Broadview Group adds Hayden Medart to beef up its technology deal team

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This article was written by the Augury Times
New hire announced and start date
Broadview Group has hired Hayden Medart as an associate on its investment team, the firm said in a short announcement. Medart will join Broadview’s Technology & Services practice and is expected to start in January 2026. The role is a direct, front‑line position working on transactions for software and services companies.
The firm framed the appointment as a practical move: Medart will support live deals, help build financial models, manage portions of due diligence and prepare client materials for potential buyers, investors and strategic partners. Broadview described the hire as part of an effort to boost capacity as the firm handles more mid‑market technology mandates.
Medart’s professional background and recent roles
Medart comes to Broadview after holding roles in investment banking where he focused on technology clients. In his most recent position, he worked on buy‑ and sell‑side advisory assignments and supported capital raises for growth‑stage software companies. That earlier work had him building models, running valuation exercises and coordinating diligence between company management and potential acquirers.
Before banking, Medart gained experience in corporate finance and in working directly with product teams at smaller tech firms, giving him a mix of deal‑side and operational perspective. Broadview highlighted his familiarity with cloud software, enterprise services and cybersecurity as particularly relevant to the practice’s current client mix.
What Medart brings to Broadview’s Technology & Services practice
The hire strengthens Broadview’s ability to handle more concurrent engagements and more complex sale processes. Associates are the people who do the heavy lifting on execution: running analyses, coordinating advisers, pulling together management presentations and keeping multiple bidders moving through a transaction timeline.
Medart’s background in both modeling and hands‑on client work means he can take ownership of critical execution tasks, freeing senior bankers to spend time on strategy and client relationships. For a boutique firm that competes on sector knowledge and execution speed, that kind of depth matters in keeping deal timelines tight and outcomes predictable.
How this hire fits broader trends in tech advisory
Across the mid‑market, advisory shops have been hiring junior and mid‑level bankers to meet a steady flow of technology deals. Companies that sell software and digital services still attract strategic buyers and private capital, and boutique firms that can show sector expertise tend to win mandates.
Firms like Broadview are therefore focused on building small teams with deep coverage of specific verticals rather than expanding generalist headcount. Bringing in associates with prior tech experience is a cost‑effective way to boost capacity and preserve senior bankers’ time for client origination.
Firm quote, expected responsibilities and next steps
In its announcement Broadview said, “We are pleased to welcome Hayden to our Technology & Services practice. His experience will help us continue to deliver focused, industry‑specific advice to founders and management teams.” The firm said Medart will be involved in deal execution, financial analysis and client outreach from the start of his tenure.
Broadview also noted the hire is part of a broader plan to expand advisory bandwidth as transaction activity in software and services stays steady. The firm invited media and client inquiries to its communications team for further information about service offerings and open mandates.
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