Creator of the Clear to Exit Method.
Author of Both Sides of the Wire.
The advisor who has lived both sides of the exit.
Most business owners spend years building something worth selling and almost no time preparing for who they are on the other side of selling it.
Rachel Scholler is the creator of the Clear to Exit Method and founder of the Clear to Exit Mastermind. In 2008, at 30 years old, she started a non-emergency medical transportation company with two vans, no business plan, and no outside investment. Her grandfather needed dialysis transport, and the local company told her they didn't serve properties thirteen miles outside the city. She didn't sell her home. She built a business instead.
What followed was seventeen years of building something real — from two vans to a fleet transporting more than a hundred patients a day, running a profitable adult day programming operation alongside the core transport business, and cultivating a team culture so deliberate that when COVID shut down the world, three of her drivers chose to keep working without pay rather than leave the clients they'd been serving.
In early 2024, she sold the business in a seven-figure exit. And then the wire hit. What she felt in the weeks that followed was not the relief she'd imagined. It was disorientation, identity loss, and the kind of quiet that accumulates when the thing you've organized your life around for seventeen years is suddenly someone else's.
That experience, combined with everything she learned on both sides of the transaction, is what she teaches now. Rachel works with established business owners doing $2M to $10M in annual revenue to prepare for exits that maximize business value and protect what comes next. Her framework, the Clear to Exit Method, is a three-stage, nine-step system that addresses both the financial and personal dimensions of exiting a business. Her first book, Both Sides of the Wire, was published in 2026.
What makes Rachel's perspective distinct is not her credentials. It is her lived experience. She has been the owner who didn't know what she didn't know. She has been the seller who walked into a private equity meeting unrepresented and learned what that cost her. She has been the person standing in the quiet on the other side, figuring out who she was without the business. That is not a consulting background. That is lived authority.
Each talk draws from Rachel's lived experience and the Clear to Exit Method. They expand or contract based on available time. All are available as keynotes, featured breakout sessions, workshop formats, or podcast conversations.
What no one tells you about the exit — and how to prepare for both sides of it
The talk that started everything. Rachel opens with the morning the sale closed: the wire transferred, the balance changed, and she sat in her house at 8 a.m. with nowhere to be for the first time in seventeen years. What followed was not the freedom she'd imagined. It was disorientation, identity loss, and the gap that almost every high-achieving founder falls into and nobody warns them about. This talk reframes the exit from a financial event to a life transition — and gives audiences a clear framework for preparing for both sides of it before the wire hits. Counterintuitive, emotionally resonant, and immediately actionable.
How buyers think about valuation — and why most owners are leaving money on the table without knowing it
Most business owners have a rough sense of what their business might be worth. They are usually wrong — and often not in the direction they expect. This talk takes audiences behind the numbers to show how buyers actually evaluate a business: what suppresses a multiple, what expands it, and why founder dependency and recurring revenue matter more than almost anything else. Grounded in Rachel's own experience, including the broker who undervalued her business by thirty percent and the advisor who recovered that value, this talk translates complex M&A thinking into plain language that business owners can act on immediately.
Founder dependency, transferable value, and the work that pays you twice
Rachel's entire routing system lived in her head for seventeen years. No software could replicate it. No documentation could transfer it. She carried that founder dependency all the way to the closing table — and watched a buyer use it as negotiating leverage. This talk is for the business owner who is the ceiling of their own operation: the one clients call directly, the one every decision runs through, the one the team cannot move without. It names the problem clearly, shows why it is almost always invisible to the person who created it, and gives audiences the framework for reducing it before a buyer finds it for them.
The gap between a great business and an exit-ready one — and how to close it
There is a meaningful difference between a business that performs well and a business that a sophisticated buyer will pay a premium for. Most owners conflate the two. This talk unpacks the Clear to Exit Method at a conceptual level — the three stages, the nine steps, the specific gap between where most established businesses are today and where they need to be before going to market. It is structured for audiences who are building toward an eventual exit but have not yet started the preparation work, and delivers enough specificity that they leave knowing exactly where to start.
The identity work of exiting a business — and why it matters more than anyone tells you
This is the talk that no one else in the exit planning space can give, because it requires having lived it. When Rachel sold her business, she had her identity tied to it in ways she didn't fully understand until it was gone. The structure. The metric. The proof that she was doing something that mattered. This talk addresses the post-exit experience head-on: the identity loss, the purpose vacuum, the relationship friction that follows a successful sale. It is not therapy. It is preparation — the kind that lets someone step into the next chapter of their life with intention instead of arriving there by accident. Deeply personal, emotionally resonant, and unlike anything else on the conference circuit.
Rachel is available for keynotes, featured breakout sessions, workshop facilitation, and podcast appearances. She presents as a solo speaker, not as a panelist — the material requires space to build an arc, tell the story, and deliver the framework with the depth it deserves.
Booking inquiries are handled directly and personally. There is no intake form, no auto-responder, and no one between you and a real conversation about fit and logistics.