Welcome to the first episode of The Exit Strategy, where founders open up about what really happens when you sell your business- the tough calls, the lucky breaks, and the lessons you only learn by living them.
To kick things off, I sat down with Keith Schacht, co-founder of Mystery Science, an education startup that sold to Discovery Education for $140 million. Keith’s story isn’t just about a big payday—it’s about timing, focus, and the courage to start over.
Knowing When to Sell
Keith didn’t sell because he was burned out. He sold because the timing was perfect.
As he watched the edtech world heat up, especially during the pandemic, he realized something important: Mystery Science was more valuable to buyers than to him at that moment. Rather than waiting for growth to plateau, he and co-founder Doug decided to sell while the market was hot.
“We saw the consolidation wave coming,” Keith said. “You don’t want to sell when you have to but you want to sell when you can.”
Takeaway: Keep a pulse on your industry. If your business is thriving and the market is peaking, it might be the ideal time to exit,a and not the time to double down.
Structuring the Deal on Your Terms
Keith and Doug were clear about one thing: they didn’t want to sell everything.
They carved off the school-focused part of the business for Discovery Education and kept the consumer side for themselves. They also negotiated not to stay on after the sale, freeing them to explore new ventures immediately.
“We wanted to retain the creative parts that mattered most to us,” Keith explained. “That made the deal work for both sides.”
Takeaway: Think carefully about what you sell and what you keep. The best deals give you both liquidity and freedom for what’s next.
How Mystery Science Went Viral
One of Mystery Science’s biggest secrets? They barely had a sales team.
Instead, they built their growth around referrals- 95% of new teachers came from other teachers. Keith borrowed strategies from consumer tech and applied them to education.
“We engineered virality,” he said. “If teachers loved it, we made it easy for them to share.”
Takeaway: Find the natural sharing loop in your customer base. Build tools and incentives around it, and your users will do the marketing for you.
Surviving Due Diligence
Selling a business isn’t just about finding a buyer, it’s about surviving due diligence without losing your sanity.
Keith and Doug kept the process tight, involving only a few trusted team members and hiring top-tier legal help. They documented everything in advance, so there were no surprises.
“The diligence process is like an audit and a therapy session combined,” Keith laughed. “You need pros in your corner.”
Takeaway: Get organized early, hire great advisors, and protect your time. The best founders keep their business running smoothly even while the sale is underway.
Helping the Team Transition
Acquisitions can rattle even the strongest teams. Keith’s approach? Prepare them well before the sale.
He built a leadership team that could operate independently, which made the transition to Discovery Education smoother. Many employees even found new opportunities there.
Takeaway: Take care of your people. A smooth handoff builds goodwill and your reputation follows you into your next venture.
Life After the Sale
Post-exit life wasn’t all smooth sailing. Because of IP restrictions, Keith couldn’t use the Mystery Science brand or content in future products. The new consumer venture he started eventually shut down after three years.
“You think you’ll just build the next thing faster but sometimes, you have to start from scratch,” he said.
Takeaway: When negotiating a sale, pay close attention to brand and IP rights. If you can’t keep them, be ready for a clean reboot.
Luck, Timing, and Passion
Keith is the first to admit that luck played a role. The pandemic boom in digital education helped, but so did years of passion for teaching science creatively.
“You can’t control timing,” he said. “But you can control whether you’re doing something you care about enough to keep at it until the timing hits.”
Takeaway: Passion fuels perseverance and perseverance meets luck.
Lessons for Small Business Owners
- Watch the market: Sell when the conditions are great, not when you’re tired.
• Keep what matters: Structure deals that preserve your future opportunities.
• Build virality: A great product plus word-of-mouth can beat any sales team.
• Be ready for diligence: Preparation and good advisors save headaches later.
• Support your team: They’ll remember how you handled the transition.
• Plan your next act: Be realistic about what you can (and can’t) use post-sale.
• Stay humble: Entrepreneurship is equal parts skill, timing, and luck.
Final Thoughts
Keith Schacht’s story is more than a case study, it’s a reminder that selling your company isn’t the end of the story. It’s just a new chapter.
For founders, his journey offers a roadmap: stay curious, act before you’re forced to, and never forget why you started in the first place.
Because in the end, as Keith says, entrepreneurship is a combination lock, you just have to keep turning the tumblers until it clicks.
This article, "Behind the Scenes of a $140 Million Sale: Keith Schacht’s Journey with Mystery Science" was first published on Small Business Trends
No comments:
Post a Comment