Drawing a line on due diligence

30 July, 2024 | insight
Investment Due Diligence

I had coffee recently with a good friend and entrepreneur who had come out into the daylight after many (many) long months of building out his latest venture. We were sitting at the window bench of a great little west London coffee & vinyl bar that we like to meet at to talk over life and business, and he made a comment that struck a chord: “sometimes you just need to know when to draw a line. And accept that even by investing more hours, more weeks of work, it simply isn’t a good enough venture to pursue in the long run”.

He was referring to his recent venture, and he was talking to the right people to become supporters of that new venture, but the committed buy-in he wanted from those people to fully validate the business model ultimately wasn’t there. As a many-times founder he’s experienced in building businesses and is aware of how important validation and a supportive corporate structure is, early doors, if you hope to deliver and to make a viable and sustainable business from a new venture.


And now to drawing a line on DD. As a corporate-led investor we have an investment model on our Ventures side of the business, and we tend to stick to it. So it was a sage reminder of how to most effectively use (invest) time when my friend said that sometimes you just have to draw a line – particularly as we receive 40+ requests each week across our Ventures and our Corporate Finance desks.

Whilst DD is a series of financial, technical and human reviews and typically involves many hours of combined efforts to agree that taking the journey together make sense, it must start with the founders of a business having an understanding and appreciation of what it really takes to build a lasting business – and not to become one more of the 80%+ of founders that see their business fail before it ever truly succeeds. At the centre of any good investment is aligned interests and a managing team that understands the value of a strong corporate structure. And it’s that critical acid test that we apply at the early stages of DD to gauge whether a business (and its founders) can see those realities and will be truly backable, which allows us to draw a line and to walk away when a founder tells us all they want is the money so they can ‘go it alone’.  


Just as we value the collective DD process that we often undertake with our co-investors, we also put more focus on those investment opportunities where the founders put value on building their business with a robust corporate structure in mind from the earliest stage of growth. And those future leaders are to be celebrated!