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October 8, 2025 • 29 mins

Thoma Bravo Co-Founder and Managing Partner Orlando Bravo speaks with Bloomberg’s Dani Burger about the future of private markets and the shakeout in private equity at the LAVCA Week Conference in New York.

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Bloomberg Audio Studios, Podcasts, Radio News Bloomberg.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Donny Berger is speaking with Tolma Bravo founder Orlando Bravo
at the LAVKA conference here in New York.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Let's listen it, or Orlando. There's so much change happening
right now in the industry, but you started your career
also at a moment of change. I would love to
get into that because you started as a banker at
Morgan Stanley. The lore of your career goes is that
you're often tried by your managers to pigeonhole you into
just Latin. But here, you say, here the expert in
private capital when it comes to software in tech. How

(00:35):
did you end up there?

Speaker 1 (00:36):
By luck?

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yes, But Danny, it's a pleasure of being here with you.
We're friends, We've gotten to work together over the years,
and I organized my whole New York week and a
half around this conference. It's very special for me to
be here, being from a small town in Puerto Rico
with all these great investors from Latin America, are people

(00:59):
that have an in Latin America venture capital in the region.
It's it's really really special for me. When I started
a Morgan Stanley I grew up in a small town,
may Leagues, Puerto Rico. For anyone that has been there,
probably very few of you have. And through a lot
of opportunity and seeing things that I was able to see,
I got lucky and was able to get a job

(01:21):
in Wall Street and they put me in the Latin
America Group in M and A A.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
Morgan Stanley.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
But next to our group, there was an equally small group.
This is in nineteen ninety two, that was the Tech group.
And people were, you know, mor instantly saying, Latin American
group is small. This tech group is really small. And
for some reason we were just when we would get
together every week, those two groups will get together, I
was like, I want to be in that tech group.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
There was there was something about it.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
And I'm not a coder, I'm not an engineer by background,
but it was it seemed to be a business that
really fit young people really well, where you could have
a lot of responsibility early in your career. So I
went to the West Coast. I went to graduate school there.
Then the same thing. I couldn't get a job in
private equity. There were very few jobs available in the

(02:10):
alternatives industry back then.

Speaker 1 (02:12):
It's grown so much.

Speaker 2 (02:13):
And at the end, a couple of people gave me
an opportunity of being the Latin America Group, but Carl
Toma hired me and said, if you want to do tech,
you know, come on in and I'll open up an
office in San Francisco, and we started then.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
I think it's also important to note even though you
didn't stay with Latin Investing, that you went into tech,
but you've always kept close ties to Puerto Rico and
continued to do work for the community there big time.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
I'm actually going to Puerto Rico next week for a
foundation event. My experience thus far has been one of opportunity.
I'm very self aware of that. Even when I look
at our organization today, Toma Bravo. We were one of
the first to do a software buyout deal during the

(02:57):
dotcom bubble collapse. Even though we were one of the
first to do tech buyouts, and we were one of
the people or one of the groups that created this
category that has been very profitable for LPs and it's
the biggest category in buyouts and will continue to grow
and continue to take share. I've never created anything new.

(03:18):
I got the opportunity to learn from one of the
best investors in the world, Karl Toma. I got the
opportunity to learn from the best operator I'll ever meet,
Marcel Bernard, the most important person that has ever worked
at our company during the seventies run different divisions of Motorola.
We grab both concepts and just applied in to an
industry that we really really liked.

Speaker 3 (03:40):
What a time to be doing that, though, helping found
Tomo Bravo in two thousand and eight. Really is the
tech bubble, the remnants of it, the financial crisis a
suchial a moment in time. How does how did that
help guide you? How you grew Tomo Bravo and how
you think about this market today, especially when so many
parallels are being drawn between what's happening and the AI
at the moment tack bubble of the two thousands.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Yeah, and by the way, to win with Puerto Rico. Therefore,
since I was given so many opportunities, our whole business
is based on giving opportunities to existing management, to our people,
promoting from within and in Puerto Rico to try to
change the opportunity set so the more people participate and
have an equal chance. That's kind of what I try

(04:22):
to do there in terms of what what happened during
the bubble, One important lesson is to focus on the
business and the numbers that are right in front of
you instead of being too affected by the noise. These
are general things that are going on right now. AI

(04:45):
is going to be transformative. It's going to be so powerful,
it's going to be so exciting, and it's very very
new and very early. So many people will be are
paralyzed now, including LPs, to say, do I touch this
area a services company? To I touch a software company,
is it's going to be disrupted. I just get these

(05:07):
inputs all the time of how everything is going to
change overnight. It will change significantly, but it will be
an evolution. In right after the dot com bubble burst,
but I don't know who remembers and who was there
Around that time, people thought that enterprise software was dead.
One article after the other, these stocks traded at one

(05:30):
and two dollars a share. Can you believe that it's
one of the greatest industry's one point five trillion dollar
economy today. We made a lot of mistakes before that,
but we would go to these companies and they would
let us look at all their files. We'd say, no,
this is a good business. All the customers are renewing,
they're buying more. They really need to use these products.
So just focusing on the details and the business really

(05:53):
helps you do something a little bit different than everybody else.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
Well, it's interesting because it's a two track, and I
want to get into software more, but it feels like
a two t you're describing LP's being frozen on legacy
tech or evolving tech, let's call it. And then on
the other side, a frenzy around AI and huge valuations
that a lot of these private capital or public market
companies are getting around AI. Do you look at that
and say we've gone too far?

Speaker 2 (06:19):
Look, AI and software go together. That is becoming clearer
and clearer. Look at the two hundred and fifty billion
dollar market cap software companies.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
They have.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
Absorbed AI and now they're selling huge augentic solutions to
their customers. We have a portfolio of about thirty billion
dollars in revenue. Now we're private equity, so we can
react faster than other forms of governance. All of our
companies now have big AI solutions embedded in their products,

(06:54):
or identic solutions to close the loop. Another available markets
are tam total of market has double tripled. It really
really goes together. It's not like this new thing where
the corporate enterprise would completely change all of their processes,
all of their technology, all of their interdependencies. AI will

(07:15):
create new solutions and new use cases, many of which
will allow people to use technology more than they were
doing before. Look, there's so many solutions today that exist
that allow customers to save half of the cost in
many items in supply chain, in many, many, many categories,
and right now society or companies use them five ten percent.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
So it all takes time, but once again, it goes together.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
There is, at least you can see in public market
those nerves. Salesforce Adobe, some of the worst performing stocks
underperform the s and fed down think about twenty two
percent year to date because of that. And maybe that's
a correct way to look at those specific companies. Maybe not.
Has there been a valuation reset in private capital as well?

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Well?

Speaker 3 (08:00):
And to what degree does that hurt you or does
it present opportunities?

Speaker 2 (08:05):
The chairman said that he's an optimist, and I'm always
an optimist. When you own a company, you always have
opportunities now you mentioned a couple of stocks, great great companies. Now,
is their valuations and multiples down because there's so MANI threat?
Or are there multiples down because their growth rate has

(08:27):
gone down? We really think it's the latter. Investors buy numbers.
They put money out and they buy numbers. That's what
the greatest investors do. The rest is noise and the
market is highly highly highly efficient. So I don't I
don't think that there's been this rerating of the sector

(08:50):
because of AI, because really smart investors agree that this,
over time will help these companies that are trusted by
the customers, that have proprietary data that are embedded in
their systems.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
It's helpful.

Speaker 2 (09:03):
I cannot even begin to describe how helpful it is.

Speaker 3 (09:08):
Does it at all though put pressure on margins? For example,
if you have someone that says, all right, I can
find a cheaper solution that's AI driven. It doesn't take
as much, it doesn't cost as much. Does the whole
industry pricing need to change because of the AI offering.

Speaker 2 (09:24):
There's always the question whether software is econ one oh
one where price equesst marginal cost. You build all these products,
but the marginal cost of delivering one is extremely low,
so you kind of raise to the bottom and you
have to control discounting the key and what we try
to do is have the lowest cost of production, have

(09:45):
the most efficient company there is. So when we do
buy these billion dollar companies, we are very upfront that
the first course of action is we're going to reduce
the cost of the business, try to get it to
a forty percent and margin usually from zero. And if
you have the best run company making the right investment decisions,

(10:07):
you can invest plenty in AI because you're not wasting
a lot of money in other activities or trying activities
that the company doesn't even have a core competency in doing.

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Well, Considering you've done that to so many companies, I'd
love to know how you're using AI internally. What about Toma,
Bravo's own processes. How are you utilizing AI.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
To grab information?

Speaker 2 (10:26):
It's really and I think most companies are using it
that way, right We all ask consumers use it to
ask questions, get quick data. Search companies as well are
using it in that way. We're using it to get
information a lot quicker. For example, at the end of
the quarter. We love those quarter ends. Now it's October
because companies have a January fiscal your end. That's something
that SaaS Companies did a while ago. But as we

(10:49):
come to the end of October, instead of me having
to call every single partner across our portfolio of sixty companies,
I just know the bookings results and you kind of
can consume that pretty quickly and say, oh, is this
are being good trends? And that really informs how you
invest in companies as well. All your pipeline of deals
is the industry slowing down, our customers buying more. But

(11:09):
the ability to consume information very quickly in data is
how we use it.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
I talked to one of your competitors, who maybe will
remain nameless, that so that they were experimenting with an
ai IC member that they would feed at all of
its information and all the decisions they made, and you
almost get kind of a vote or she I don't
think we can gender these things on the IC. Would
you ever do something like that? Would you use that
for actual decision making?

Speaker 2 (11:32):
That would be pretty cool. I mean we would, and
I've heard some VC firms have done that as well.
And this ICY member shows up and then has the
most power, and how could they possibly be wrong. They
have all the data, the super brain that would be
fun to do at some point.

Speaker 3 (11:47):
Okay, well you have to let me know.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
The thing is, I don't see, Danny.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
The thing is, all these things are very helpful right now,
but you try to think of your time during the day.
I always tell our team private equity, you have three
things to do. Get the money, get the deal, and
improve the deal. If in your eighteen hour day, if

(12:11):
you really want to stretch it that way seven days
a week trying to crush it and make money for
LPs in an ultra competitive market, you're not spending time
on those three it maybe a competitor is going to
do better. So you have to be careful how much
you're levitating and investing in projects that are intellectually interesting

(12:32):
versus actually getting that deal, which, as you know many
practitioners here, is very hard to convince a company that's
worth ten billion dollars to sell it to you, no
matter how poorly they're doing. And it's a day to
day we do control deals only it's a day to
day effort to improve the company. The head of sales quits.
Now you got a problem the pipeline is low. You

(12:55):
have a problem with a competitor, you have to take
out the cost. You have to track that company on
a monthly basis. For example, we do instead of quarterly
board meetings, given the intensity of our operations, we do
monthly operating reviews Adie Amternoon with every single company, all
the direct reports in the room, and these processes are
that is the alpha that our industry looks for in software.

(13:17):
It is incredibly huge. When we started in software, the
average software company lost money. Today and after the industry
became this one point five trillion, the average publicly trying
to software company loses money. There has been no operational
improvement in the public markets in almost thirty years in
the way software companies run. Now, groups like us, we

(13:38):
started small, we started producing twenty five percent margin, now
thirty five, now forty to forty five because we're also
buying better businesses and we've learned. But that is so
intense that it gives you very little time to pursue
internal projects.

Speaker 3 (13:52):
Well, you mentioned the things that you should be doing
if you are in this industry and delivering share, delivering
value to your LPs. One of them, of course, is exiting,
and this is an industry that has struggled with that
as a whole lafter maybe overinvesting. In twenty twenty one
and twenty twenty two, you've seen the rise of continuation vehicles,
for example, liquidity solutions, and many people would say it's

(14:14):
just a way to provide liquidity. It's the creativity of
this industry and it's a natural progression. Other people would
say it's a failure that you didn't get the exits
and that you're continuing things on where do you stand
on it.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Both it's pretty controversial. LPs have gotten used to it,
they've accepted this. I think you should do that as
the exception rather than the rule. You can also do
so many in your fund you mentioned valuations in our world.
Say you are looking at a fifteen percent growth company

(14:49):
that has high quality or revenue, that is a market
leader in its space, that is now highly profitable because
it's been owned by private equity. Those companies used to
trade in the private markets for or twenty to twenty
five times EBITDA, something in that range from one firm
to another. Now the valuations of those companies are fifteen
times EBITDA.

Speaker 1 (15:10):
So as an owner.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
The opportunity is that you can buy other companies out
on acquisitions much cheaper than you had in your model.
So you always try to use these things as an
owner to your advantage. You then have to create more
values so that at fifteen to seventeen times exit you
can produce the returns that your investors expect.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
And that's where it.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
Comes in, and it's that optimism of there's always something
you can do about it. When there was inflation, you
have this huge labor inflation in your employee base, but
that means you can raise prices to your customers even
more because these are productivity tools.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
Same thing if prices go down.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
So what happened in private equity and the reason why
I say the industry for a while, they're life us
its way is one of the reasons is people forgot
to sell our industry is you get the money, you
try to transform a company as best you can, and
then you sell that company. There is no permanent hold

(16:15):
in our industry. If you want to do that, go
to the public markets, form a holding company, tell your
investors I'm going to hold these things forever. Back me
and we'll figure out a way to do make money
that way buy my stock. Private equity is not that
the industry levitated too much, and we always say it's
much harder. Remember when I said how hard it is
to buy a company, it's much harder to sell it.

(16:38):
So our team has to spend more time selling a
company than buying a company. And that's something that we
do rigorously, and it's something that really helped us. You
and I were talking about in super Return. In the
last eighteen months, we delivered back to our investors twenty
billion in cash. That really helped our firm. Now it
didn't happen overnight. We were working on those deals and
on those sales for a while.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
So all these evergreen funds that are popping sounds like
they're a problem.

Speaker 2 (17:01):
Then it's if you hold a company too long in
private equity, and in this transformation world that we live
in that is not linear, you will ultimately face a
big project, especially in software, because it's not just the
technology change or AI or how you have to invest,
it's that these companies are exhausting to run. You live

(17:23):
quarter of a quarter. That's why it's tough for family
businesses to hold software companies. Right, It's not a thing
you go from one entrepreneur to the other. And it's
also a culture of employee ownership where employees, especially in
Silicon Valley, need to have that return and that pop
in their options and that restricted stock. So if you
hold these things for twenty thirty years, I mean, we

(17:43):
would love to. It'll be better for our business, will
make more money, but it's not the way to really
serve your customers as LPs.

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Well, as you.

Speaker 3 (17:50):
Mentioned when we had spoken earlier this summer, you were
really outfront with saying private equity has lost its way.
Where do we stand in that cycle?

Speaker 2 (17:57):
Now?

Speaker 3 (17:57):
Every now and then you hear news report of a
company or a fund that's tried to fundraise it doesn't
do so as successfully as it has in the past.
Where are we out in the shakeout? Are we about
to see some real visible pain between the haves and
have nots?

Speaker 2 (18:10):
We are in the middle of the shakeout. It's when
you see the few funds that raise all this great
amount of money. They have two things. They have great
performance and they have liquidity to their LPs.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
They have high.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
DPIs the investors in private equity states sovereign wealth funds.
That's where most of the capital comes from the big money.
Eighty percent of the money. Their boards still believe in
private equity. The ten year performance beats everything, the fifteen
year performance, the twenty year performance. The challenge is they

(18:47):
have an allocation usually to private equity or fifteen percent.
Some are growing in a little bit from thirteen, others
may be decreasing depending on their portfolios. That investor base
or that allocation is very stable, which is really nice
for us and for the industry. But that allocation is
stable because people get money back and they redeploy the money.

(19:10):
If not, that allocation would grow on indefinitely. So when
we meet with our own investors, we have a sheet
for every one of them, and that's the one piece
of paper we have is how much money they've given us,
how much money we've given back, and therefore how much
money maybe they.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Have left to redeploy.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
Because also as a manager, they cannot be or we
would love to one hundred percent concentrated into Mobravo by
continuing to give us capital. Then they need manager diversification.
So the people that have don't have liquidity and are
having problems, they're just going to go away.

Speaker 1 (19:42):
And I've never seen that in the industry.

Speaker 2 (19:44):
In thirty years, the best managers are going to get
a lot more money, and we're seeing that also in
the business.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
What does it look like for funds to just go away?
Is it they kind of quietly wind down? Does more
consolidation happen? Do you have some really high profile shakeouts?
What exactly does that even look like.

Speaker 2 (20:03):
We're seeing a lot of funds wind down and close
we meet with you know, we have most of our
our partners are most of the states and most of
the sovereign wealth funds, and I spend about twenty five
to thirty percent of my time with them to see
how our performance matches up to our competitors, to see
how they're doing. How else could we help them? Are

(20:24):
we doing enough co invest We are so close to
our partners and they are very open, and they tell us,
we're really worried about these dormant or zombie funds because
they've lost half their team, they've come to do something else,
and they're senior people know that they're wind down the
portfolio and that there's no future future fundraise. It is
still private equity is still a bit of a momentum business.

(20:47):
When you're returning a lot of money. Your people have
confidence to put money out, Investors have confidence to give
you money. People are happier. Everybody that carries worth something
to the team. People are getting promoted from within. The
older generation didn't lose ten years of opportunity. It's it's great.
So you see that now, and now that's accelerating because
the added pressure is the S and P with a

(21:09):
magnificent seven in the last five years, has done great.
It's hard to compete with those stocks. And yeah, that's
where we are.

Speaker 3 (21:16):
So to be clear, the issue isn't just that exits
aren't happening. It's that just straight up managers are underperforming
underperforming public markets.

Speaker 2 (21:24):
Over the last five years, the average private equity firm
and venture capital firm has underperformed the S and P
five hundred. Now, the best of the best always crush it.
They find a way, and we're talking about losing its way.
And for I mean, there's a lot of experience in
this room, but for those of you that are younger

(21:44):
in starting a firm or building a firm, private equity
should be agnostic as to what the environment is. You're
not buying a stock, you're buying a company. It's not
what's happening to you, Well, you buy a stock and
the stuff price goes down and inflation goes up, or
this happens, or there's a terif or trade. You can

(22:08):
only sell the stock or keep it. But things are
happening to you. When you own a company, there is
so much you can do about it. You just have
to adapt to the times.

Speaker 3 (22:17):
What do you then make as the shakeout is happening
that there's a serious and big push into wealth and retail.
Some would criticize that and say it's because fundraising has
been challenged that people are looking into other avenues. Is
there a bit of that happening in this industry?

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Look, it's new, just like AI or the power these
predictive models is new. How will it evolve? Would it
be a good thing for the industry and institutional investors
or not? Once again, on those things, since they haven't happened,
we don't know. Now, look at what I just said

(22:56):
about institutions that fifteen percent. One of the reasons it's
going to grow so much is because allocation by retail
and private wealth is close to zero percent, So it's.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Going to go up.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
I mean, that's the huge market that is completely untapped
that will be tapped into this alternative asset class for us.
The way we see it is we are going to
look at it, but very carefully and very strategically. And
the reason we're going to go slowly and strategically into
it is that investors, retail investors and high net worth

(23:30):
investors really need to understand what the manager does, how
the manager invests. I go back to the point of
our business is not linear. We buy a billion dollar
revenue company that has no earnings, we.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
Cut twenty percent of the cost.

Speaker 2 (23:45):
We do this with those projects, even when we get
the best outcomes at the.

Speaker 1 (23:50):
End, they weren't a straight line.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
So with these investors that have liquidity, if they don't
understand really well what you're doing, they may make bad
choices with your investment over time, just like we go.
I've mentioned thirty percent of my times with institutions, I
really need our partners to know exactly what we're doing,
why we're doing it. When we make a mistake, they
understand when we do well, there's a reason why we
got lucky or did well. Explaining that to the retail

(24:15):
channel is going to be absolutely critical.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Think about it.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
Right, we're investing in the capital. You want to know
who you're dealing with for sure.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
I mean, but there are other firms. You can make
the argument they're going full speed ahead and maybe there's
something of a first move or advantage. Do you look
at some of the things happening Apollo having an ETF
others discussing trying to get into four oh one case
and worry that maybe you need to get in first.

Speaker 2 (24:41):
There's that fomo and you have to resist it, especially
since there's so much demand for it. I mean, if
you open the flood gates, there is just incredible demand
because it's zero going to fifteen, and people want actually
and rightly so individuals to be part of the economy,
me in North American economy, especially in tech and software,

(25:03):
where you're targeting smaller companies with owners that can really
add value to these companies as as an alternative right
to just buind the magnificent seven forever, which with forever
won't do as great as they've done over the last
five years.

Speaker 3 (25:16):
It's really interesting because there's pressure and other people are thriving,
and amid all of that, you had one of the
biggest take privates of the year until EA came along
with the fifty five. I know we thought we were
they knocked you off.

Speaker 1 (25:30):
The throne this way, Well, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
My partners were like one of them is ripping his
eyebrows out.

Speaker 1 (25:34):
He didn't understand.

Speaker 2 (25:37):
I thought it was a good thing because at some
point we can't be the only crazy ones doing all
these ten dollar dollars deals.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
I mean literally they but they up to you by
fifty five billion, the biggest LBO in history. Just given
some of the stresses we were talking about. Is that
a one off and aberration? Is Toma Bravo doing a
huge deal with day Force and Jepson Is that a
one off? Or have the mega LBOs returned?

Speaker 2 (25:59):
It's look, this is not new for us, right. You
mentioned this year Jefferson and day four so that we're
both around ten billion announced deals. But we did proof
Point ninet eleven billion, Real Page at ten billion, Sale
Point at eight billion, Ping and four Draw at eight billion.

Speaker 1 (26:15):
I mean, we were just going.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
There because our strategy is to focus on our two
core competencies. One is our team really knows how to
buy the best, the market leader in these categories of apps,
infrastructure and cyber the number one player, and it's so
important in cyber to buy the number one player. You
cannot go in and buy the number three, four, five.

(26:38):
I can talk about that all day. Why that's the case,
and our second team score competency is turning a great
innovator which those companies are into actually a great business.
Taking that twenty percent growth of the company and innovation
and market leadership and making it work for the shareholder.

Speaker 1 (26:56):
When those companies were.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Delivering zero cash, have them delivered forty percent cash. That way,
our investors become fundamental investors in software instead of depending
on a revenue multiple exit, which is completely arbitrary and
completely volatile. They depend on selling the company or they're
selling the company at a twenty five PE, highly justifiable
as a small premium to the s and P five

(27:18):
hundred for four times the growth and a much much
better business, all recurring where cash flow is greater than PE.
We turn a revenue multiple to an even multiple. What
happened is as the SaaS industry has really taken off,
and it's still at its infancye fifty percent of the
systems are still on premise, we have this enormous opportunity

(27:39):
to take these beautiful companies and transform in that way. Now,
we need to keep proving that we can generate the
performance at the scale that we're doing. And we've had
some wonderful exits in the past at a big scale.
So it's nice to see somebody do a fifty five
billion dollar deal because now we can tell our investors
we're middle market and we do middle market only, and

(28:01):
we're really targeted, and these things are really small. Were
like you see, we told you these companies.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
Are yeah, only about a minute left Orlando. And I
know you've touched on this in different places, but it
might be nice to just put it together for everyone
watching and for trying to navigate a particularly difficult time
in private equity and private capital investing. What are just
the most important principles to be concentrating on it this time.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
Focus on the business, you know, focus on your investors,
but really spend most of your time cult calling all
the companies. Really focus on the business. Get away from
what's the firm going to be in ten years or
twenty years, what's the strategy, what's.

Speaker 1 (28:44):
My org structure?

Speaker 2 (28:46):
Mentor your people to get the deal and then figure
out a way, a repeatable process that you can continuously
improve the company. Have your feet on the ground and
focus on the business that's right in front of you.

Speaker 1 (28:57):
You know, do the work, do the diligence.

Speaker 2 (29:01):
It is so important, and don't be as affected by
what everybody thinks. The answers are sometimes so obvious investing
wise and operating that you just need to go to
the source and focus on it. Our group has become
much larger now we have one hundred and eighty billion
dollars under management. We work as hard as possible to
run it just like when we did when we did
our first deal at fifty million. And frankly, the problems

(29:23):
that our companies have and the opportunities that our companies
have and how we generate a deal and convinced a
founder or a big company to work with us is
the same as it was before.

Speaker 1 (29:33):
So remaining true to that is very, very important.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
That's the perfect note to end it on. Orlando, thank
you so much for joining this morning, and thank you
all for watching. Please join me in thinking, Orlando. Bravo, bravo,
thank you
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