
Jared Johnson sits down with M&A advisor and serial entrepreneur Christine McDannell, founder of The Magnolia Firm, to unpack a deal that did not go as planned. Christine shares how an acquisition of a dance and fitness studio moved from seemingly profitable to cash-flow negative once she took over operations. They walk through what she missed because of speed, compressed diligence, and incomplete financial visibility, including licensing costs, seasonal revenue swings, and marketing spend that lived outside the books. Christine explains why raising pay and funding upgrades early created unintended expectations, how customer and operational pressures compounded the situation, and why working capital is the difference between surviving a rough stretch and being forced to shut the doors. The conversation challenges the idea that buying businesses is easy and highlights how even experienced operators can misstep when timelines are rushed and the full expense picture is not visible.Main Takeaways:Speed compresses diligence and increases the odds of missing material risksA business that looks profitable can become unprofitable quickly once all true expenses hit the buyer’s booksWorking capital determines whether a downturn becomes temporary or fatalMarketing spend and other costs can be obscured when accounts sit outside the primary P&LImmediate raises and visible capital improvements can create entitlement and escalating demandsSeasonality can materially impact revenue and must be stress tested before closingCustomer service businesses carry emotional and operational volatility that buyers often underestimateNot every concept is best acquired; some are better built from scratch with rent and unit economics designed correctlyTransparency about failures helps reset expectations and protects new buyers from unrealistic narrativesEpisode Highlights:Christine’s background: 22 years as an entrepreneur, 10 startups, acquisitions, roll-ups, and turnaroundsLaunching The Magnolia Firm in 2021 and advising sellers while continuing to acquire businesses personallyThe trigger: seeing a studio opportunity and moving quickly after the seller shut it downOperating under LOI: taking over operations immediately while still finalizing purchase termsReactivating customers after a sudden closure and attempting to stabilize revenueUnderestimating licensing, regulatory, and operating costs that surfaced post-closeEarly missteps: raising pay immediately and funding upgrades without validating margin stabilityDiscovering hidden marketing expenses and incomplete financial visibilityRealizing the business was running a material monthly loss and funding the burn personallyThe decision point: when to stop financing losses and close the businessThe broader lesson: why speed, ego, and optimism can override discipline in acquisitionsConnect with Jared:If you have questions for Jared, visit: https://jaredwjohnson.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/jaredwjohnson/Connect with Christine:<a href="https://www
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