// Blog
Notes on building forever.
Essays on permanent capital, AI-native SaaS economics, and what we're learning operating our brands.
24 of 26 essays match your filters
International expansion on a twenty-five-year clock.
Most B2B SaaS international expansion fails because it is underwritten as a sales expansion when it is a market-development commitment. The Cobalt Glacier playbook: pull signal first, country lead before AE, retention before bookings.
Buying out a co-founder before a permanent-capital exit.
Unresolved co-founder cap-table situations are the most common reason a clean B2B SaaS process stalls. The fix is a documented buyout twelve to eighteen months before the holdco conversation, not during it.
Proprietary data is the only real AI moat in vertical B2B SaaS.
Model access is not a moat. Cobalt Glacier underwrites AI features on the data behind them — workflow-generated, non-obvious schema, closed feedback loop — not the model in front of them.
Integration anti-patterns: what we deliberately do not consolidate across a SaaS holdco.
Brand consolidation, product surface merging, sales pooling, support pooling, and unified billing — the five integration anti-patterns Cobalt Glacier refuses, and the willingness test that keeps the platform-brand line honest.
Gross margin floors in AI-native B2B SaaS: how we underwrite the cost stack.
Cobalt Glacier's 70% steady-state gross margin floor for AI-native acquisitions, the three axes that determine where the floor sits, and the patterns that disqualify a business regardless of topline growth.
What being CEO of a Cobalt Glacier brand actually looks like.
Cobalt Glacier's default assumption is that the founder stays as CEO indefinitely. What changes after close — a real board, a long-horizon capital allocator, a shared services platform, and a peer group of operators — and what deliberately does not.
How we migrate pricing after a B2B SaaS acquisition without breaking NRR.
A four-quarter pricing playbook — instrument, repackage, fix contracts, then move list — designed to capture unrealized economics in an acquired SaaS business without spending the trust that made it acquirable.
Customer concentration is the most underpriced risk in lower-middle-market SaaS.
How Cobalt Glacier underwrites customer concentration on three axes — revenue share, contractual entrenchment, and narrative dependence — and the diligence workstream we actually run.
Building a shared services platform for a SaaS holding company.
The seven functions on the Cobalt Glacier platform, the four we deliberately keep off it, and the single test — would the brand willingly buy it from us at market price — that decides whether a service belongs at the holdco.
Why we pass on most venture-backed B2B SaaS targets.
We pass on most venture-backed SaaS targets not because the businesses are bad, but because the capital stack is mismatched with a permanent-capital holding period. The structural reasons, and the narrow conditions under which we lean in.
The Cobalt Glacier B2B SaaS due diligence checklist.
Six diligence workstreams — commercial, product, customer, financial, legal, and operational continuity — and the exact items a founder can prepare to compress the timeline without compressing the rigor.
Pricing power in vertical SaaS: why narrow workflows compound faster.
Pricing power is the right to raise prices annually without measurable churn. Vertical B2B SaaS earns it faster than horizontal SaaS because the workflow is narrower, the competitor set is shallower, and the buyer feels the pain directly.
Multi-product B2B SaaS: when bundling compounds, when splitting is the honest answer.
Bundling B2B SaaS products only compounds when the buyer, the workflow, and the data model overlap. The Cobalt Glacier framework for deciding when to bundle a roadmap, when to split it, and when to bundle only the buying motion.
Free cash flow conversion is the underwriting bar in B2B SaaS.
Why we underwrite every Cobalt Glacier acquisition to a steady-state seventy-five percent free cash flow conversion ratio, the four reconciling items we focus on in diligence, and what disqualifies a business from our process.
How permanent-capital holdcos actually pay founders: equity rolls, earn-outs, and ongoing economics.
Cash at close, a meaningful equity roll into the holdco, an operator-controlled earn-out, and ongoing operator compensation — the four building blocks of a Cobalt Glacier deal and the kind of founder it fits.
LP-grade reporting for a permanent-capital holdco.
What we publish quarterly and annually, the governance stack behind the reporting, and why we hold ourselves to an institutional reporting standard nobody is making us follow.
Concentration is the strategy: why a four-brand portfolio is the right shape.
Why Cobalt Glacier holds four B2B SaaS brands on purpose, what concentration buys us that diversification cannot, and the specific conditions under which we will add another.
How we underwrite a software acquisition for a 25-year hold.
Three filters every deal has to clear before we model it, what changes when the hold period is twenty-five years, and why the discipline is in what we walk away from.
The first 100 days: what we change after a Cobalt Glacier acquisition (and what we deliberately don't).
The integration playbook we run after every acquisition. Four things change in the first 100 days. Roadmap, pricing, brand, and team deliberately don't.
Selling your B2B SaaS to a permanent-capital holdco: what's actually different.
Diligence, deal structure, founder role, and post-close life all look different in a holdco process than in a strategic or PE sale. A practical guide for founders weighing the conversation.
SaaS roll-ups vs permanent-capital holdcos: what actually changes after close.
Roll-ups and permanent-capital holding companies look similar on a deal page. The operating posture, brand decisions, and life of the founding team after close are not the same.
Operator continuity is the real asset.
Most B2B SaaS acquisitions quietly destroy the operating team that built the business. Permanent capital is the only structure designed to keep them in the building.
The holding period is the moat.
Pricing power, switching costs, distribution, talent — every B2B SaaS moat only fully compounds on a decade-plus clock. Time itself is the unfair advantage.
Permanent capital is the only sane structure for software.
Software compounds over decades. Most capital structures force exits in years. The mismatch is the entire opportunity.
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