The whole deal in plain English, your numbers you can move yourself, and a step-by-step plan that anticipates their every response, so we stay one move ahead from the first email to the close.
No jargon. The whole thing in five answers. Everything after this is the detail behind them.
Tick each item as it's done. Your progress saves in this browser, so it's here when you come back. (For a shared, synced tracker across the whole team, we'd add a small backend later, but this keeps you and anyone you share it with oriented now.)
Change the cash, the sweat equity, and the valuation, and watch your ownership and potential payout update live.
Where you could land, worst to best. The color is the read at a glance: gold = the target we steer toward · blue = upside if diligence is strong · gray = the floor I'd accept · red = defensive if there's risk.
| Scenario | Cash in | Sweat + earned equity | Total equity | When we play it |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capital-light DEFENSIVE Plan C | ~$0–100K | 3–6% | ~3–6% | If diligence exposes real risk, like the account not transferring or no real profit underneath. Little or no cash, earn in through sweat and royalties, easiest to walk away clean. |
| Floor · cash-only FLOOR Plan A entry | $300K | 0% | 6% (7.5% at the $3M floor) | If they price in no role for me. A pure check, no sweat equity. The least I'd accept and still come in. |
| Base ideal ★ TARGET Plan A target | $300K | ~4% | ~10% | Where we steer. $300K for ~6%, plus ~4% earned for running growth, a real salaried seat, and design royalties on top. |
| Stretch UPSIDE Plan B | ~$500K | ~5% | ~15% | Only if the New Era account and the profit verify strong. Bigger check, a board seat, max control and upside. |
They want $3.75M for the whole company (you'd own 25% of it). The right way to judge it isn't against clothing stores — it's against other New Era exclusive-drop shops (Burdeen's, ecapcity, MyFitteds and the rest), where the whole business is a scarce New Era account that lets them design exclusives New Era then makes for them. Measured that way, the number splits cleanly in two.
The blue bar is the shop on its own. The gold bar is what the scarce New Era account adds — if it's verified yours and it transfers. The red bar is their ask. The gap above the gold is the part they have to justify, and it all rests on one thing: the account.
Not a clothing store and not a reseller — New Era manufactures their hats, and the scarce account is what lets them design exclusives at all. Valued as the operating shop it is today (one NY store plus online, ~$800K/yr), it's worth roughly $0.3–0.8M on its own. Everything above that is the account — so if the account doesn't come with it, that's the whole price.
New Era isn't handing out new accounts — their own site says they're not taking new retailers. So a real, US-held, transferable account plus the brand and the exclusive drops is a genuine asset, and it's what lifts a shop like this to ~$1.5–3M. Their $3.75M sits just above that — reachable only if the account is proven to transfer to you and there's real profit underneath. They're not a franchise yet either; that's a future to grow into, not to pay full price for today.
The honest truth most founders won't say: equity in a private retailer is illiquid for years. So we don't just buy equity and hope for a sale. We engineer your money back early, the way the sharks who know this industry would.
The equity clock is long (their own exit horizon is 5–7 years, no liquidity until then). The cash clock is what we make short: royalties and salary put money in your pocket from day one, recouping the $300K well before any sale.
Built FUBU on licensing and authenticity. He'd zero in on the New Era license as the moat and insist you license your designs, never assign them. Your royalty isn't a perk, it's ownership of what drives sales.
Don't fall in love with illiquid equity. Take a royalty or preferred return until your principal is recouped, then let the equity ride. The single most important structural idea for your payback.
Built Fanatics into a licensed-merch empire on exactly this thesis: exclusive licenses + a dominant e-commerce engine. Homegame is a micro version. His seat is the one you'd own, which makes his playbook your blueprint.
Owns the Mavericks, reads the expansion market cold. He'd pressure CAC, LTV, online margin and the inventory cash-cycle, and test whether the Toyota/Plano demand is real. That's your lane.
Your instinct is right: every successful location raises the valuation, so you want to keep buying in at the earliest, lowest price and never get watered down. Here's the honest version of how much of that we can actually win, and how.
The blue line is the company getting more valuable as locations succeed. The gold dashed line is the price you locked. Every time you exercise an option to buy more at that locked price while the real value is higher, you capture the gap. And because you're the growth operator driving the line upward, you have the strongest possible claim to that right.
The right to put in more money whenever they raise again, so your slice of ownership doesn't shrink. They already offered this in writing.
If they ever sell shares cheaper than you paid, your price drops to match. A normal protection in case growth is slower than hoped.
The right to buy more ownership at today's low price as each new store succeeds. Because you're the one driving that growth, you have a strong case to earn it.
Yoshi already showed the whole hand: the valuation logic, the floor, the never-move line, the org chart, the weaknesses they admitted. You've shown nothing. Protect that, and everything else follows.
We know their floor, their gaps, their stated risks. They don't know your check, your plans, or that you audited their backend.
You can price their operational risk better than any investor at the table. Let them tell you what you already know, and watch if they're straight.
Online is their stated engine and it's unstaffed at the principal level. That's your superpower, not a favor they're doing you.
15 years in banking at JP Morgan, UBS, and Standard Chartered, founder of Highlark Collective and Highlark Concierge, and one of the most recognized names in the fitted-hat community. So you read a cap table, a P&L, and a debt facility better than anyone across that table, you bring two real businesses, and you have standing in the category itself. They're not taking on a check, they're taking on a peer who can see straight through the numbers.
Drawn from the best in the game (Voss, Never Split the Difference; Malhotra, Negotiation Genius; Klaff, Pitch Anything; Cialdini, Influence; Rackham, SPIN). Each is a specific move for a specific moment, so you're never just talking, you're steering.
Open the non-compete ask by saying the thing they're about to think: "it isn't about caution." Defuses the resistance before it forms. Use it: the NDA opener.
Open questions make them teach you and keep their guard down; yes/no questions tip what you're worried about. Use it: every question in the bank.
"It sounds like bandwidth across three markets is the real worry." They confirm and elaborate. Free intel, no pressure. Use it: on every call.
"Is it unreasonable to want New Era's sign-off in writing before close?" Easier to win than a yes-question. Use it: the hard asks.
The account's transferability and any personal guarantee on the debt. Everything else is secondary until these two are nailed, in writing. Use it: relentlessly.
You hand them full Dallas/Texas protection to earn your NY, design, and brand carve-outs. A concession framed as generosity. Use it: the non-compete.
You're the scarce growth operator, not a grateful check, and you keep both businesses no matter what. That quiet walk-away is what lets you slow-play without flinching. Use it: always, never spoken.
"What's the single biggest thing between you and the $4 to 6M number?" They name the gap you fill, so your terms land as the obvious fix, not an ask. Use it: question 5, then later.
When price comes, re-anchor on the operating floor and concede in shrinking, oddly-precise steps. Not in the first send, hold it. Use it: after diligence.
Each step names what we send or ask, the questions that ride with it, what we anticipate back (with our counter and the tell to watch), and what it sets up next. We never skip ahead and we reveal nothing we don't have to.
The analysis the moves are built on. You don't need to read it to act, it's here so every claim above is backed.
Left: the ask vs the hard-asset floor they claim. Right: the growth story they're selling. Every number here is self-reported.
The ask sits ~$1.75M above the high end of their own hard-asset floor. That gap is the "New Era license premium." Only worth paying if the license is real, durable, and survives a change of control.
Triple in year one, double again in year two, against their own stated risks (thin management, New Era cash-cycle pressure). This is the upside case, not the base case. Underwrite conservatively.
Your strength and your risk are the same fact: you touch every party. Leverage if you enter as your own principal, a trap if you're absorbed as someone's slice.
"5 roles, 1 person" means you play five parts in this one deal at the same time: you design their hats, you supply them product, you'd be an investor, you'd work there, and your agency serves a related business. One person touching everyone. That's your power here, and the thing to handle with care.
Don't commit a structure until the license and profit report are verified. Carry three, and the diligence outcome chooses which we lead with.
| Severity | Failure mode | The signal | Our mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| CRITICAL | New Era license has a change-of-control clause | Selling 25% triggers a termination right | Verify first. Make closing conditional on written license consent. |
| CRITICAL | profit report shows the business is burning | No actual profit disclosed | Shift to Plan C / lower check / milestone-tranched capital. |
| HIGH | You get absorbed as Tim's sub-allocation | "Come in under the Hat Wall 25%" | Positioning play now, with Yoshi. Your own lane, your own equity line. |
| HIGH | You over-show your hand | Eagerness, revealing the audit, naming price first | Slow-play discipline. Questions, not positions. Let silence work. |
| MED | Inventory debt carries personal guarantees | "The facility services itself" | Confirm it sits at the entity with no personal guarantee. |
| MED | US trademark unregistered | "Filed concurrently with closing" | Condition closing on the filing. |
| MED | Concierge's own product line gets handcuffed | Broad non-compete signed by Concierge | Narrow to a Dallas store; carve out Concierge's D2C hat/apparel. |
| WATCH | Tim friction (vendor + co-investor) | Awkwardness over Hat Wall work vs co-ownership | Transparency + written carve-outs up front. |
First we narrow the non-compete so I can sign, then five sharp questions go now and the deeper diligence list follows once the NDA is in. Worth knowing who's across the table: Jun is the founder of Lafayette (LFYT), the 20-year Japanese streetwear brand, and Homegame is its hat arm with the flagship in Japan. The New Era relationship runs deep on the Lafayette/Japan side, which is exactly why how the US account sits is the question that matters most. None of these repeat Tim's Q1–Q22; each goes a layer deeper.
Why: as written it would lock me out of my own work. I've been in hats and design in New York for years with commitments I can't drop. I give them full protection where it counts, no competing store in Texas, the market this funds, and keep my New York business, my designs, my brand, and my projects clear. Fixed before I sign.
Why: the New Era access is the whole asset, and it runs deep on the Lafayette/Japan side over many years. So is the US account its own relationship in the US company's name, or does it lean on Jun or Japan? And what does the agreement say about new owners or a change of control, with anything needed from New Era in writing before close? If the account can't stand on its own and come with the company, the price has nothing under it.
Why: $800K in sales tells me nothing about profit. I want the real earnings after the true cost of running the New York store, staff included, adding back only Jun's owner pay and one-offs, across three years and tied to the tax returns.
Why: I'm not a slice of the Hat Wall group. I want the fully diluted cap table after this round, every partner on their own line including me, plus anything outstanding like options, notes, or convertible debt.
Why: online is the engine of the whole plan, and the lane I'd own. Who runs it day to day now, and what is it actually doing, the spend, the return, the repeat customers? That tells me what the $4–6M is really built on, and whether the seat is open.
Why: going from $800K to $4–6M in two years is a real jump. Asking them to name the one true bottleneck tells me how they think, and it usually points straight at the gap I fill.
Three years of statements and tax returns; the inventory-debt terms and any personal guarantees; the Dallas model and lease; the real online metrics; how dependent the US is on Japan; who owns the Homegame trademark; and why a 20-year founder with a large Japan business wants outside capital for Dallas. Held back on purpose, we don't show how deep we dig until we're in.