Corporate Finance, Valuation & Transaction Advisory · Due Diligence
Deal Sourcing & Partner Search
Most acquisition and joint-venture processes fail before diligence ever begins — not because the wrong target was rejected, but because the right target was never found, or an unsuitable one was pursued for lack of a proper search.
Chartered Accountants · Dubai · Since 1986
Deal Sourcing & Partner Search is the origination discipline that sits upstream of due diligence and transaction execution: systematically identifying, screening, and approaching companies, business owners, or investors in the UAE who fit a defined acquisition, joint-venture, or investment mandate, before any term sheet or exclusivity is discussed. It exists because the UAE's mid-market and family-business economy is not transparent by default — many attractive targets are not on any broker's list, have never engaged an advisor, and will only respond to a credible, well-briefed approach from a party they can verify is serious. A search process that relies solely on inbound broker deal flow sees a narrow, self-selected slice of the market; a structured outbound search reaches the wider universe of businesses that fit the mandate but are not actively for sale.
At PNPC, a deal sourcing engagement begins with translating the client's strategic brief — sector, size band, geography within the UAE, ownership structure preference, and deal rationale (market entry, capability acquisition, consolidation, or capital deployment) — into a written search criteria document that becomes the filter for every candidate considered. From there we build a long list using a combination of public and licensed-authority sources (trade licence and DED/free zone registries, industry associations, trade directories), sector knowledge accumulated through our audit and advisory practice, and referral networks across our Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and India offices, before narrowing to a short list through a first-pass screen against the criteria document. Each shortlisted candidate is then approached — under an agreed confidentiality protocol and, where appropriate, anonymised at first contact — to gauge genuine interest, ownership readiness to transact, and basic fit, before any sensitive information changes hands in either direction.
The UAE presents specific sourcing considerations that a generic cross-border search process does not surface. Ownership of UAE mid-market businesses is frequently concentrated in first- or second-generation family structures, where the decision-maker may not be the person listed as the trade licence holder or general manager, and where succession dynamics — rather than a formal sale process — are often the real trigger for openness to a transaction. Free zone versus mainland licensing affects not just a target's tax profile under the Corporate Tax regime but also who can legally hold shares and on what terms, which shapes which candidates suit a share-purchase structure versus a joint-venture or asset-based approach. And because many UAE SME owners have never been through a formal M&A process, first-contact framing matters disproportionately: an approach that reads as a cold sales pitch, rather than a credibly briefed, confidentiality-respecting introduction from a recognised advisory firm, can close a door that a better-framed approach would have opened.
The output of a PNPC sourcing engagement is not a single introduction — it is a managed pipeline: a long list with rationale for inclusion or exclusion against the criteria, a short list of approached candidates with a live status against each (declined, interested, awaiting owner decision, in preliminary discussion), and, for candidates that progress, a structured handover into indicative-terms discussion and, subsequently, due diligence. We track engagement outcomes transparently so the client always knows how many candidates were screened, how many were approached, how many responded, and why the ones that dropped out did so — rather than being presented with a single opportunity with no visibility into the process that produced it.
Cost and timeline scale with mandate breadth and sector opacity: a narrowly defined mandate in a well-documented sector can produce a workable short list within a few weeks, while a broad or unconventional mandate — an unusual sector combination, a specific ownership-transition trigger, or a geographically dispersed criteria set — takes longer and benefits from iterative refinement of the search criteria as early candidate feedback sharpens what 'fit' actually means in practice. PNPC confirms a scoped, fixed or capped fee for the sourcing phase in the engagement letter, separate from any subsequent due diligence, valuation, or transaction advisory fee, so the client is not committed to a full deal-advisory retainer before there is even a candidate to evaluate.
Sourcing work also differs by who the client is on the other side of the transaction. A cross-border acquirer approaching a UAE mainland trading company faces a different verification burden than a UAE-based investor approaching a DIFC- or ADGM-regulated candidate, where change-of-control and shareholder-suitability rules sit with the DFSA or FSRA rather than the DED or a commercial free zone authority — and PNPC builds that regulatory reality into the criteria document from the outset rather than discovering it once a candidate has already been approached. Candidates that are themselves structured through an offshore vehicle (JAFZA Offshore, RAK ICC) or a corporate-service-provider-administered holding company require an additional layer of verification before outreach, since the person actually authorised to discuss a transaction may sit several steps removed from the trade licence holder or registered agent of record.
Where a mandate touches a Designated Non-Financial Business or Profession sector, or where the acquiring capital originates outside the UAE, PNPC also builds basic source-of-funds and counterparty legitimacy considerations into the search discipline early — not as a formal AML opinion, which sits outside a sourcing engagement's scope, but as a practical filter that avoids introducing a client to a counterparty, or presenting a client's approach to a counterparty, in a way that later creates friction once formal KYC and goAML-related checks are run during due diligence. A search process that ignores this until the diligence phase risks a late-stage withdrawal after both sides have already invested weeks of relationship-building.
Conflicts of interest are managed explicitly rather than assumed away. Because PNPC's audit and advisory client base is itself a meaningful sourcing channel, we confirm at the outset whether a candidate identified through that network is, or has been, a PNPC audit or advisory client, and disclose that relationship to the search client before any approach is made. Where two separate PNPC clients have mandates that could plausibly compete for the same candidate, we disclose the conflict and, where necessary, decline to run both in parallel rather than risk either client's confidentiality.
When a structured sourcing and search process earns its cost
Planning a UAE market entry or expansion by acquisition, but with no specific target already identified — the search itself is the first deliverable, not an afterthought to a deal already in motion
Seeking a joint-venture or local partner to satisfy a licensing, sector-specific, or commercial-relationship requirement in the UAE, where the right counterparty is not already known to you
An investor or family office with defined sector and size criteria wanting a disciplined, criteria-led pipeline rather than reacting one-by-one to broker-shopped opportunities
Consolidation strategies where a UAE operator wants to approach several fragmented competitors or complementary businesses systematically, rather than pursuing one relationship-driven lead at a time
Situations where relying on inbound broker deal flow has produced only overpriced, pre-shopped, or poorly-fitting opportunities and a proactive outbound search is needed to reach the wider, non-listed market
Cross-border acquirers (Indian, GCC, European, or other) unfamiliar with the UAE mid-market landscape who need local sourcing expertise, trade licence and DED/free zone registry familiarity, and a credible first-contact approach that a foreign buyer cannot easily replicate alone
Family businesses or founders approaching a succession point where a proactive, confidential search for a buyer or investor is preferable to an open broker listing that signals distress or urgency to the market
You need an anonymised, confidentiality-respecting first approach to sensitive targets — for example approaching a competitor or a business with an undisclosed succession situation — where a direct approach from the acquirer itself would be premature or counterproductive
A board or investment committee wants documented evidence of a disciplined search process, not just the single opportunity a broker happened to bring, before approving diligence spend on a specific target
You need to benchmark several live candidates against each other on a consistent set of criteria before committing exclusivity or diligence budget to any single one
The mandate sits in a regulated sector (financial services, healthcare, education) where the candidate universe is narrow, public information is limited, and only a credible, advisor-led approach is likely to get past the gatekeeping around a change-of-control conversation
You are running, or plan to run, a competitive process approaching several candidates in the same sector in parallel, and need the outreach sequenced and managed so it does not leak intent or damage your negotiating position with any one of them
When a lighter-touch or different engagement is more appropriate
You already have a specific, identified target and an agreed basis for discussion — the appropriate next step is due diligence or valuation, not a sourcing search
The search criteria are so broad or undefined that no meaningful filter can be applied — an initial strategy or feasibility engagement to sharpen the mandate is a better first step than an open-ended search
You are looking for a passive financial investment (listed securities, a fund allocation) rather than a direct operating business acquisition or partnership — that sits outside a deal-sourcing mandate
The intended relationship is a straightforward vendor, supplier, or distributor arrangement rather than an equity, joint-venture, or acquisition relationship — ordinary commercial sourcing does not require this scope of confidential search process
You want PNPC to broker or negotiate the transaction as principal, or to act as agent taking a success fee on the deal value — PNPC's role is advisory search and screening, not deal brokerage or agency
Your own network, existing relationships, or an already-engaged investment bank or broker realistically covers the relevant candidate universe, and the constraint is deal execution rather than deal origination
The mandate is for a purely internal restructuring or a related-party transaction with no genuine external counterparty search required
You need the search completed within days rather than weeks — a disciplined, confidentiality-respecting search process cannot be meaningfully compressed below the time genuine screening and first-contact outreach requires
The engagement is effectively an executive search for an individual hire rather than a corporate counterparty search — that is a recruitment mandate, not deal sourcing
You need dedicated bilingual legal drafting or courtroom representation as the core deliverable — PNPC's outreach is conducted in the language appropriate to the candidate, but formal legal translation, contract negotiation, and representation sit with your UAE legal counsel
Deal sourcing and partner search engagement models for UAE transactions
| Search Model | What It Covers | Typical Use Case | Key Limitation | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Criteria Definition & Market Mapping | Translating the strategic brief into written search criteria and producing a landscape map of the addressable candidate universe in the UAE | Clients with a general acquisition or JV appetite but no sharpened criteria yet — used as the foundation before outreach begins | Does not itself produce approached candidates or engagement outcomes — a scoping step, not a search | 1–2 weeks |
| Long List Screening | Compiling a broad candidate list from registry, sector, and referral sources and screening against the criteria document | Sectors with reasonably good public and licensed-authority data availability | Long list quality depends on sector transparency — informal or undocumented businesses may not surface through registry-based screening alone | 2–3 weeks |
| Short List Development & Confidential Approach | Narrowing to priority candidates and making a confidentiality-protected, anonymised-where-appropriate first approach to gauge interest | Most standard sourcing mandates — this is the core deliverable of a typical engagement | Response rate and pace depend on candidate willingness to engage, which PNPC cannot guarantee or control | 3–6 weeks from long list |
| Full Managed Pipeline (Search-to-Introduction) | End-to-end process from criteria definition through approached candidates to a structured introduction and indicative-terms discussion | Acquirers or investors without an internal corporate development function to manage the process themselves | Highest engagement scope and cost of the available models — proportionate for material or repeated deal activity | 6–12 weeks, mandate-dependent |
| Reverse Search (Partner-Seeking Mandate) | Sourcing on behalf of a UAE business or family owner seeking an investor, acquirer, or JV partner, rather than an acquirer seeking a target | Succession planning, capital-raising, or a UAE operator seeking a strategic or financial partner | Requires the seeking party's own financial and operational information to be diligence-ready before serious counterparties will engage | 4–10 weeks, depending on readiness |
| Sector Consolidation Sweep | Systematic outreach to multiple fragmented operators in a defined sector for a client pursuing a roll-up or consolidation strategy | Consolidation-minded acquirers targeting several smaller competitors or complementary businesses | Higher coordination complexity — managing several parallel candidate relationships without cross-signalling intent between them | 8–16 weeks, phased |
| Introduction-Only (Named Candidate) | PNPC facilitates a confidential first introduction to one or more specific, client-identified candidates using our network and credibility | Client already knows the target but wants a credible, confidentiality-managed third-party introduction rather than a cold approach | Narrowest scope — does not include the screening, criteria, or long-list workstreams of a full search | 1–3 weeks |
| Regulated-Sector Sourcing | Search and approach for candidates in a DFSA-, FSRA-, or sector-regulator-governed activity, with change-of-control and shareholder-suitability considerations built into the criteria from the outset | Financial services, healthcare, education, or other licensed-sector acquisitions and JV searches | Narrower candidate universe and slower approach cadence than an unregulated-sector search, since gatekeeping around a change-of-control conversation is inherently more cautious | 6–14 weeks, regulator-dependent |
| Retainer / Ongoing Origination Mandate | A standing sourcing relationship for a repeat acquirer or consolidator running multiple searches over time, rather than a single one-off mandate | Private equity-style consolidators, family offices, or corporates with an active, recurring acquisition programme in the UAE | Requires the client to maintain reasonably consistent criteria and decision-making capacity across multiple parallel or sequential searches to justify the retainer structure | Ongoing, reviewed quarterly or as agreed |
Search model is agreed with the client at the outset based on how sharpened the mandate already is, sector transparency, and whether the client is acquiring, seeking a partner, or seeking to be found. Most first-time UAE market entrants benefit from the full managed pipeline; clients with an existing internal corporate development team often need only long-list screening or an introduction-only scope.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What a Generic Broker Approach Misses | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Mandate Briefing & Search Criteria Definition | We push for specificity beyond 'a good business in logistics' — size band, mainland versus free zone preference, owner-manager versus institutionally-run, minimum trading history, and the actual strategic rationale, since criteria vagueness is the single biggest driver of a wasted search cycle. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Confidentiality Framework & Engagement Letter | A signed NDA and engagement letter defining scope, fee, and how candidate confidentiality will be protected on both sides before any name is approached — including whether the client's own identity should be disclosed at first contact or withheld pending initial interest. | Week 1 |
| 3 | Long List Compilation — Registry, Sector & Referral Sources | We combine DED and free zone authority trade licence data, sector association membership, our own audit and advisory client relationships across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and India, and referral networks — reaching candidates that never surface in a broker's standard listed inventory. | Week 1–3 |
| 4 | First-Pass Screening Against Criteria | Public information (licence status, apparent scale, sector activity, ownership structure where discoverable) is used to eliminate clear non-fits before any candidate is contacted — protecting the client's outreach capacity for genuinely relevant approaches. | Week 2–3 |
| 5 | Short List Prioritisation | Remaining candidates are ranked by strategic fit, apparent readiness to transact (succession stage, growth-capital need, or expressed openness gathered through indirect channels), and estimated approach difficulty. | Week 3 |
| 6 | Confidential First Approach | Outreach is framed as a credible, advisory-led introduction — not a cold sales pitch — and, where sensitivity warrants it, the client's identity is withheld until the candidate confirms genuine interest, protecting both sides before any information is exchanged. | Week 3–5 |
| 7 | Interest Qualification & Owner Readiness Check | We probe beyond a polite 'we'd consider it' response to establish whether the decision-maker (often not the person listed on the trade licence) is genuinely ready to transact, what triggered any openness, and what basic parameters (price expectation, timeline, structure preference) would need to align. | Week 4–6 |
| 8 | Pipeline Status Reporting | The client receives a live-tracked pipeline — approached, declined, interested, awaiting owner decision, in preliminary discussion — rather than being told only about the single opportunity that happened to progress, so the search's actual breadth and effort are visible. | Ongoing through engagement |
| 9 | Preliminary Information Exchange | For candidates progressing past initial interest, a limited, mutual, NDA-protected exchange of headline financial and structural information is coordinated — enough for both sides to assess basic fit before committing to full due diligence. | Week 5–8 |
| 10 | Indicative Terms Discussion Support | PNPC supports early, non-binding discussion of price range, structure (share versus asset, majority versus minority, or JV), and timeline expectations, helping surface a genuine gap early rather than after diligence spend has already occurred. | Week 6–9 |
| 11 | Handover to Due Diligence / Valuation | Where a candidate progresses to a term sheet or letter of intent, PNPC transitions the engagement into due diligence and, where instructed, valuation — carrying forward everything already learned about the target rather than starting a new advisor relationship from a blank file. | Week 8–12, candidate-dependent |
| 12 | Search Refinement (Where Needed) | If early approaches surface a pattern — criteria too narrow, price expectations misaligned with the sector, or a structural blocker (foreign ownership restriction, licence class mismatch) — we revisit and refine the search criteria with the client rather than continuing to approach a poor-fit universe. | As needed, iterative |
| 13 | Cross-Reference Against Existing Advisory Relationships | Before any candidate is approached, we check whether it is, or has been, a PNPC audit or advisory client and disclose that relationship to you upfront — a check a broker with no audit practice has no equivalent process for, and a gap that can otherwise surface awkwardly mid-negotiation. | Ongoing, before each approach |
| 14 | Engagement Close-Out & Lessons Log | At the end of the engagement — whether it concludes in a completed introduction, a handover to due diligence, or an unconverted search — we document what the market response revealed about the mandate, so a future search or a re-engagement of a declined candidate starts from an accurate record rather than institutional memory alone. | End of engagement |
A narrowly defined mandate in a well-documented UAE sector can produce a workable short list and initial approaches within 4–6 weeks; a broader or less transparent mandate, or a reverse search where the client is the party seeking to be found, typically runs 8–12 weeks or more. Timelines depend materially on candidate responsiveness and sector opacity, both outside PNPC's direct control.
Sector, sub-sector, and any adjacent-sector flexibility you would consider for the acquisition, JV, or partner search
Target size band — indicative revenue, headcount, or asset value range — and any hard minimum or maximum
Preferred structure: acquisition (majority or full), minority investment, or joint venture, and any flexibility between them
Mainland versus free zone preference, or emirate/free zone preference within the UAE, and the underlying reason for that preference
Deal rationale — market entry, capability or licence acquisition, consolidation, capital deployment, or succession — since rationale shapes which candidates genuinely fit
Timeline expectations and any external driver (funding deadline, board mandate expiry, licensing window) affecting the search
Whether your identity should be disclosed at first contact or withheld pending expressed candidate interest
Any named candidates that must be excluded from outreach (existing relationships, prior failed approaches, competitive sensitivity)
Signed non-disclosure agreement covering the search engagement, and any candidate-side NDA template you require PNPC to use at first information exchange
Internal stakeholders authorised to receive pipeline updates and approve progression of a candidate to preliminary discussion
A short, non-confidential acquirer or investor profile PNPC can share with candidates to establish credibility at first approach
Evidence of funding capacity or committed capital, where relevant to reassure a candidate that an approach is genuine and not speculative
Corporate structure of the acquiring or investing entity, including whether the counterparty will be a UAE entity, a foreign parent, or a newly formed acquisition vehicle
Written search criteria document used as the screening filter throughout the engagement
Long list with inclusion/exclusion rationale against the criteria document
Short list with prioritisation rationale and estimated approach difficulty per candidate
Live pipeline status report tracking every approached candidate and outcome
Confidential approach materials (anonymised teaser or introduction note, as appropriate) used for first contact
Candidate's expressed interest level and any stated price, timeline, or structure expectations gathered during qualification
Basic licensing and ownership information for progressing candidates (trade licence, indicative shareholding), for initial fit assessment ahead of formal due diligence
Any preliminary, NDA-protected financial summary exchanged as part of early mutual assessment
Named client-side decision-maker with authority to approve progression of any candidate to preliminary terms discussion
Board or investment committee sign-off where the search mandate itself requires internal authorisation before outreach begins
Clear handover point and criteria for when a progressing candidate moves from sourcing into formal due diligence and transaction advisory scope
Confirmation of whether the target sector sits under a specific regulator (DFSA, FSRA, UAE Central Bank, or a health or education authority) whose change-of-control or shareholder-suitability rules affect who can be approached and how
Basic source-of-funds documentation for the acquiring party, prepared in a form PNPC can reference (without formal disclosure to candidates) to avoid presenting an approach that later stalls once formal KYC is run at the due diligence stage
Any existing PNPC audit or advisory relationship with a candidate that should be disclosed to you before an approach proceeds, and your instruction on how to handle it
Summary of every candidate contacted, their status, and the reason for exclusion or continued pursuit, for your internal records or board reporting
Any preliminary financial or structural information exchanged under NDA during qualification, organised for direct handover into the due diligence data request list
A documented log of search criteria refinements made during the engagement, so a future search (or a re-engagement of a previously declined candidate) starts from an accurate record rather than institutional memory alone
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mandate Definition | Initial engagement decision to pursue a UAE acquisition, JV, or investment without a specific target identified | Search criteria sharpened into a written, screenable document before any outreach begins, so effort is not wasted approaching poor-fit candidates. | A vague mandate produces a scattershot search that burns candidate goodwill on approaches that were never going to fit, making later, better-targeted outreach harder. |
| Long List & Screening | Criteria document agreed | Candidates sourced from registry, sector, and referral channels beyond broker-listed inventory, then screened against criteria before contact. | Relying only on inbound broker deal flow sees a narrow, self-selected, often overpriced slice of the market and misses better-fitting unlisted candidates. |
| Confidential Approach | Short list finalised | First contact framed as a credible advisory-led introduction, with identity disclosure and anonymisation calibrated to sensitivity, protecting both the client's and candidate's position before information is exchanged. | A poorly framed cold approach can permanently close the door on an otherwise strong-fit candidate, particularly with family-owned UAE businesses sensitive to how they are approached. |
| Qualification & Pipeline Management | Candidates respond with initial interest | Genuine owner readiness to transact is probed before significant time is invested — polite interest is distinguished from real intent to move forward. | Pursuing a candidate who is not genuinely ready to transact consumes months of relationship-building effort that never converts to a deal. |
| Preliminary Terms & Fit Assessment | Candidate confirms serious interest | Early, non-binding discussion of price range and structure surfaces a genuine expectations gap before diligence spend is committed. | Committing to full due diligence before basic price and structure alignment is confirmed risks significant wasted diligence cost on a deal that was never realistically closeable. |
| Handover to Due Diligence | Term sheet or letter of intent agreed with a candidate | The sourcing engagement transitions directly into due diligence and transaction advisory, carrying forward everything already learned about the candidate rather than starting from a blank file. | A disconnected handover to a new advisor loses institutional knowledge built during the search phase, extending diligence timelines and re-raising questions already answered during sourcing. |
| Search Refinement or Restart | Initial candidate pool exhausted without a viable progression | Criteria and approach are revisited with the client based on real market feedback — price expectations, structural blockers, or sector-specific readiness patterns observed during outreach — rather than repeating an unproductive approach. | Continuing an unrefined search with the same criteria after clear negative market feedback wastes further time and candidate goodwill without improving the odds of a successful outcome. |
| Post-Introduction Relationship Management | A candidate declines or pauses but remains a plausible future fit | Declined or paused candidates are tracked, not discarded — UAE succession and ownership situations evolve, and a candidate not ready today can become genuinely interested months later. | Treating a 'no' as final loses a future opportunity when the candidate's circumstances change, and re-approaching cold after losing the relationship thread is materially harder than maintaining light-touch contact. |
| Multi-Candidate Parallel Management | Client is evaluating several live candidates concurrently | Each candidate relationship is managed on a separate, disciplined track with no cross-signalling of the client's parallel interest in other candidates, protecting confidentiality and negotiating position across the whole set. | A candidate discovering it is one of several being approached in parallel, without that having been handled deliberately, can feel treated as a commodity and disengage — costing a genuinely strong-fit relationship. |
| Search Mandate Renewal or Re-Scoping | Original search concludes (successfully or not) and the client has an ongoing or repeat acquisition appetite | Criteria, approach materials, and the candidate pipeline history are reviewed and carried forward into a renewed or re-scoped mandate rather than starting from a blank file each time. | Restarting each new search from scratch loses the market feedback and candidate relationship history built up in the prior mandate, extending timeline and repeating avoidable early-stage friction. |
Starting a search with criteria too broad to screen against ('any good business in logistics'), which produces a long list that cannot meaningfully be prioritised and wastes early outreach capacity on poor-fit candidates
Fixing criteria too rigidly and refusing to revisit them even after early market feedback consistently signals a mismatch — a search should sharpen based on what candidates actually say, not repeat the same unproductive approach
Failing to specify a genuine structural constraint (foreign ownership limits, licence class requirement, mainland versus free zone preference) at the outset, so a candidate is approached, engages, and only later turns out to be structurally unworkable
Treating deal rationale as an afterthought rather than the filter it should be — a mandate defined only by size and sector, with no clarity on why the deal is being pursued, produces a long list that looks plausible on paper but does not actually fit the underlying strategic need
Approaching a candidate directly, or through an unbriefed intermediary, before the confidentiality protocol and identity-disclosure approach have been agreed — a poorly framed first contact can permanently close the door on an otherwise strong-fit candidate
Signalling the client's identity prematurely to a sensitive candidate (a competitor, or a business with an undisclosed succession situation) where anonymised first contact was the agreed approach
Running parallel approaches to multiple candidates in the same narrow sector without managing cross-signalling risk, so candidates learn of each other's involvement and infer more about the client's intent than intended
Accepting a candidate's polite expression of interest at face value without qualifying genuine owner readiness to transact — pursuing a relationship that was never going to convert consumes months of effort for no outcome
Moving straight from initial candidate interest to a term sheet or exclusivity request without a preliminary, NDA-protected information exchange to confirm basic fit first — skipping this step risks committing to exclusivity with a candidate that a basic fit check would have ruled out
Letting a warm, engaged candidate go cold between search and due diligence because the handover to the diligence team is disconnected — momentum built during qualification is hard to rebuild once a candidate's attention moves on
Discarding a declined or paused candidate entirely rather than tracking it lightly — UAE succession and ownership situations evolve, and a 'not now' response can become a genuine opportunity months later if the relationship thread is maintained
Failing to document why candidates were excluded from the long list, so a board or investment committee cannot later distinguish a disciplined search from a narrow one that happened to produce a single opportunity
What exactly does a deal sourcing and partner search engagement deliver?
It delivers a managed, criteria-led pipeline: a written search criteria document, a long list of candidates sourced from registry, sector, and referral channels, a prioritised short list, a record of confidential first approaches made, and a live-tracked status for every candidate contacted. For candidates that progress, it also delivers a structured handover into preliminary terms discussion and, where instructed, due diligence. It is not a single introduction with no visibility into the process — it is the process itself, made transparent.
How is deal sourcing different from using a business broker to find opportunities?
A broker typically presents opportunities already brought to market by sellers who have engaged that broker — a self-selected, often narrower and pre-shopped pool. Deal sourcing is an outbound, criteria-led search that reaches the wider universe of businesses fitting your mandate, including many that have never engaged a broker or considered a sale, using registry data, sector knowledge, and referral networks. The two are complementary rather than mutually exclusive — many engagements combine broker-sourced opportunities with PNPC's proactive outbound search.
Can PNPC search for a joint-venture partner, not just an acquisition target?
Yes. The same disciplined criteria-and-screening process applies to identifying a UAE joint-venture partner — for example, a party needed to satisfy a licensing requirement, local market knowledge, or a specific commercial capability. The criteria document and approach framing differ from an acquisition search (emphasising fit for an ongoing shared relationship rather than a clean exit for the seller), but the underlying methodology is the same.
How does PNPC find candidates that are not actively looking to sell or partner?
Through a combination of trade licence and registry data from DED and the relevant free zone authorities, sector association and trade directory research, referral relationships built through PNPC's audit and advisory client base across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and India, and direct market knowledge accumulated since 1986. Many strong-fit UAE businesses have never formally considered a transaction — a credible, confidentiality-respecting approach from a recognised advisory firm is often what prompts the owner to consider it seriously for the first time.
How does PNPC protect confidentiality during the search process, for both the client and the candidate?
The engagement begins with a signed non-disclosure agreement and an explicit confidentiality protocol agreed with the client — including whether the client's identity is disclosed at first contact or withheld until the candidate confirms genuine interest. Candidates are typically approached with an anonymised introduction or teaser where sensitivity warrants it, and any information exchange in either direction is governed by its own NDA before substantive detail is shared.
What information do you need from us to start a search?
A clear written brief covering sector and any adjacent flexibility, target size band, preferred structure (acquisition, minority investment, or JV), mainland versus free zone preference, deal rationale, and timeline. We also need a signed engagement letter and NDA, and a short, shareable acquirer or investor credibility profile we can present to candidates. The more specific the initial brief, the faster we can move from criteria definition into productive screening.
How long does a typical deal sourcing engagement take?
A narrowly defined mandate in a well-documented sector can produce a workable short list and initial approaches within 4–6 weeks. A broader mandate, an unconventional sector combination, or a reverse search (where you are the party seeking to be found by a buyer or investor) typically takes 8–12 weeks or longer, since candidate identification and response times cannot be compressed below what genuine screening and relationship-building require.
What does a deal sourcing and partner search engagement typically cost?
Fees are scoped and quoted based on mandate breadth, sector transparency, and which search model applies — criteria definition alone, long-list screening, a full managed pipeline, or an introduction-only scope for a named candidate. PNPC confirms a fixed or capped fee for the sourcing phase in the engagement letter, kept separate from any subsequent due diligence, valuation, or transaction advisory fee, so you are not committed to a full deal-advisory retainer before there is even a candidate to evaluate.
What happens if the search does not produce a viable candidate?
If the initial candidate pool is exhausted without a viable progression, we revisit the search criteria and approach with the client based on the real market feedback gathered during outreach — price expectations, structural blockers such as foreign ownership or licence class mismatches, or sector-specific readiness patterns — rather than repeating an unproductive approach. In some cases the honest conclusion is that the original mandate needs to be broadened, phased, or reconsidered, and we say so directly rather than continuing a search we do not believe will succeed.
Can PNPC run a reverse search — helping a UAE business owner find a buyer or investor?
Yes. A reverse search applies the same disciplined process in the other direction: defining the type of buyer or investor that would genuinely fit (strategic versus financial, local versus international, majority versus minority appetite), building a candidate list of plausible counterparties, and making confidential approaches on the owner's behalf. This is particularly relevant for succession planning, where a proactive, confidential search is often preferable to an open broker listing that can signal urgency or distress to the market.
How does UAE Corporate Tax or free zone structure affect which candidates fit a search mandate?
A target's mainland versus free zone licensing status affects its Corporate Tax profile — free zone entities may qualify as a Qualifying Free Zone Person eligible for the 0% rate on qualifying income under the Corporate Tax Law, subject to conditions — and can also affect what shareholding and structuring options are available for an acquirer. Where the acquisition rationale depends on a specific tax or structuring outcome, we build that consideration into the search criteria from the outset, rather than discovering a structural mismatch only after a candidate has been approached and engaged.
Can PNPC search across both the UAE and India for a cross-border deal?
Yes. PNPC operates from Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad, and regularly sources candidates for clients pursuing UAE-India cross-border acquisitions, joint ventures, or partner relationships in either direction. Running the search under one coordinated engagement, rather than splitting the mandate across two unconnected local advisors, keeps the criteria, confidentiality protocol, and candidate qualification consistent across both markets.
What if we already have a specific target in mind and just need an introduction?
That is an introduction-only engagement — a narrower scope than a full search, where PNPC facilitates a confidential first approach to your named candidate using our credibility and confidentiality protocol, without the criteria-definition and long-list screening workstreams of a broader mandate. This suits clients who already know who they want to approach but prefer a credible, confidentiality-managed third-party introduction over a direct cold approach.
Why should we engage PNPC for deal sourcing rather than relying on our own network or an investment bank?
Your own network reaches only the relationships you already have, which is rarely the full addressable candidate universe for a defined mandate. An investment bank's origination capability is well suited to large, capital-markets-scale transactions but is often disproportionately expensive and structured for a different deal size than the UAE mid-market and family-business acquisitions most of our clients pursue. PNPC combines UAE-specific registry and sector knowledge, a confidentiality-first approach discipline, and continuity into due diligence and post-completion advisory — at a scope and fee structure calibrated to mid-market transactions, not large capital-markets deals.
What happens if a candidate tries to negotiate directly with us, bypassing PNPC, once contact is made?
This happens occasionally once a candidate has confirmed interest, and it is not necessarily a problem — the sourcing role's main value is in identification, screening, and the confidentiality-managed first approach. Once genuine mutual interest is established, many clients prefer to take the relationship forward directly, with PNPC available to support if useful. We agree at the outset how active a role you want PNPC to continue playing once a candidate is engaged.
What if a candidate insists on knowing our identity before agreeing to any conversation at all?
Some candidates will not engage on a fully anonymised basis, particularly once a conversation moves past a first exploratory contact. Where this happens, we come back to you with the candidate's stated reason and let you decide whether to authorise disclosure, propose a partial disclosure (sector and scale without naming the entity), or decline to proceed further with that candidate.
Does PNPC search for candidates outside the UAE if the deal has a cross-border angle?
The core search discipline described here is UAE-focused, drawing on UAE registry, sector, and referral sources. Where a mandate has a genuine cross-border dimension — for example a UAE-based subsidiary of a foreign group, or a parallel search needed in India — PNPC coordinates the UAE workstream with our other offices (Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad) or, for other jurisdictions, flags the limit of our direct sourcing reach so you can decide whether a separate local advisor is needed alongside us.
What if two of PNPC's clients have search mandates that could compete for the same candidate?
We check for this at the outset and disclose it to both clients rather than running two competing searches silently. Depending on the situation, we may decline to pursue the overlapping candidate for one or both mandates, or — with both clients' informed consent — continue with clear boundaries on what information is shared with whom. Client confidentiality is never compromised to manage the conflict.
How do you avoid signalling risk when approaching several businesses in the same sector for one client?
Approaches are sequenced and framed individually rather than run as a visible, simultaneous sweep, and each candidate is given no indication of who else has been contacted. Where the client is pursuing a consolidation strategy involving several sector competitors, we agree an outreach sequence and pacing with the client specifically to manage this risk, since a sector-wide leak of intent can affect price expectations across every candidate at once.
Does PNPC charge a success fee or commission on a completed transaction?
PNPC's sourcing fee is fixed or capped for the sourcing phase itself, agreed in the engagement letter, and is not structured as a success fee or percentage-of-deal-value commission. This is a deliberate choice — a success-fee structure can incentivise pushing a marginal-fit candidate toward a deal rather than giving an honest assessment of fit, which runs against the disciplined, criteria-led approach the search is built on.
Is there a conflict of interest if a sourced candidate turns out to already be a PNPC audit client?
We check this before any approach and disclose it to you if it applies. You then decide whether to proceed with full knowledge of the relationship, exclude that candidate, or ask PNPC to manage the approach with additional information barriers. This disclosure happens as a matter of course, not only if you ask — it is built into our long-list screening process.
Can the search criteria change once the engagement is already underway?
Yes, and criteria refinement partway through a search is common and expected, not a sign of a badly scoped mandate. Early candidate feedback often sharpens what 'fit' actually means in practice — a price expectation pattern, a structural blocker, or a sector nuance that only becomes clear once real candidates have responded. We revisit criteria with you explicitly rather than silently narrowing or widening the search on our own judgement.
Is there a minimum deal size or mandate scope PNPC will take on for deal sourcing?
There is no fixed minimum, but the search model and fee are scoped to be proportionate to the mandate — a very small, narrow mandate may be better served by an introduction-only or long-list-screening scope rather than a full managed pipeline, since the cost of the fuller model would be disproportionate to the transaction size being pursued. We discuss this proportionality directly at the scoping conversation.
How does PNPC verify a candidate's actual ownership structure before making an approach?
Where discoverable through trade licence and registry records, we identify the registered shareholders and licence holder before approaching, and flag where the structure suggests the decision-maker may not be the person listed — for example, a nominee arrangement, a corporate-service-provider-administered holding structure, or a family business where the listed general manager is not the actual owner. This shapes how the first approach is framed and to whom.
Does the approach differ for a private individual acquirer versus a corporate or institutional one?
The core screening and outreach methodology is the same, but the credibility materials and framing differ — an institutional acquirer typically presents corporate credentials and funding evidence, while an individual acquirer's credibility rests more on personal track record, financing readiness, and clarity of intent. We tailor the acquirer profile shared with candidates accordingly, since a vague or unconvincing first approach undermines a genuinely serious individual buyer just as much as a corporate one.
Is it normal for a candidate to want an NDA signed before sharing even basic information?
Yes, this is standard and expected in the UAE mid-market, particularly for privately held or family businesses cautious about competitor intelligence-gathering disguised as acquisition interest. We come prepared with a template NDA and expect this step, rather than treating a candidate's request for confidentiality protection as an obstacle or a sign of reluctance to engage.
How do you handle a candidate structured through nominee shareholders or a corporate service provider?
We identify this structure during first-pass screening where possible and, before making an approach, try to establish who the underlying beneficial party actually is and whether they are reachable through the registered agent, a known local contact, or another channel. Approaching a nominee shareholder or corporate service provider with no route to the real decision-maker wastes the approach — we flag this risk to the client rather than proceeding blind.
Can PNPC help with the regulatory change-of-control approval process once a candidate is identified?
Where the candidate sits under a sector regulator (DFSA, FSRA, UAE Central Bank, or a health or education authority), a change of control typically requires that regulator's approval as part of completion, which is a due diligence and transaction advisory matter rather than a sourcing one. We flag the regulatory approval requirement as part of the search criteria and handover, and PNPC's due diligence and transaction advisory team picks up the approval process itself once the engagement transitions past sourcing.
Does deal sourcing include a preliminary valuation view to help calibrate the search parameters?
Not as a formal valuation deliverable, but we do factor realistic price-range expectations into the criteria discussion, drawing on sector knowledge, so a client is not defining a size band or approaching candidates with price expectations that are clearly out of step with what the UAE market for that sector and size actually looks like. A formal valuation, where needed, is a separate, explicitly scoped engagement.
Can the acquirer stay undisclosed even after a deal is agreed in principle, for example by structuring through an SPV?
Delaying full identity disclosure past initial interest is workable in some cases, but most candidates will expect to know the ultimate acquiring party before signing a term sheet or letter of intent, since an SPV structure alone does not answer who is actually behind it. We discuss identity-disclosure strategy explicitly with the client, including at what stage full disclosure becomes commercially necessary rather than optional.
How does PNPC handle sourcing for candidates in DIFC or ADGM where the regulator sits outside the DED or free zone commercial authority model?
DIFC and ADGM entities are licensed and regulated within their own common-law frameworks, with the DFSA and FSRA respectively overseeing regulated financial activities. Sourcing candidates in these jurisdictions requires checking both the entity's DIFC/ADGM registration and, where the activity is regulated, its DFSA/FSRA authorisation status, since a change of control in a regulated entity is a materially more involved process than in an unregulated mainland or free zone trading company.
What is a realistic response rate to a well-framed cold outreach to a UAE business owner?
This varies too much by sector, candidate profile, and mandate specificity to state a general figure, and we do not quote one, since doing so risks anchoring client expectations on a number that may not reflect their specific search. What we can say is that framing matters enormously — a credible, confidentiality-respecting introduction from a recognised advisory firm consistently performs better than an unbriefed or generic approach, which is the entire rationale for running the outreach through a structured process rather than an ad hoc one.
Can a search engagement be paused and resumed later?
Yes. If a client's priorities shift, funding timing changes, or internal capacity to evaluate candidates is temporarily constrained, we can pause active outreach while keeping the criteria document and long list intact, and resume without restarting the search from scratch. We agree how any paused candidates already in conversation should be managed during the pause, since leaving an engaged candidate with no update for an extended period can itself damage the relationship.
Should we ask for an exclusive sourcing mandate with PNPC, or run a non-exclusive search alongside our own efforts?
Both models work, and the right choice depends on how much internal corporate development capacity you already have. A non-exclusive arrangement lets you continue your own relationship-based outreach in parallel with PNPC's structured search, while an exclusive mandate concentrates search effort and avoids the risk of PNPC and your own team unknowingly approaching the same candidate through different channels, which can look uncoordinated to that candidate.
Does the sourcing engagement include broader market intelligence or sector reports, beyond the specific candidate search?
The primary deliverable is the candidate pipeline itself, but the market-mapping work involved in building a long list generates genuine sector visibility — approximate market structure, the degree of fragmentation or consolidation, and typical ownership patterns — which we share with the client as context alongside the pipeline, even though it is not formally packaged as a standalone market report.
Do you approach Emirati or Gulf family business owners differently than expatriate-owned UAE businesses?
The underlying respect for confidentiality and credibility-first framing applies to every approach, but the specific relationship dynamics, decision-making structure, and appropriate channel of introduction can differ meaningfully between an Emirati family business (where succession and reputational considerations often carry particular weight) and an expatriate-owned SME (where the founder is frequently the sole decision-maker with fewer extended-family stakeholders). We calibrate the approach to what we know about the specific candidate's ownership and cultural context rather than using one template for every business type.
What if the real counterparty is a GCC parent company and the UAE entity we are searching for is only its local subsidiary?
We identify this during first-pass screening wherever the corporate structure is discoverable, and flag it to the client, since a genuine transaction decision may need to be made at the GCC parent level, not with the UAE subsidiary's local management. Approaching only the UAE-level contact in that situation risks a conversation that cannot actually progress without the parent's involvement.
Is there a risk that one approached candidate finds out which other businesses we approached in the same search?
We manage outreach specifically to prevent this — candidates are not told who else has been approached, and materials shared with one candidate are not shared with another. Where a client wants us to be especially careful (for example, approaching close competitors who are likely to compare notes informally), we discuss additional sequencing or timing precautions as part of the search plan.
What happens if a joint-venture search surfaces a candidate that wants majority control rather than a genuine JV?
This is a common outcome — a business approached for a JV conversation sometimes responds with interest in being acquired outright instead, or in taking a majority stake in a combined structure rather than a balanced partnership. We flag this shift back to the client immediately, since it changes the nature of the deal being discussed, and let the client decide whether to continue the conversation on the new basis, redirect it back to a genuine JV structure, or close it out.
How do you measure whether a search was 'successful' if it does not end in a completed transaction?
Success in a sourcing engagement is measured by the discipline and completeness of the process, not solely by whether a deal closed — how many candidates were genuinely screened, how many were approached, what the response pattern revealed about market appetite for the mandate as defined, and whether the client ended the engagement with a clear, evidenced basis for its next decision. A well-run search that concludes 'this mandate as currently defined does not have a viable candidate in the UAE market' is a legitimate and useful outcome, not a failed engagement.
Can PNPC re-approach a candidate that declined a different client's search some time ago?
We check our own engagement records for prior contact with a candidate before making a new approach, and if the candidate was previously approached on behalf of a different client, we handle the re-approach carefully — respecting confidentiality obligations from the earlier engagement and not disclosing that a prior, unrelated approach occurred, while still framing the new outreach honestly and independently.
PNPC deal sourcing versus typical alternatives
| Dimension | PNPC Deal Sourcing | Relying on Broker Deal Flow Alone | In-House / Own Network Only |
|---|---|---|---|
| Candidate universe reached | Registry, sector, and referral-sourced long list plus broker-listed opportunities — the wider addressable market | Narrow, self-selected pool of businesses already engaged with a broker | Limited to relationships already known to the client's team |
| Confidentiality management | Structured NDA-first protocol with anonymised first approach where warranted | Varies by broker; identity disclosure practice often inconsistent | Informal, dependent on the individual relationship |
| UAE-specific screening | Trade licence, DED/free zone registry, and Corporate Tax structuring fit built into criteria from the outset | Typically limited to whatever the broker's listing summary provides | Rarely formalised into written screening criteria |
| Pipeline transparency | Live-tracked status across every approached candidate, with rationale for exclusions | Client sees only the opportunities the broker chooses to present | Ad hoc, dependent on who happens to raise an opportunity |
| Fee structure | Fixed or capped advisory fee for the sourcing phase, unbundled from downstream diligence and advisory fees | Often success-fee or listing-fee based, which can incentivise pushing marginal-fit opportunities | No direct fee, but opportunity cost of limited coverage and internal time |
| Continuity into diligence and completion | Same team can carry sourcing knowledge directly into due diligence, valuation, and post-completion compliance | Handover to a separate diligence advisor typically required, losing context | Requires engaging external diligence support from a standing start |
| Cross-border coordination | Coordinated UAE-India (and broader) search under one engagement via Dubai, Abu Dhabi, Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad offices | Typically single-jurisdiction, requiring a separate advisor for each country | Dependent entirely on the client's own existing cross-border relationships |
| Regulated-sector and sensitive-mandate handling | Change-of-control and shareholder-suitability considerations for DFSA/FSRA or sector-regulated candidates built into criteria from the outset | Rarely addressed unless the broker has specific sector licensing experience | Dependent entirely on whether the client's own team has regulated-sector transaction experience |
| Conflict-of-interest disclosure | Existing PNPC audit/advisory relationships with a candidate disclosed to the client before any approach is made | Rarely disclosed systematically, since a broker's own client relationships are not typically cross-checked | No independent disclosure mechanism — dependent on the client's own awareness |
| Continuity of relationship post-introduction | Same team can carry sourcing knowledge directly into due diligence, valuation, and post-completion compliance | Handover to a separate diligence advisor typically required, losing search-phase context | Requires engaging external diligence support from a standing start |
| Track record and practitioner network depth | Sourcing knowledge built on decades of UAE audit, advisory, and transaction relationships since 1986, not a listings database | Depth varies significantly by individual broker and their personal network | Limited to whatever relationships the client's own team has built independently |
- 01
Written search criteria document translating your strategic brief into a screenable mandate
- 02
Long list of candidates sourced from trade licence/registry data, sector knowledge, and referral networks
- 03
First-pass screening against agreed criteria with documented inclusion and exclusion rationale
- 04
Prioritised short list with fit ranking and estimated approach difficulty
- 05
Confidentiality-first outreach protocol, including anonymised introduction materials where appropriate
- 06
Confidential first approach management, with identity disclosure calibrated to sensitivity
- 07
Owner readiness and genuine-interest qualification beyond polite initial responses
- 08
Live pipeline status tracking across every approached candidate
- 09
Support for preliminary, NDA-protected information exchange and basic fit assessment
- 10
Non-binding indicative terms discussion support (price range, structure, timeline)
- 11
Structured handover into due diligence, valuation, and transaction advisory for progressing candidates
- 12
Search criteria refinement based on real market feedback where the initial pool does not convert
- 13
Coordinated cross-border search capability across UAE and India offices
- 14
Fixed or capped sourcing-phase fee, unbundled from downstream advisory fees
- 15
Conflict-of-interest disclosure where a candidate has an existing PNPC audit or advisory relationship
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