The Process of Due Diligence
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The Process of Due Diligence
By Sam Vaknin
Author of "Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited"
A business which wants to attract foreign investments must present a
business plan. But a business plan is the equivalent of a visit
card. The introduction is very important - but, once the foreign
investor has expressed interest, a second, more serious, more
onerous and more tedious process commences: Due Diligence.
"Due Diligence" is a legal term (borrowed from the securities
industry). It means, essentially, to make sure that all the facts
regarding the firm are available and have been independently
verified. In some respects, it is very similar to an audit. All the
documents of the firm are assembled and reviewed, the management is
interviewed and a team of financial experts, lawyers and accountants
descends on the firm to analyze it.
First Rule:
The firm must appoint ONE due diligence coordinator. This person
interfaces with all outside due diligence teams. He collects all the
materials requested and oversees all the activities which make up
the due diligence process.
The firm must have ONE VOICE. Only one person represents the
company, answers questions, makes presentations and serves as a
coordinator when the DD teams wish to interview people connected to
the firm.
Second Rule:
Brief your workers. Give them the big picture. Why is the company
raising funds, who are the investors, how will the future of the
firm (and their personal future) look if the investor comes in. Both
employees and management must realize that this is a top priority.
They must be instructed not to lie. They must know the DD
coordinator and the company's spokesman in the DD process.
The DD is a process which is more structured than the preparation of
a Business Plan. It is confined both in time and in subjects: Legal,
Financial, Technical, Marketing, Controls.
The Marketing Plan
Must include the following elements:
a.. A brief history of the business (to show its track performance
and growth).
b.. Points regarding the political, legal (licences) and
competitive environment.
c.. A vision of the business in the future.
d.. Products and services and their uses.
e.. Comparison of the firm's products and services to those of the
competitors.
f.. Warranties, guarantees and after-sales service.
g.. Development of new products or services.
h.. A general overview of the market and market segmentation.
i.. Is the market rising or falling (the trend: past and future).
j.. What customer needs do the products / services satisfy.
k.. Which markets segments do we concentrate on and why.
l.. What factors are important in the customer's decision to buy
(or not to buy).
m.. A list of the direct competitors and a short description of
each.
n.. The strengths and weaknesses of the competitors relative to
the firm.
o.. Missing information regarding the markets, the clients and the
competitors.
p.. Planned market research.
q.. A sales forecast by product group.
r.. The pricing strategy (how is pricing decided).
s.. Promotion of the sales of the products (including a
description of the sales force, sales-related incentives, sales
targets, training of the sales personnel, special offers,
dealerships, telemarketing and sales support). Attach a flow chart
of the purchasing process from the moment that the client is
approached by the sales force until he buys the product.
t.. Marketing and advertising campaigns (including cost
estimates) - broken by market and by media.
u.. Distribution of the products.
v.. A flow chart describing the receipt of orders, invoicing,
shipping.
w.. Customer after-sales service (hotline, support, maintenance,
complaints, upgrades, etc.).
x.. Customer loyalty (example: churn rate and how is it monitored
and controlled).
Legal Details
a.. Full name of the firm.
b.. Ownership of the firm.
c.. Court registration documents.
d.. Copies of all protocols of the Board of Directors and the
General Assembly of Shareholders.
e.. Signatory rights backed by the appropriate decisions.
f.. The charter (statute) of the firm and other incorporation
documents.
g.. Copies of licences granted to the firm.
h.. A legal opinion regarding the above licences.
i.. A list of lawsuit that were filed against the firm and that
the firm filed against third parties (litigation) plus a list of
disputes which are likely to reach the courts.
j.. Legal opinions regarding the possible outcomes of all the
lawsuits and disputes including their potential influence on the
firm.
Financial Due Diligence
Last 3 years income statements of the firm or of constituents of the
firm, if the firm is the result of a merger. The statements have to
include:
a.. Balance Sheets;
b.. Income Statements;
c.. Cash Flow statements;
d.. Audit reports (preferably done according to the International
Accounting Standards, or, if the firm is looking to raise money in
the USA, in accordance with FASB);
e.. Cash Flow Projections and the assumptions underlying them.
Controls
a.. Accounting systems used;
b.. Methods to price products and services;
c.. Payment terms, collections of debts and ageing of receivables;
d.. Introduction of international accounting standards;
e.. Monitoring of sales;
f.. Monitoring of orders and shipments;
g.. Keeping of records, filing, archives;
h.. Cost accounting system;
i.. Budgeting and budget monitoring and controls;
j.. Internal audits (frequency and procedures);
k.. External audits (frequency and procedures);
l.. The banks that the firm is working with: history, references,
balances.
Technical Plan
a.. Description of manufacturing processes (hardware, software,
communications, other);
b.. Need for know-how, technological transfer and licensing
required;
c.. Suppliers of equipment, software, services (including offers);
d.. Manpower (skilled and unskilled);
e.. Infrastructure (power, water, etc.);
f.. Transport and communications (example: satellites, lines,
receivers, transmitters);
g.. Raw materials: sources, cost and quality;
h.. Relations with suppliers and support industries;
i.. Import restrictions or licensing (where applicable);
j.. Sites, technical specification;
k.. Environmental issues and how they are addressed;
l.. Leases, special arrangements;
m.. Integration of new operations into existing ones (protocols,
etc.).
A successful due diligence is the key to an eventual investment.
This is a process much more serious and important than the
preparation of the Business Plan.
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AUTHOR BIO (must be included with the article)
Sam Vaknin ( samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant
Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West
Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Global Politician,
Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent, and
the editor of mental health and Central East Europe categories in
The Open Directory and Suite101.
Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia.
Visit Sam's Web site at samvak.tripod.com
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