Rick Sanford, CEO of Complete Aerospace Solutions, Inc., is deploying capital through reverse mergers where founders retain 100% equity ownership while accessing growth funding. They provide capital for scale, but the original ownership keeps their equity and board control. Instead of taking upfront equity stakes, Complete Aerospace participates in a small percentage of annual growth each year until exit. The bottleneck isn't capital availability, however; the constraint is finding companies fast enough to deploy it.
They're currently in due diligence on 20 companies with 50 more in the pipeline and operating across five verticals leveraging syndicate partners who've already completed due diligence on companies "too small for them to acquire" (under $500M) but still need patient capital. Rick accomplishes this by verifying stated requirements match actual mission intent, bringing commercial solutions forward rather than getting paid to study problems, and prioritizing execution ruthlessly because "smart engineers with enough time and money can build anything, but there's never enough time or money."
Topics discussed:
Deploying capital through reverse mergers where founders retain 100% equity while taking a percentage of annual growth until exit
Structuring aerospace investments for companies generating $10-200M revenue with positive EBITDA facing the valley of death funding gap
Leveraging partners who completed due diligence on sub-$500M companies too small for acquisition but needing patient capital
Operating five vertical-specific holding companies with dedicated subject matter experts for technical risk adjudication
Bringing commercial-first innovation to defense programs where hardware investments generate dual revenue streams from commercial and government applications
Verifying stated requirements match actual mission intent to ensure the ask is commensurate with expected outcome
Prioritizing execution when engineers face limited time and money constraints by focusing ruthlessly on delivery over endless studies
Enabling the "and equation" where small agile innovation teams complement large systems integrators rather than competing for the same opportunities
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