
I was speaking to a lettings business owner recently who joked that selling a company must feel a bit like an episode of Succession, the smash-hit TV series in which the immensely privileged kids of fictional media tycoon Logan Roy vie for the inheritance of their father’s business. It’s all big personalities, high stakes and a constant undercurrent of tension.
I told them it’s not a bad instinct. Other shows like the British-American investment banking drama Industry and UK reality series Dragon’s Den have done a good job of pulling back the curtain on deals, negotiations and power dynamics. But they also distort reality in ways that can be unhelpful if you are thinking about selling your own business.
Strip away the theatrics, though, and there are some genuinely useful lessons for property business owners. In fact, if you know what to look for, these shows can tell you a lot about how buyers think, where deals go wrong, and what actually drives value.
Let me explain.
If there is one theme that runs through Succession, it’s power. Who has it, who thinks they have it, and how quickly it can shift.
That translates directly into the real world.
In property business sales, leverage rarely comes from headline profit alone. It comes from how dependent the business is on you, how predictable the income is, and how easy it is for a buyer to step in and run it.
I often see founders assume that strong EBITDA will carry the deal. But if that income is tied up in personal relationships, inconsistent processes or undocumented agreements, a buyer will see risk, not strength.
The practical takeaway is simple: the more your business can stand on its own, the more negotiating power you retain.
Without that, conversations can quickly move from “what is this worth?” to “how do we structure around the risk?”
In Industry, timing is everything. Trades, exits, decisions. Move too early or too late and the outcome changes completely.
The same applies when selling a property business.
Many owners wait until they feel “ready” to sell. In reality, the best outcomes tend to come when the business is performing well, the numbers are clean, and there is no external pressure forcing a decision.
I have seen situations where an owner delays a conversation for a year or two, only to find that:
None of these kill a deal outright. But they do change the tone of the negotiation.
A well-timed sale is not about chasing a peak. It is about engaging with buyers while you still have options.
Dragon’s Den is probably the closest of the three to real dealmaking, but even there, decisions are compressed into minutes and driven by instinct as much as analysis.
In reality, most acquisitions are far more measured.
A serious buyer is not looking for a dramatic “yes” or “no” moment. They are looking to understand:
This is where many deals quietly fall apart.
Not because the business is unattractive, but because the detail does not quite stack up. Financials are unclear. Contracts are inconsistent. Processes live in someone’s head rather than on paper.
From the outside, it can feel like the buyer has lost interest. In truth, they have just uncovered uncertainty.
And uncertainty affects value.
One thing Succession does get right is that deals are rarely straightforward. There are always layers: equity, control, incentives, future performance.
In property, this is often where the most productive conversations happen.
A deal is not just a price. It is:
For example, if a lettings business has strong recurring income but relies heavily on the founder, a buyer may structure part of the deal around a handover period or future performance.
That is not a negative. In many cases, it is what allows a deal to happen at all, and often at a better overall outcome.
Owners who understand this tend to approach negotiations more confidently. They see structure as a tool, not a compromise.
What television captures well – particularly in Succession – is the emotional weight behind deals.
Selling a business you have built over years is not purely a financial decision. There is identity, legacy and, often, uncertainty about what comes next.
Where this becomes relevant commercially is in how decisions are made under pressure.
I have seen owners:
None of these are inherently right or wrong. But they are easier to navigate if you recognise them early.
Prepared owners tend to negotiate with more clarity. They know their numbers, understand their options, and are not making decisions for the first time in the middle of a transaction.
For all their insight, these shows largely ignore one critical factor: preparation.
Good exits are not created in the final negotiation. They are built over time.
In the property world, that usually means:
These are not glamorous things. They would not make good television. But they are exactly what buyers look for. And they are often the difference between a smooth process and a difficult one.
If there is one lesson to take from Industry, Succession and Dragon’s Den, it is this: deals are not won in the room. They are won long before you get there.
The more prepared you are, the more options you have. The more options you have, the better your outcome is likely to be.
That does not mean you need to be ready to sell tomorrow. But it does mean understanding how your business would be viewed through a buyer’s lens today.
Because that perspective changes how you build, how you operate and, ultimately, how you exit.
If you are curious how your business would stand up to that kind of scrutiny, let me know.