
As financial engineering alone becomes less effective, the focus has shifted to creating value from the inside out. That shift brought the rise of the Operating Partner — a full-time specialist focused on making portfolio companies stronger from the ground up.
These are not advisors or consultants. They are embedded professionals who work across strategy, execution, leadership, and change management. And in many firms, they are now just as critical as the deal team.

Source: FasterCapital
The Operating Partner role took shape in the early 2000s, as the industry realized that squeezing value from leverage and multiple arbitrages wasn’t enough. Sellers were getting smarter, assets were trading richer, and value creation had to come from somewhere else.
Enter the Operating Partner — not to sideline dealmakers, but to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with them.
They brought sector knowledge and C-suite experience.
They knew how to lead teams, not just model outcomes.
And they built value that could survive beyond a flip.
Fast forward to today: nearly every mid and large-cap fund has Operating Partners on deck. Their involvement spans the entire investment lifecycle from diligence and integration to transformation and exit.
Consider this figure below of what a Private Equity deal lifecycle looks like for further clarification:

Source: CorporateFinanceInstitute
Operating Partners add value before the ink dries. During diligence, they assess:
Management team capability
Operational bottlenecks
Margin expansion opportunities
Scalability risks
This isn’t a surface-level review. It’s a deep interrogation of how the business runs — and where it breaks under pressure.
They help the investment committee distinguish between an execution problem (which can be fixed) and a structural weakness (which kills the deal).
Once the deal is closed, Operating Partners become change agents. They often focus on:
Commercial excellence (pricing, GTM, sales effectiveness)
Operational efficiency (supply chain, SG&A, process design)
Data and reporting infrastructure
Leadership and team upgrades
Importantly, they help build the systems that track whether these changes are working. This means designing dashboards, establishing KPIs, and creating a culture of measurement.
They also balance pressure and support — knowing when to push for more and when to roll up their sleeves.
In the final stretch of a holding period, Operating Partners focus on cleanup and momentum:
Locking in recurring improvements
Finalizing org design
Supporting buyer diligence
They ensure the exit story holds up, especially in showing a repeatable playbook that a buyer can trust.
Paul Stansik at ParkerGale Capital outlines four practical responsibilities that define success in the role:
Define What Good Looks Like
Operating Partners set the standard. They establish what “great” performance means for different roles and functions.
Build Systems That Scale
They create tools and processes that make it easier to execute consistently across a growing business.
Facilitate Accountability with Clarity
They simplify reporting and make outcomes trackable. Not more dashboards — just better ones.
Push While Supporting
Great Operating Partners are demanding, but fair. They expect performance, but they’re in the trenches with management to get there.
Operating Partners are well-compensated, and for good reason. Their packages typically include:
| Component | Range (USD) |
|---|---|
| Base Salary | $200,000 – $500,000+ |
| Bonus | $100,000 – $400,000+ (variable) |
| Carried Interest | Varies, but can exceed $1M+ total |
According to Growth Equity Interview Guide, average base salaries sit around $315,000, with carried interest as the biggest driver of upside.
Why does this structure matter? Because their compensation reflects real impact. Operating Partners are there to create lasting value that shows up when it counts — at exit.
Not all funds use Operating Partners the same way.
Some (e.g., Sun Capital, Apollo, KPS) buy broken businesses and send in a SWAT team of operators.
Others (e.g., Leonard Green, Harvest Partners) prefer to buy high-quality assets and act more as board-level advisors.
Then you have firms like Vista, which build internal playbooks and apply them systematically across the portfolio.
There’s no single right model. But across the board, the best firms are the ones that don’t overstate their operating chops, but rather the ones that just prove them in the numbers.
The background varies, but certain traits are common:
Ex-CEOs / COOs: Deep P&L and leadership experience
Former management consultants: Strong across diagnostics and playbook design
Sector specialists: Especially in verticals like tech, healthcare, or industrials
Turnaround leaders: Especially valuable in distressed or underperforming assets
The best Operating Partners pair real-world operating experience with a firm grasp of private equity mechanics — hold periods, IRR, governance, and capital structure.
And yes, many spend their early days learning a key lesson: support management without doing the work for them.
Performance is judged across both financial and operational lines. Typical metrics include:
EBITDA growth
Revenue trajectory
Cost structure improvements
Exit multiple expansion
But numbers alone don’t tell the story. Sophisticated firms also look at:
Strength of new leadership teams
Org health and employee retention
Speed of integration post-acquisition
In some cases, internal scorecards track progress against a value creation plan (VCP), which can tie directly into bonuses and carry payouts.
The Operating Partner role continues to evolve with market expectations. What’s next?
Digital transformation: Data infrastructure, AI enablement, automation
ESG: Sustainability, governance, and regulatory alignment
Talent: Recruiting and developing high-performing management teams
Platform scalability: Especially in roll-up strategies or multi-site businesses
Firms that attract and retain top Operating Partners will increasingly win on execution, not just origination.
As more funds compete for similar assets, operational differentiation becomes a moat. And Operating Partners are the ones tasked with digging it.
In private equity, capital is no longer scarce. Execution is.
Operating Partners sit at the center of that reality — part operator, part strategist, part coach. Their mandate isn’t just to fix what’s broken. It’s to help good companies become great and to make sure improvements stick long after the exit.
They work behind the scenes. But their fingerprints are on every deal that exceeds its underwriting.
For firms that take operational value creation seriously, the Operating Partner isn’t just a nice-to-have. They’re a competitive advantage.
P.S. – Explore our Premium Resources for more valuable content and tools to help you break into the industry.