The Search Fund Model
The search fund model has evolved from a niche career path into a significant segment of lower middle market M&A. Stanford’s 2024 Search Fund Study documents the model’s trajectory: from 20-30 searches launched annually a decade ago to 94 in 2023.
The model works in two phases. In the search phase, an entrepreneur raises $400-500K from 10-20 investors and spends 18-24 months finding a company to acquire. In the acquisition phase, the searcher raises $5-30M in equity from the same investors (plus new ones) and uses a combination of equity, SBA loans, and seller financing to complete the deal.
The economics are compelling for both sides. Searchers receive 20-30% of equity at acquisition with step-up vesting, creating significant upside. Investors see average pre-tax IRRs of 35% across the asset class (Stanford, 2024), driven by the combination of a motivated operator-CEO, lower middle market valuations (4-6x EBITDA), and operational improvement potential.
Who Invests in Search Funds
Traditional search fund investors
The core investor base is roughly 100 individuals and families who have invested in multiple search funds, often through Stanford GSB, HBS, or other top MBA networks. Many are former searchers themselves who acquired companies, operated them successfully, and now invest in the next generation. They typically invest $20-50K per search in the search phase.
Family offices
Family offices are the fastest-growing segment of search fund investors. Those with expertise in lower middle market acquisitions see search funds as a way to back talented operators at attractive valuations. Family offices often invest larger amounts ($100-250K in search, $1-5M in acquisition equity) and bring operational expertise alongside capital.
Institutional programs
Several institutional investors now run dedicated search fund programs: Pacific Lake Partners, Search Fund Partners, and Relay Investments focus exclusively on the space. These firms typically invest across 10-20+ searches per year and bring a portfolio approach to a historically individual-driven asset class.
Independent sponsors and self-funded search
Not every searcher follows the traditional search fund model. Self-funded searchers skip the search capital raise entirely, funding their own search while sourcing acquisition equity on a deal-by-deal basis. Independent sponsors operate similarly but may have a broader mandate or run multiple acquisitions. Both models draw from the same investor universe but with different economics.
Finding Search Fund Investors Outside the Core Network
The biggest challenge for searchers outside Stanford and HBS is access. The traditional search fund investor network is tight-knit and relationship-driven. Three approaches expand your reach:
Alumni networks. Even if you’re not from a top-3 MBA, many search fund investors will take meetings with credible candidates from other strong programs. The IESE, Darden, and Kellogg search fund communities have grown significantly.
Search fund conferences and communities. Events like the Stanford Search Fund Conference, Searchfunder.com, and ETA-focused Slack communities connect searchers with investors. These are higher-signal environments than general private equity conferences.
Data-driven investor discovery. PipelineRoad’s investor database tracks search fund investor activity, including who has backed recent searches, their sector preferences, typical check sizes, and current deployment capacity. This is especially valuable for searchers targeting industries or geographies outside the traditional search fund sweet spot.
Search Fund vs. Private Equity
Both search funds and PE funds acquire private companies, but the models diverge in structure, economics, and operator involvement. In PE, professional investors raise blind pool funds, acquire portfolio companies, install management teams, and optimize for exit. In search funds, the searcher becomes the full-time CEO and operator. PE targets larger companies (typically $25M+ EBITDA) while search funds focus on the lower middle market ($1-5M EBITDA).
For investors, the choice between backing search funds and LP commitments to PE funds often comes down to involvement level. Search fund investors typically have closer relationships with their searchers, provide operational advice, and participate in board governance. PE fund investors are more passive LPs.
How PipelineRoad Helps Searchers
PipelineRoad brings the same investor matching intelligence we use for fund managers raising capital to the search fund space. Our platform surfaces investors who have previously backed searches with similar profiles to yours, identifies family offices entering the search fund space, and maps warm introduction paths through alumni and community connections. Whether you’re raising search capital or acquisition equity, the same principle applies: the quality of your investor targeting determines the speed and success of your raise. For a broader view of how capital raising works across asset classes, see our capital raising overview and PE fundraising guide.