Start a Search

Elevator

A forty-year service contract, enforced by code.

Learn More
Elevator
Elevators are the only trade where the regulators force you to keep the asset alive for forty years. That is why every PE roll-up in essential services points to elevator eventually.

The service contract flywheel is the entire investment thesis. Every elevator installed requires code-mandated annual inspections, twice-yearly maintenance visits, and a continuous relationship with whoever holds the service contract. In most US markets the big four OEMs (Otis, KONE, Schindler, TK Elevator) hold 70-80 percent of the installed base on OEM service contracts. The independent opportunity sits in the remaining 20-30 percent plus every building owner who is one renewal away from switching providers for a 30 percent price reduction.

Then there is the modernization wave. The US has approximately 950,000 passenger elevators in operation. ASME A17.3 code updates have made 1980s-era controllers non-compliant in many jurisdictions, and hydraulic units from the 1990s are approaching end-of-life. A full modernization runs $80,000-$250,000 per unit. Independent operators who can handle both the mechanical retrofit and the controller swap are capturing work that the OEMs often will not quote competitively.

PE has noticed. The space saw record deal activity in 2024-2025, and firms like Arcline (Minnesota Elevator) and Bow River Capital (TK Elevator Americas acquisition partnership) have publicly committed to elevator consolidation theses.

950KPassenger elevators in operation across the US - each requires code-mandated service forever
70%OEM share of the service contract base. The independent opportunity is the other 30 percent plus every renewal.
$250KUpper range per-unit modernization revenue. A 50-building portfolio represents $12M in addressable retrofit work.
THE INSTALLED BASE
1.3M
Elevators installed in the U.S., many over 20 years old, driving steady modernization demand.

Modernization revenue is contractually larger, technically harder and more competitive than maintenance. The leadership question is whether your operations team can sell and deliver both inside the same field organization.

THE RECURRING ENGINE
45%
Of industry revenue from maintenance and repair - the recurring-revenue engine with 85%+ renewal rates.

Maintenance contracts are the asset. Renewal rates above 85 percent come from technician relationships built over a decade with the building owner, not from the contract terms. Losing the wrong tech can cost a six-figure account.

THE TECHNICIAN SCARCITY
4-6 years
CET apprenticeship duration, creating structural technician scarcity in a compliance-intensive trade.

A four-year apprenticeship means the next generation of techs you need in 2030 has to be hired this year. The platforms that win this category are the ones that already started.

The technician who can pull wire and replace a motor is not the leader who can navigate multi-OEM parts procurement, ASME A17.1 compliance audits, 85 percent service-contract renewal targets, and modernization-to-maintenance conversion. They perform like different executives because they are.
The vertical sits where industrial services consolidation reached around 2016-2018: OEM-dominated on new installation, fragmenting rapidly on independent service, and beginning to attract institutional capital. The executive talent pool is approximately 18 months behind deal pace. Every platform is competing for the same thin pool of operators who combine elevator-specific technical knowledge with institutional-quality leadership.
Where the search breaks down
  • Replacing a retained founder-CEO with an industrial services operator who lacks elevator credibility - the ASME A17.1 code requirements, multi-OEM parts procurement across Otis/Schindler/Kone/ThyssenKrupp, CET-certified technician training pathways, and modernization contract-to-maintenance conversion dynamics are not transferable from HVAC or facility management, and attrition starts within weeks
  • Hiring a CFO who does not understand deferred revenue from prepaid multi-year maintenance contracts, warranty reserve modeling on modernization projects, or customer concentration risk when 30-40 percent of revenue sits with five commercial property managers - elevator service has portfolio dynamics that facility management CFOs misread as unstable cash flow
  • Treating the Director of Service Contracts as a standard account management hire - this role owns 85 percent-plus renewal targets on contracts worth $4-8 million annually, manages escalation clauses tied to labor rates and parts inflation, and controls whether modernization wins convert into 10-15 year maintenance relationships
  • Undervaluing the VP of Compliance and Safety - ASME A17.1 code compliance, state elevator inspector relationships, annual inspections on every unit under contract, and incident reporting protocols are non-negotiable. A missed inspection can trigger contract termination. A failed audit can cost the platform its entire book in a metro.
What we bring to it
  • We know the difference between an operator who has genuinely built an 85 percent-plus service contract renewal base and one who inherited mature commercial relationships and maintained them - the value creation profiles are completely different, and the latter cannot scale through tuck-in integration
  • We have mapped the industrial services CFOs in the market who understand deferred revenue, modernization project accounting, and multi-OEM parts procurement volatility - this is not a large group, and we know which ones have successfully transitioned into elevator platforms
  • We understand where commercial and residential elevator service leadership overlaps and where it does not - commercial service requires facility manager relationships and multi-year PM contract expertise, while residential requires volume service-call dispatch and homeowner conversion, and we do not present a commercial VP of Operations for a residential platform search or vice versa
  • The retained-founder-to-professional-operator transition is the hardest leadership move in elevator service. We know which former owners have made it successfully, which ones L Squared and Carroll Capital have equity-partnered to extend runway, and which ones will revert the moment integration pressure builds.

Hiring in Elevator?

Start this search

Leading in Elevator?

Join our operator network
Roles We Place
Every seat on this list is hard to fill. The elevator executive pool runs deep in technical operators. Thin in operators who have scaled inside PE.
CEO / Platform President
Must navigate an acquisition pace of 10-20+ add-ons per year while retaining the founder-operators, CET-certified technicians, and commercial property relationships that made each acquisition worth buying. Balances multi-OEM parts procurement strategy across Otis, Schindler, Kone, and ThyssenKrupp, ASME A17.1 compliance across state jurisdictions, and the decision between commercial density, residential expansion, and vertical integration into modernization project work. The rarest profile: elevator-technically credible and institutionally fluent at the same time.
Chief Financial Officer
Owns deferred revenue accounting from prepaid multi-year maintenance contracts, project accounting on modernization work with 12-18 month timelines, warranty reserve modeling, and acquisition evaluation where the value is in 85 percent-plus service contract renewal rates - not trailing EBITDA. Must model customer concentration risk when 30-40 percent of revenue sits with five commercial property managers, manage parts procurement volatility across four OEMs, and navigate state elevator inspector audit requirements. Not a general-industry brief.
VP of Operations
Accountable for units under contract, service-call response times, modernization project delivery, CET technician utilization, and callback rates across multiple branches. In a PE-backed platform this role drives integration of acquired companies - migrating onto shared dispatch systems, harmonizing safety protocols, building SOPs that allow a $10 million acquired company to operate inside a $200 million platform without losing the commercial property manager relationships that made it worth acquiring. Must navigate OEM parts procurement, ASME A17.1 compliance, and the commercial-residential service mix.
General Manager
Branch or regional P&L owner. $10M-$50M revenue. Manages service contract renewals, modernization project pipeline, technician productivity, and the commercial-residential mix. The seat requires fluency in both worlds - a commercial GM who has never run residential elevator service will struggle with volume service-call dispatch and homeowner conversion, while a residential GM lacks the facility manager relationship skills for multi-year PM contracts.
VP of Service Contracts
A role that barely exists outside elevator PE. Owns the platform's 85 percent-plus renewal target on contracts worth $4-8 million annually. Manages escalation clauses tied to labor rates and parts inflation, controls whether modernization wins convert into 10-15 year maintenance relationships, and builds the commercial property manager relationship strategy that protects the platform from customer concentration risk. Moving service contract penetration from 70 percent to 90 percent can add 1-2 turns to the exit multiple.
VP of Compliance and Safety
Owns ASME A17.1 code compliance, state elevator inspector relationships, annual inspections on every unit under contract, and incident reporting protocols. A missed inspection can trigger contract termination. A failed audit can cost the platform its entire book in a metro. This leader manages QEI-certified inspector pipelines, develops internal CET apprenticeship programs, and navigates the reality that elevator safety regulation varies by state jurisdiction - what passes in Texas fails in New York.
Director of Modernization Projects
Manages the modernization pipeline that converts one-time capital projects into 10-15 year maintenance contracts. Oversees project bidding, multi-OEM equipment procurement, installation timelines, and post-modernization service contract conversion rates. Must balance commercial property manager relationships, union labor coordination in major metros, and the technical reality that modernization projects carry 12-18 month delivery timelines with warranty obligations that extend into multi-year maintenance agreements.
Director of Technician Development
Builds the CET-certified technician pipeline through 4-6 year apprenticeships. Manages NAEC certification pathways, develops internal training academies, and designs the career pathway from apprentice to field supervisor - the retention mechanism that reduces the 20-25 percent annual turnover that costs $15,000-$20,000 per departure. The elevator industry supports 27,000 IUEC members. The talent pool is structurally constrained by apprenticeship duration and certification requirements.

A sample of the senior leadership positions we place across this vertical. Not an exhaustive list - if the role you need is not shown, reach out.

Other Verticals
Let's
Talk.
You have an elevator platform. IUEC-credible leadership who can also navigate OEM independence strategy does not walk through the door.