If you're a seasoned executive looking to break into private equity—or advance within a PE-backed company—how you talk about your experience matters. A lot.
PE firms don’t just want experienced leaders. They want value creators who understand the investor mindset, move with urgency, and speak in terms of outcomes. Too often, strong candidates get passed over simply because they sound too “corporate.”
Here’s how to shift your language—and mindset—to sound more PE-ready.
Private equity is about results, not process. Your communication should reflect that.
Avoid vague statements like “drove efficiency” or “transformed culture.” Instead, speak in terms of:
Example:
“Consolidated vendors and improved gross margin by 220bps in 9 months.”
“Improved procurement efficiency through vendor relationships.”
Show you understand the investment lens by referencing:
Example:
“Delivered pricing changes that improved top-line growth while protecting EBITDA.”
Lose terms like:
Replace them with plain, actionable language that shows ownership.
Example:
“Set clear KPIs across teams to hit our 24-month growth targets.”
“Oversaw alignment of cross-functional priorities.”
PE timelines are fast. Use direct, active voice:
“I owned…”
“I delivered…”
“I restructured…”
Avoid soft phrases like:
“I was involved in…”
“I participated in…”
Whatever your role—finance, ops, tech, HR—connect it to value.
Example:
“Revamped onboarding to cut time-to-value by 40%, reducing churn.”
“Implemented new onboarding workflows for team efficiency.”
Drop in terms they use:
The right vocabulary signals you “get it.” If you’re not fluent yet, start learning.
You don’t need to erase your corporate background—you just need to translate it. In private equity, language isn’t about fluff. It’s about results, velocity, and ownership.
Be sharper.
Be more bottom-line.
Speak like a value creator.
For more information about this topic, check out our Guide on Shifting from Corporate.
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