BLOG
Where to Find a Debt Capital Consultant (and How to Choose the Right Partner)
Matthew Bjonerud
Founder & CEO
Raising debt capital may seem simple. You find a lender, share numbers, and sign a term sheet, then reality sets in. In reality, debt financing is a negotiation-heavy, structure-sensitive process where small choices, covenants, amortization, pricing grids, reporting requirements, intercreditor terms, can meaningfully change your company’s flexibility and total cost of capital for years.
That’s exactly why a strong debt capital consultant (often called a debt advisor, capital markets advisor, or debt placement advisor) can be the difference between “funded” and funded well.
This guide breaks down where to find a debt capital consultant, what to look for, what to avoid, and how to run a process that improves pricing, terms, and certainty of close—without burning months of leadership time.
What a Debt Capital Consultant Actually Does (Beyond “Finding Lenders”)
Before you start searching, it helps to clarify what you’re hiring for. A true debt capital consultant should do more than send your deck to a list of banks.
A high-quality debt advisor typically helps with:
Capital strategy: How much to raise, what type (term loan, revolver, asset-based lending, venture debt, private credit, mezzanine), and when
Positioning & materials: Lender-ready narrative, model hygiene, KPI definitions, and a clean data room
Market mapping: Identifying the right lenders for your size, sector, collateral profile, and growth stage
Process management: Running outreach, managing Q&A, and keeping momentum without derailing operations
Term sheet negotiation: Pricing, covenants, baskets, reporting, EBITDA addbacks, permitted liens, restricted payments, and more
Diligence support & closing: Coordinating legal, lender diligence, insurance, appraisals, third-party reports, and closing mechanics
In other words: they’re a translator, strategist, project manager, and negotiator, not just a connector.
Where You Can Find a Debt Capital Consultant (Best Sources First)
1) Referrals from CFOs, founders, and PE operating partners
The most reliable path is still warm introductions from people who have closed financings recently, especially in your industry and deal size.
Ask these specific questions when you request a referral:
“Who ran a process that improved terms (not just found capital)?”
“Who protected the business during covenant negotiations?”
“Who stayed calm during diligence and got to close on schedule?”
Why this works: debt advisory quality is hard to judge from a website; outcomes and execution show up in peer feedback.
2) Your existing professional ecosystem (but be selective)
Your current advisors can be a strong starting point:
Corporate attorneys (they see who negotiates well and who creates chaos)
Accountants and fractional CFOs
M&A advisors / investment bankers (many do debt raises too)
Insurance brokers (surprisingly connected for lender-driven processes)
Tip: Ask them for two names:
the “best overall” and
the “best for our profile” (industry, scale, urgency)
3) Industry associations and finance networks
If you’re in a specialized vertical (healthcare, SaaS, manufacturing, logistics, energy, real estate), look for finance communities where debt advisors participate:
Local and regional CFO councils
Association events for your industry
Private credit and capital markets conferences
Founder networks and operator communities
These venues help you see who can speak credibly about:
common covenant traps in your sector
lender appetites
typical leverage metrics and reporting expectations
4) LinkedIn (use it like a database, not a feed)
LinkedIn is effective if you search with intent. Use keywords like:
“Debt advisory”
“Capital markets advisory”
“Private credit placement”
“Venture debt advisor”
“Structured finance”
“Asset-based lending advisory”
“Debt placement”
Then filter by:
Geography (if your lenders require local presence)
Industry experience
Recent activity (e.g., “closed” announcements, content on covenants, lender updates)
What to look for: evidence they understand structure—not just “we help companies raise money.”
5) Boutique advisory firms and capital partners (the sweet spot for many companies)
For many growth-stage and middle-market businesses, boutique debt advisors offer the best mix of:
senior attention
specialized lender relationships
faster execution
more tailored structuring help
This is also where you often find partners who can stay close to the CFO/CEO and help coordinate the full financing workflow end-to-end.
6) Online directories and marketplaces (use with caution)
There are platforms that list financial advisors and consultants. They can be useful for discovery, but always validate claims.
If a profile is heavy on buzzwords and light on specifics (deal sizes, instruments, industries, closing timelines), treat it as a lead, not a decision.
How to Vet a Debt Capital Consultant (A Practical Scorecard)
Finding candidates is the easy part. Choosing the right partner is where value is created (or destroyed). Use the criteria below to compare options objectively.
Track record and deal fit
Ask:
What is your typical deal size range?
What instruments do you place most often (ABL, cash-flow loans, venture debt, private credit, mezzanine)?
What industries do you know deeply?
Can you share anonymized examples of structures and terms you negotiated?
Green flag: they can explain why a structure worked and what tradeoffs were made.
Lender access that matches your situation
A strong advisor should have relationships across:
Banks (revolvers, term loans, treasury services)
Private credit funds (unitranche, delayed draw, bespoke covenants)
Venture debt lenders (warrants, growth profiles)
Asset-based lenders (borrowing base mechanics)
Red flag: an advisor pushing one lender type because that’s all they know.
Negotiation strength (the hidden ROI)
Debt terms are not just “rate and leverage.” You want someone who can negotiate:
covenant headroom
EBITDA addbacks (reasonable, defensible)
baskets and carveouts
reporting cadence and definitions
cure rights
change-of-control and prepayment language
If they can’t talk confidently about these topics, they’re not a debt capital consultant, you’re hiring a matchmaker.
Process discipline and time management
Ask:
What is your process timeline from kickoff to close? (Capital raises typically require up to 9 months)
What do you need from us each week?
How do you run the data room and lender Q&A?
Who does the work day-to-day?
Green flag: clear weekly milestones, templates, and a realistic diligence plan.
Alignment and compensation clarity
Common fee structures include:
Retainer + success fee
Success fee only (can create rushed behavior)
Hourly/Project-based (rare for placements, but common for readiness work)
You should understand:
When fees trigger
Whether there are minimums
What happens if you refinance later
Whether they receive any lender-side compensation (disclose and avoid conflicts)
Common Mistakes Companies Make When Hiring a Debt Advisor
Mistake #1: Hiring based on brand name alone
A big brand can be helpful, but only if your deal gets senior attention. If you’re not a priority, you may get a generic process and junior execution.
Mistake #2: Running a “spray and pray” lender outreach
Sending your story to 50 lenders sounds like a strategy. It often leads to:
inconsistent messaging
fragmented feedback
reputational fatigue in the market
slower closes
A good consultant runs a targeted process with tight positioning.
Mistake #3: Not preparing the lender narrative and data room
Lenders fund clarity. If your KPIs, margins, churn, backlog, or working capital story are messy, you’ll pay for it in pricing, covenants, and structure.
Mistake #4: Optimizing for maximum leverage instead of durable terms
The best debt is the debt you can live with, through volatility. Smaller companies have higher covenant default rates than upper middle market companies. A strong advisor optimizes for survivability, not just proceeds.
What “Good” Looks Like: The Debt Advisory Process in 6 Steps
A well-run engagement typically follows this arc:
Diagnostic & capital plan
debt capacity estimate
structure options and tradeoffs
Materials + model readiness
lender deck / memo
data room checklist
Lender mapping and shortlist
right-fit lenders only
Outreach + management presentations
clean Q&A flow
consistent narrative
Term sheet comparison + negotiation
normalize economics across offers
negotiate covenants/definitions
Diligence + documentation to close
maintain speed
avoid last-minute surprises
If your advisor can’t outline a process like this (and show how they keep it on track), that’s a signal.
Why Cerebro Is Built to Be the Debt Capital Partner You Actually Need
If you’re looking for more than introductions, if you want a partner who can structure, negotiate, and execute, that’s where Cerebro stands out.
Cerebro’s point of view is simple: debt should fund growth without quietly handcuffing the business. That means focusing on the full equation:
The right structure for your cash-flow profile and assets
Competitive pricing and resilient covenant packages
A clean process that respects leadership time
A closing path that avoids “death by diligence”
Rather than treating debt as a commodity, Cerebro approaches it as a strategic layer of your capital stack, built to match how your business actually operates.
Conclusion: Finding a Debt Capital Consultant Is About Outcomes, Not Titles
You can find debt capital consultants through referrals, your professional network, industry groups, and targeted LinkedIn outreach. But the real key is choosing a partner who can:
match you with the right lender universe
run a disciplined process
negotiate terms that protect flexibility
get you to a confident close
If your business is serious about raising debt, and doing it in a way that supports growth, Cerebro is the kind of debt capital partner designed for that job.
FAQs: How Cerebro Becomes the Debt Capital Partner You Need
1) What makes Cerebro different from a broker who just “shops the deal”?
Cerebro is built for end-to-end debt execution: structuring, positioning, targeted lender outreach, term sheet normalization, and covenant negotiation, so you’re not just getting capital, you’re getting better capital.
2) Can Cerebro help if we’re not sure what type of debt we qualify for?
Yes. Cerebro helps you assess realistic options, cash-flow lending, asset-based facilities, private credit, venture debt, or hybrids, based on your metrics, assets, and growth plan. The goal is to choose a structure you can operate within.
3) How does Cerebro help us get better terms (not just a yes)?
Cerebro focuses on the parts of debt that quietly matter most:
covenant headroom and definitions
addbacks and reporting requirements
baskets and restricted payment flexibility
prepayment language and amendment friction
That’s where many companies either win flexibility, or lose it.
4) We’re busy. How does Cerebro minimize management distraction?
Cerebro runs a disciplined process with clear weekly milestones, a guided data room build, and centralized lender Q&A, so your CEO/CFO stays focused on the business while the raise moves forward.
5) When should we talk to Cerebro—before we need the money, or when we’re ready?
Earlier is usually better. If you talk to Cerebro before a raise, you can improve readiness (KPIs, model, story, lender fit) and avoid rushed decisions. But Cerebro can also execute quickly when timing is tight, especially if the objective is a clean, controlled close.
6) What’s the best first step with Cerebro?
Bring your current financials, your growth plan, and your goals for the facility (size, use of proceeds, timeline). Cerebro can then map likely structures and lender fit, and outline a financing process designed to deliver strong terms with high certainty of close.
If you’d like, share your company stage (revenue/EBITDA), industry, funding timeline, and whether you have hard assets or mostly recurring revenue and I can outline what type of debt capital consultant to prioritize and what a Cerebro-led process would look like for your specific situation.
Author: Cerebro Capital Capital Markets Team
Published: February 11, 2026
Cerebro Capital is committed to helping businesses secure the right financing through data-driven insights, objective guidance, and the broadest lender access in the market. Discover additional financing solutions such as working capital loans and strategies for managing debt by visiting our resource center.
Related Content
The world of middle-market lending has changed. Before COVID-19, traditional lenders showed flexibility as they worked to expand their books of business.
Increase the Chances of Closing a Loan
Significant disruptions to the lending landscape in the past four months have left corporate borrowers scrambling to stay on top of changing requirements
CFOs need to be constantly aware of how their company’s financial performance and market shifts affect its debt capacity, which is the best measure of your business’ ability to borrow.
Ready to get started?
Join the thousands of mid-sized companies who have used Cerebro.
- info@cerebrocapital.com
-
12 W Madison St.
Baltimore, MD 21201 - Cerebro Capital
- @cerebrocapital