How Michael Ligon Evaluates Opportunities Across Capital, Real Estate, Business, And Strategic Situations
Michael Ligon evaluates opportunities by looking at fit, source quality, decision maker access, asset value, operator ability, capital purpose, structure, downside risk, timing, documentation, and the path to a defined outcome.
Michael evaluates opportunities by moving from first impression to facts, then from facts to structure.
Many opportunities sound interesting at first. Fewer stay interesting after the details are reviewed. A real evaluation process separates a strong opportunity from a good story, a rushed pitch, or an idea that is not ready.
Michael’s process looks at the opportunity itself, the people behind it, the source of the deal, the asset or business involved, the timing, the capital need, the available documents, the risk profile, and the practical path to resolution.
The purpose of evaluation is not to make every opportunity work. The purpose is to decide whether deeper review, capital strategy, relationship discussion, referral, restructuring, or a clean pass makes the most sense.
The first question is whether the opportunity fits the right review lane.
Before looking at deeper numbers, Michael first considers what type of opportunity is being presented. Real estate, private capital, business purpose lending, private business, strategic partnerships, and special situations each require a different review lens.
Fit matters because the wrong review lane creates the wrong questions. A private lending opportunity should not be evaluated the same way as a business acquisition. A land opportunity should not be reviewed the same way as an operator led capital partnership.
The first filter asks what the opportunity is, why it is relevant, who brought it, and whether it belongs within Michael’s current areas of focus.
A first review starts with simple questions that reveal whether the opportunity belongs in the process.
A private opportunity becomes stronger when the source is credible and the decision maker is reachable.
Michael pays close attention to the source of an opportunity. A serious source can explain where the opportunity came from, who is involved, what authority exists, what documents are available, and what next step is realistic.
A weak source may have a loose story, no decision maker access, unclear ownership, limited facts, no documents, and no practical path to move the situation forward.
The more direct the source, the easier it becomes to verify facts, understand timing, and decide whether the opportunity deserves deeper review.
Michael evaluates the people behind the opportunity because people determine whether the plan can survive reality.
Numbers, assets, and ideas matter. But the quality of the people involved often determines whether the opportunity becomes executable.
Who Executes?
The operator should have the experience, discipline, communication, decision making, and problem solving ability required by the opportunity.
Who Controls?
The opportunity should identify who has authority to sell, borrow, partner, sign, approve, negotiate, fund, or make the relevant decision.
Who Benefits?
The incentives, contributions, risk, upside, and responsibilities should be aligned enough to support good decisions.
Who Reports?
The parties should be able to communicate clearly, provide updates, answer questions, disclose issues, and respond when conditions change.
A serious opportunity should have substance that can be reviewed beyond the pitch.
A real estate opportunity should have property facts. A private lending opportunity should have collateral and exit logic. A business opportunity should have operating context. A partnership opportunity should have defined roles. A special situation should explain the pressure, complexity, and path.
Michael evaluates whether the opportunity can be supported by actual information. If the pitch depends only on enthusiasm, market buzz, or unsupported projections, the review usually stops early.
Substance creates the ability to ask better questions. Better questions create better decisions.
Michael evaluates what the capital is expected to do before deciding whether the request makes sense.
A capital request should explain the specific use of funds. Capital may be needed for acquisition, repairs, bridge timing, payoff, stabilization, growth, transaction execution, business transition, or a special situation path.
The structure should match the capital purpose. Private lending, strategic capital, capital partnership, special situation capital, and business purpose capital each require different review questions.
Michael evaluates whether the requested capital is appropriate for the opportunity or whether the situation needs more diligence, a different structure, a different partner, or no capital at all.
The most useful part of an evaluation is often the part that tests what could go wrong.
Every opportunity has risk. The question is whether the risk can be identified, understood, structured, reduced, priced, or avoided.
Michael looks at downside before accepting upside. What happens if the timeline changes? What if costs increase? What if the operator underperforms? What if the market softens? What if the refinance, buyer, tenant, or partner does not perform?
An opportunity becomes stronger when it can survive those questions without relying on perfect conditions.
Michael evaluates whether the opportunity can move from story to support.
Serious review usually requires supporting information. The exact documents depend on the type of opportunity, but every opportunity should be able to provide enough proof to justify the next step.
Property Support
Address, photos, price, condition, title status, repair scope, rent details, valuation support, zoning, access, or seller context may matter.
Capital Support
Use of funds, requested amount, proposed structure, timeline, collateral, repayment path, refinance path, or sale path may matter.
Business Support
Revenue, expenses, operating history, customers, assets, liabilities, ownership structure, growth plan, or transition details may matter.
Partner Support
Roles, responsibilities, contribution, decision rights, reporting expectations, documents, economics, and exit expectations may matter.
An opportunity evaluation may lead to deeper review, capital strategy, private lending, partnership discussion, referral, restructuring, watch list status, or a clear pass.
A clean decision is valuable even when the answer is not to move forward.
Deeper Review
The opportunity may deserve more diligence when the source, people, documents, risk, and outcome are strong enough to continue.
Capital Path
The opportunity may move toward private lending, strategic capital, special situation capital, or a broader capital strategy discussion.
Relationship Path
The opportunity may require a capital partner, operator, referral source, strategic relationship, or clearer role alignment.
Pass Or Monitor
Some opportunities should be passed on, monitored, referred elsewhere, or revisited later after the facts improve.
The first step is to submit enough context to make the opportunity understandable.
The strongest submissions are specific, organized, and honest about what is known and what still needs review.
You do not need to have every answer before submitting an opportunity. But you should provide enough context to explain what the opportunity is, who is involved, what is being requested, and why the timing matters.
If the opportunity appears aligned with Michael’s current focus, the next step may include follow up questions, document review, source review, operator review, asset review, capital structure discussion, or a private conversation.
Submitting details does not create a lending commitment, investment commitment, advisory relationship, partnership relationship, obligation to fund, or guarantee that capital will be available.
Opportunity evaluation connects to investment criteria, capital allocation philosophy, private capital opportunities, capital partnerships, and strategic capital.
The right path depends on the opportunity, source, people, structure, risk, asset quality, capital need, timing, and outcome being pursued.
Investment Criteria
Review the standards used to evaluate fit, structure, risk, opportunity quality, operator strength, and execution path.
Capital Allocation Philosophy
Review how capital allocation decisions are approached with discipline, selectivity, downside awareness, and opportunity fit.
Private Capital Opportunities
Review private opportunities where relationship, operator quality, source quality, use of funds, and outcome need attention.
Capital Partnerships
Review capital partnership opportunities where alignment, operator quality, roles, reporting, and structure matter.
Have a serious opportunity that may deserve Michael’s review?
Send the opportunity details, source context, parties involved, capital need, use of funds, documents if available, timing, and expected outcome. If the situation fits Michael’s current review focus, the next step may be a private follow up conversation.