bearing on how a buyer structures and prices the deal.
Outdated or undocumented systems mean the buyer will need to spend money bringing your technology up to standard after the deal closes. Post-merger integration costs typically range from 3 to 10% of a deal’s total value[4] and that is before surprises surface in the environment.
Strong cybersecurity documentation, incident response plans, and clean compliance records signal a well-managed business. Companies with modern security infrastructure and solid documentation command valuation premiums of 15 to 25%.[5]
Businesses with connected, well-integrated systems are faster and cheaper to absorb into an acquirer’s existing infrastructure. High automation and standardized processes can increase valuation multiples by 0.5 to 1.5x.[6]
Companies actively using AI, automation, and analytics to drive results are priced as growth assets, not just income streams. This is where valuation narratives shift from “what does it earn” to “what can it become.”
Technology gaps don't just reduce your headline number. They create friction, contingencies, and structural complications throughout the deal process. Here are the areas we see cause the most damage:
For a comprehensive view of what buyers review, see our IT Due Diligence Checklist for M&A.
The good news: technology maturity is not fixed. With the right partner and enough runway, businesses can move meaningfully up the TMM curve before buyers arrive. Here is where to focus:
Meaningful improvements, particularly in security posture and documentation, can be achieved in 6 to 12 months with focused effort. Full progression through multiple TMM stages typically requires 12 to 24 months. If an exit is on the horizon, the sooner you start, the stronger your position at the negotiating table.
Not always, and that’s part of the problem. Smaller deals and less sophisticated buyers may skip formal technology review, only to discover costly issues after close. Private equity firms and strategic acquirers almost always include it as a standard part of the process.
IT due diligence is buyer-driven and focused on uncovering risk. A technology maturity assessment is seller-driven and focused on improvement. Done proactively before a transaction, it allows you to identify and address gaps on your timeline, not the buyer’s.
Yes. Buyers who identify technology risk may structure deals with earn-outs, escrow holdbacks, or indemnification clauses tied to specific issues. These structures reduce your guaranteed payout, even when the headline number looks intact.
If an exit is in your future, even several years out, your technology posture is a strategic asset worth building now. Sentry Technology Solutions helps growth-oriented businesses understand where they stand on the Technology Maturity Model and build a clear roadmap to close the gaps before buyers find them.
Ready to know your score? Schedule a technology assessment (TMM) today.
[1]Bain & Company, widely cited analysis on technology as unrealized value in M&A acquisition targets.
[2]PwC, 2024 Global Digital Trust Insights Survey.
[3]Reuters and SEC filings, Verizon-Yahoo acquisition price adjustment, 2017.
[4]mergerintegration.com, "List of Post Merger Integration Costs."
[5]CodeLock.it / Luminary Ace, cybersecurity posture and valuation premium analysis.
[6]DealFlowAgent, "Business Exit Valuations 2025-26: EBITDA Multiples Guide."