🌕 Independent School Moonshot Podcast

M&A in Independent Schools:

A Guide for Heads and Boards

An interview with Kevin Ruth, Executive Director, NJAIS

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Anatomy of a School Merger:

From Due Diligence to the First Day

For many boards and heads, the word "merger" enters the conversation far too late, loaded with fear, myth, and misunderstanding. In this episode, Kevin Ruth, Executive Director of NJAIS and a certified M&A advisor, pulls back the curtain on what mergers actually look like in the independent school world, and why the schools that navigate them best are the ones that start the conversation before they have to.

Kevin breaks down the full arc of a school merger: from the strategic rationale that must anchor every serious conversation to due diligence, legal counsel, board governance, faculty contracts, and the loaded question of who leads the merged entity.

This is not a theoretical conversation. It is a practical, honest look at what it takes to merge two institutions thoughtfully, and what goes wrong when schools wait too long, move too fast, or skip the hard internal conversations about identity, mission, and culture.

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What You'll Learn from Kevin Ruth:

  1. Merger is not a rescue plan; it is a strategy. The most successful mergers happen between schools that are thinking proactively, not reactively. Waiting until you cannot make payroll changes your leverage, your options, and ultimately your outcome.

  1. Shared services are often the on-ramp. A shared CFO or shared resource between two schools is not just a cost solution. It is a low-risk way to test cultural and operational compatibility before a formal merger conversation begins.

  1. The strategic rationale has to come first. Before you sign a letter of intent, both institutions need a clear, agreed-upon answer to one question: what can we do together that we cannot do alone? Without that anchor, due diligence becomes expensive, and the deal often falls apart.

  1. Mergers are the work of the board, not the head. Heads may start the conversation, but the moment a merger is on the table, it belongs to board leadership. Getting the board chair read in early is not optional; it is a fiduciary requirement.

  1. Know yourself and be brutally honest. The schools that move through mergers most successfully are the ones willing to take off the mask and clearly name their strengths and weaknesses. Trying to mask weaknesses during due diligence almost always backfires.

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