Beyond the Case
A podcast where global leaders from the Harvard Business School Owner/President Management (OPM) community join in a personal capacity and share the real decisions, failures, and mental models behind building enduring companies.
This podcast is independent and not affiliated with Harvard Business School.
Beyond the Case
Eric Hoffman: The Owner Who Bought Back His Company from Private Equity
Hoffman Media, a founder-led niche media company, raised private equity capital in the mid-2000s to fund acquisitions and organic growth. The firm entered the 2008 financial crisis with a PE partner holding a large minority stake (~40%+) and remained investor-backed for eight years.
By 2012, the typical PE-backed outcome would have been a full sale or recapitalization allowing founders to take liquidity and move on. Market precedent favored exits, particularly after a long hold period and a volatile macro cycle.
Instead of selling the business, the Hoffman family chose to buy out their private equity investors. The deal delivered a 27% annualized IRR to the PE firm over an eight-year hold while returning full ownership and strategic control to the family.
Why This Was Unusual
- Founders typically de-risk personally once PE is involved
- Liquidity is often treated as the primary measure of success
- Few entrepreneurs willingly re-lever a business after a strong run
What Enabled the Outcome
- A patient, founder-aligned PE partner
- Deep trust built through the 2008 recession
- Eric Hoffman’s financial sophistication in deal structuring
- Conviction that long-term stewardship outweighed near-term liquidity
The buyout challenges a common assumption in private markets: that optimal outcomes always involve selling. It demonstrates that exceptional investor returns and long-term family ownership can coexist.
Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation:
- Entrepreneurial sacrifice is often invisible: Eric only later understood the personal cost his mother bore building the business, shaping his sense of stewardship as a second-generation leader.
- Riches are in the niches: Hoffman Media thrived by serving deeply passionate, underserved audiences rather than chasing mass scale.
- Direct customer relationships create resilience: With only ~10% of revenue from advertising, the business weathered downturns through loyal, subscription-driven customers.
- Outside experience sharpens judgment: Background in consulting and investment banking provided the financial fluency needed to navigate PE dynamics & complex capital decisions.
- Buying out PE can be the boldest capital allocation decision: Rather than exiting, the family bought out their PE investors after eight years demonstrating conviction and long-term thinking.
- Succession is earned through trust, not titles: The transition from founder-led to second-generation leadership unfolded gradually through autonomy, accountability, and learning from failure.
- The CEO’s primary job is people in the right seats: Eric emphasized that organizational outcomes follow talent alignment more than strategy alone.
- Informal feedback beats formal systems: Post-HBS, Eric prioritized real-time, values-based feedback.
- Make the customer the hero: After HBS, Eric adopted Professor Das’s thinking, shifting from “customer first” to “customer as hero.” He brought service in-house and named a Customer Hero Officer betting customer delight is a strategic advantage.
- Growth itself is not a strategy: Inspired by cases like LEGO, Eric reinforced discipline around where and how the company grows, focusing on core strengths rather than growth for its own sake.
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