What PE should ask of bakers
How strong is the go-to-market strategy? For investors, the first step is to understand the bakery’s core strengths. Is it a leader in fresh or frozen, branded or private label? Does it dominate a region or supply national chains? Understanding the company’s position across product lines, sales channels and geographic markets is key to determining its scalability.
Is the business prepared for growth? PE firms invest with one goal: to help businesses grow and create value. Achieving strong returns depends on the company being bigger, stronger and more competitive at exit than it was at entry. That growth, however, is rarely driven solely by customer demand. More often, the real obstacles are inside the four walls of the business: capacity, systems or talent.
PE firms should ask hard questions early: Is the plant operating at full capacity? What will it take — in terms of time, cost and disruption — to add a new line or facility? Are existing enterprise resource planning and quality systems robust enough to serve larger retail or foodservice customers? Does the management team have the depth of experience to lead through expansion?
Identifying these bottlenecks upfront allows both sides to be realistic about the growth journey. When gaps exist, strong PE partners should be prepared to provide more than capital, offering operational expertise, leadership support, and resources to remove barriers and unlock the next stage of growth.
What role could M&A play? In a fragmented industry like bakery, acquisitions can unlock new customers, products or geographies. However, M&A also brings potential integration challenges. Does the team have the skills necessary to execute alongside the guidance of the PE firm? Will customers benefit from the combination? Are the projected synergies achievable?
A two-way street
It’s easy to forget due diligence runs both ways. While PE firms conduct rigorous reviews — digging into financials, operations and market position — bakers should be equally thorough in evaluating their potential partner. Both sides need to ask hard questions upfront, clarify expectations and confirm their visions align.
Equally important is cultural fit. Even when the numbers and strategies look promising, mismatched values or working styles can derail a partnership. For a family-or founder-owned bakery, it matters whether the PE firm respects the heritage and culture that built the business. Likewise, investors should gauge whether the company’s leadership team is open to new ways of operating and disciplined execution. A shared culture of transparency, accountability and mutual respect can be just as critical as financial performance in determining long-term success.
When the partnership is right, the results can be transformative. Bakeries gain access to capital, expertise and networks that accelerate growth. Investors gain a resilient, in-demand business with strong customer relationships. Together, they can scale faster, serve more customers and weather industry challenges with confidence.
This has been adapted from the October | Q4 2025 issue of Commercial Baking. Read the full digital edition here.