Most companies hire their investor relations firm too late — within three months of filing, when the IR firm's most valuable work (investor targeting, messaging development, non-deal roadshow preparation) is already foreclosed. The best IR firms help companies build the institutional investor relationships that make the bookbuild easier. That requires time.
What an IR Firm Does Pre- and Post-IPO
| Pre-IPO Work (6–12 months before S-1) | Post-IPO Work (Ongoing) |
|---|---|
| Investor targeting list — which institutional funds should be on the roadshow | Quarterly earnings preparation — press release drafting, script preparation, Q&A coaching |
| Equity story development — investor messaging, KPI framing, competitive positioning | NDR planning and logistics — non-deal roadshows with institutional investors |
| Pre-IPO non-deal roadshow — building relationships with target investors before the official process | Analyst relations — managing sell-side analyst relationships and consensus estimates |
| Investor relations website and governance document preparation | Investor perception studies — understanding how the buy side views your story |
| Competitive peer analysis — how comparable companies present their story | Annual meeting and proxy preparation support |
Large Platform vs. Boutique IR Firms
ICR · Sard Verbinnen · Joele Frank · Edelman Financial
Full-service communications and IR platforms with deep investor relationships built over hundreds of IPOs. Strong for companies where institutional investor access and sell-side analyst relationships are a priority. Monthly retainers: $15,000–$30,000+. The brand name matters in this business — institutional investors recognize and take calls from the major IR firms.
Gateway Investor Relations · Three Part Advisors · Darrow Associates
Boutique firms with focused IPO and small/mid-cap expertise. Often 30–40% lower retainers than the major platforms, with stronger senior-level attention to each client. Better fit for companies below $1B market cap where boutique-sized investor targeting is more relevant than bulge-bracket institutional access.
When to Hire
Engage your IR firm 9–12 months before your anticipated S-1 filing date. The firm needs time to:
- Understand your business and competitive landscape deeply enough to represent it credibly to investors
- Build the investor targeting list — identifying which funds hold comparable companies and why
- Help you conduct pre-IPO investor education meetings with target institutional investors
- Develop the messaging framework that will anchor the S-1 and roadshow presentation
The Non-Deal Roadshow Before the Roadshow
The most successful IPOs typically involve 20–40 pre-IPO investor education meetings with target institutional investors in the 6–12 months before the roadshow. These meetings — conducted under specific legal constraints — allow management to build relationships and test messaging before the formal bookbuild begins. EGC companies have additional flexibility via the "testing the waters" provision. Your IR firm and legal counsel manage this process together.
Questions to Ask Every IR Firm
- What IPOs have you supported in our sector in the last 24 months — and what were the outcomes?
- Who specifically will be our day-to-day contact, and how many other IPO clients will they be managing simultaneously?
- Walk us through how you would build our investor targeting list — what databases and relationships do you use?
- How do you approach pre-IPO investor education — what's the typical program structure and investor count?
- What is your retainer structure and what services are included vs. billed separately?
- How do you coordinate with the underwriters' equity capital markets teams on investor targeting?
IR Resources
Investor relations guidance for IPO companies
US IPO Guide — Roadshow & IR Sections
Covers the legal constraints on pre-IPO investor communications, testing the waters, and post-IPO Reg FD compliance.
Post-IPO Success Playbook
Covers the post-IPO IR program — earnings cycle, NDRs, analyst relations, and investor perception studies.
What an IR Firm Actually Does
The investor relations firm provides services across four broad categories throughout the IPO process and ongoing public company life:
- Equity story development: Works with management to craft the investment thesis — the narrative that explains why the company is an attractive investment, how it is differentiated from peers, and what the financial model looks like at scale. This narrative is embedded in the S-1 prospectus summary and in the roadshow presentation.
- Investor targeting and outreach: Builds and maintains the target investor list using 13F analysis, peer ownership research, and thematic investor mapping. Coordinates all-hands roadshow logistics for the formal bookbuild, manages follow-up with potential anchor investors during testing-the-waters, and builds ongoing investor relationships post-IPO.
- IR website and materials management: Oversees the IR website build and maintenance; manages the earnings release calendar; prepares and distributes investor presentations for conferences; coordinates the earnings call logistics (webcast, dial-in, replay, transcript).
- Ongoing advisory: Advises management on investor perception, sells-side analyst relationships, activist investor monitoring, and proxy advisory firm (ISS, Glass Lewis) guidance. Monitors shareholder base changes through 13F analysis and provides quarterly reports on institutional ownership trends.
Types of IR Firms
| Firm Type | Examples | Best For | Typical Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Full-service boutique | ICR, Gilmartin Group, Westwicke (now ICR), KCSA Strategic Communications | Mid-market IPOs; companies wanting deep sector expertise and senior partner attention | $180K–$360K/year |
| Large IR agencies | FTI Communications, Brunswick Group, Edelman Financial | Large-cap IPOs; companies with significant communications complexity (M&A, activism, ESG) | $300K–$700K+/year |
| Specialist sector firms | Recon IR (fintech), LifeSci Advisors (life sciences), Alpha IR Group (technology) | Companies in specific sectors where deep sector relationships with specialist investors matter | $150K–$300K/year |
In-House IR vs. Outsourced IR
Companies face a recurring decision about how much of the IR function to bring in-house versus keep with the external IR firm. The typical evolution:
- Pre-IPO through Year 1: Most companies rely primarily on the external IR firm, supplemented by the CFO as the primary investor-facing executive. An in-house IR director may be hired 6–12 months pre-IPO to manage the interface between the company and the IR firm.
- Year 2–3: As the investor base matures and the IR program becomes routine, companies often bring more function in-house — particularly investor targeting, conference logistics, and analyst relationship management. The external firm transitions to a more advisory role.
- Mature public company: Large-cap companies typically have fully in-house IR teams (3–8 people) and use external firms primarily for specific projects (contested proxy, M&A communications, activist defense).
What the IR Firm Produces Before the IPO
An IR firm engaged 9–12 months before filing should produce the following deliverables before the S-1 is filed:
- Equity story document: A 3–5 page written investment thesis that articulates why the company is a compelling public company investment — this becomes the foundation of the S-1 prospectus summary and the roadshow script
- Investor targeting list: A curated list of 75–150 institutional funds organized by tier — Tier 1 (ideal anchor investors), Tier 2 (strong secondary investors), Tier 3 (sector-relevant accounts). The list should reflect actual knowledge of which funds are most active in comparable company IPOs
- Peer group analysis: How comparable public companies present their financial story — which metrics they emphasize, how they frame growth vs. profitability, and what the sell-side consensus model looks like for each
- Messaging framework: Key messages for each constituent audience (institutional investors, employees, press) with suggested talking points for management
- Pre-IPO non-deal roadshow: 10–30 investor meetings in the 6–12 months before the IPO to build familiarity with the company — institutions that have heard the story before are more likely to give meaningful orders in the bookbuild
How to Evaluate IR Firms
Three questions separate excellent IR firms from adequate ones:
- Who specifically will work our account? Many IR firms sell with senior partners and service with junior staff. Get in writing which senior partner will personally handle your account and confirm their current client load. If a senior partner currently has 15 clients, they cannot give a newly public company meaningful attention.
- Which institutional investors can you get us in front of — by name? A credible IR firm should be able to name specific portfolio managers at specific funds that they have active relationships with in your sector. Vague claims about "deep investor relationships" without specifics are a red flag.
- What do your last three IPO clients say about the experience? Ask for three client references from comparable-stage IPOs in the last 18 months. Talk to the CFO or CEO directly — not just the name provided on the reference sheet.
Managing the Post-IPO IR Relationship
The IR firm relationship changes after the IPO from a project-based intensive engagement to an ongoing monthly retainer covering quarterly earnings support, investor meeting coordination, and shareholder targeting. Typical ongoing retainer scope: quarterly earnings press release drafting and script preparation; investor Q&A coaching; one to two non-deal roadshows per year; annual investor perception study; and ad hoc support for conferences and investor communications.
Most newly public companies keep the same IR firm they used for the IPO for at least the first year — continuity in messaging and investor relationships matters. After the first year, evaluate whether the firm's senior partner attention has been maintained and whether the institutional investor relationships they promised have materialized in actual shareholder positions.
Building Your Full IPO Team
Overview of all eight IPO advisor roles, engagement timing, and fee structures.