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Teaser.

Aka. Teaser document · Blind teaser · One-pager

What is a teaser?

A teaser is the short, anonymous summary a sell-side banker sends to potential buyers at the very start of a sale process. Usually one or two pages, it describes the business in enough detail to spark interest — the industry, the rough size, the highlights of the opportunity — without naming the company. Its job is to find out who is interested before any confidential information changes hands.

The teaser comes before the NDA. A buyer that wants to learn more signs a non-disclosure agreement, and only then receives the named, detailed confidential information memorandum. The teaser is deliberately thin: it has to be circulated to a wide set of potential buyers, some of whom are competitors, so it gives away as little identifying detail as possible.

For the banker, the teaser is also a filtering tool. The responses to it tell the seller which buyers are worth bringing further into the process and which are not.

What a teaser contains

A teaser is built to be informative yet anonymous.

  1. Business description. What the company does and the market it serves, described generically enough not to identify it.
  2. Investment highlights. A few headline reasons the business is attractive — growth, margins, market position.
  3. Summary financials. Approximate scale — revenue and earnings ranges — without precise figures that would reveal the company.
  4. The opportunity. Why the business is being sold and what a buyer could do with it.
  5. Contact and process. How an interested buyer can sign an NDA and proceed.

Frequently asked.

4 questions
01 What's the difference between a teaser and a CIM?

A teaser is short, anonymous, and sent before any NDA to gauge interest. The confidential information memorandum is the full, named, detailed document sent only after a buyer signs the NDA. The teaser opens the conversation; the CIM makes the full case.

02 Why is a teaser anonymous?

Because it is circulated widely, often to parties including competitors, before anyone has committed to confidentiality. Keeping the company unnamed protects the seller from the disruption that would follow if word got out that the business was for sale — to employees, customers, and rivals.

The anonymity is dropped only once a buyer signs an NDA and receives the CIM.

03 Who prepares the teaser?

The sell-side investment bank or M&A advisor running the process, working with the company's management. It is the first marketing document the banker produces and the entry point to the entire sale process.

04 What happens after a buyer receives a teaser?

An interested buyer signs a non-disclosure agreement, which unlocks the named confidential information memorandum and, in time, access to the data room. From there the process moves into indications of interest, diligence, and bids. A buyer that is not interested simply declines, and the seller learns where genuine demand sits.

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