How to avoid contract chaos in due diligence

Before investors buy or invest in a company, they put it through its paces. This careful examination is called "due diligence" (literally: "due care").

The aim of due diligence is to minimise the risk of the investment. To do this, all potential vulnerabilities must be identified and any problems disclosed.

Central to due diligence: the contract

In addition to pitch decks, financing plans, cap tables and one-pagers, investors are primarily interested in contracts. This is because all the important success factors and most of the risks of a company are in the form of contracts:

  • Future income in the form of contracts with customers
  • Resources in the form of licences, contracts with suppliers, ...
  • Financial liabilities in the form of loan agreements, leasing agreements, ...
  • Business risks in the form of guarantee agreements, contractual clauses and the like
  • Personnel situation of the company in the form of employment contracts
  • etc.

Contracts play into all areas of due diligence, from commercial to legal. Let us briefly look at the most important topics:

The 4 pillars of start-up due diligence

Commercial due diligence

  • Product: Purpose and use cases of the product
  • Market: market size, competitive situation, clientele
  • Profitability: turnover, costs, upselling potential, etc.
  • Distribution: distribution channels, strategic partners, etc.

Important contracts in commercial due diligence are:

  • Contracts with customers, including agreed prices, general terms and conditions, warranty conditions, etc.
  • Contracts with suppliers and their fixed and variable costs
  • Marketing contracts, for example for software, agencies, etc.
  • Contracts with sales partners

Technical due diligence

  • Assets: intellectual property in hardware, software, etc.
  • Scalability: ability to scale the technology
  • Protection against competition: Resistance to imitation
  • Quality: Assessment of the technology roadmap, quality of research & development

In technical due diligence, the following contracts are of primary interest:

  • Patents, trademark rights, licences of the company
  • Employment contracts with developers
  • Contracts with freelancers and partners

Financial due diligence

  • Accounting: quality and correctness of financial accounting; detailed analysis of accounting accounts
  • Financial planning: financial KPIs such as liquidity, margins, ROI, etc. including forecasts
  • Cash flow: Usual payment cycles, default risks, general cash flow management
  • Taxes: Audit and tax reports (also international)

This is not so much about specific contract types, but about easy access to all contracts:

  • Vouchers and contracts for individual items in the balance sheet or income statement
  • Statistical evaluation of contract sums, e.g. expected turnover by customers, sum of fixed monthly payment obligations, etc.

Legal due diligence

  • Legal basis: basic contracts, agreements with investors, etc.
  • Legal opinions: Legal opinions regarding cases with business implications
  • Contracts: Detailed review of all contracts
  • Negotiating positions: Terms and conditions for future events, e.g. with regard to the planned later exit

Legal due diligence brings a cold sweat to the brow of every contract manager. Here, literally every shred of all contracts is scrutinised in the merciless light of legal expertise:

  • Contracts with clients
  • Contracts with suppliers
  • Licence agreements
  • Contracts with partners
  • Employment contracts

Common reality: chaotic contract management

In all too many companies, contracts are filed in a decentralised manner: in Leitz folders, in individual employees' local drives, on a SharePoint drive or even just as an attachment in the email inbox.

The reason for this chaotic handling is the extremely high number of contracts that companies conclude today:

  • Licences for software, platforms, data subscriptions and the like
  • Agreements and contracts with freelancers
  • All types of contracts with clients
  • Rental agreements for real estate, technical facilities, etc.
  • Leasing agreements
  • etc.

In everyday life, employees hardly give it a second thought: Once the contract is concluded, they concentrate on using it and forget about it for the time being.

Run your contracts as if due diligence is starting next week

If you wait until the due diligence auditors come with their enquiries, you generate an enormous amount of stress for yourself and all your colleagues.

So the smart thing to do is to file and manage the contracts centrally right from the start. This only costs you a few minutes and saves a lot of research work and hassle in the end:

  • You have a complete overview of all contracts. None will be forgotten or "discovered" until later.
  • You can be sure that you have the currently valid version of the contract in front of you.
  • You can access the contracts in a flash, without lengthy searches and queries with colleagues.

During due diligence in the context of a financing round, investors are also expected to provide so-called data rooms. For this purpose, all information, data and documents that are necessary during the due diligence must be made available to the commissioned auditors of the investors.

If you manage your contracts digitally and centrally, it will be easy for you to fill the data room with structured and well-organised overviews of all liabilities.

Contract management software such as ContractHero combines all these requirements in a single software solution.

Tool for central contract management: ContractHero

ContractHero allows you to manage your contracts centrally and digitally. You can store your contracts in digitalised form, provide them with metadata, categorise them, sort them and evaluate them statistically.

ContractHero offers many functions that massively facilitate your work with contracts during due diligence:

  • A well thought-out classification system that records all contracts uniformly and presents them clearly
  • A dashboard with the key data of the contracts
  • Individual options for categorisation
  • Flexible reports
  • Recording of individual information from contracts e.g. "change of control clauses". 

ContractHero supports your workflow with smart functions. For example, contracts can also be imported by a simple email forwarding with the contract attached. In order not to miss any notice periods, you can set up contract-specific reminders, which you will be reminded of not only in the dashboard, but also via email and browser notification.

Systematically recording contracts saves you a lot of time and nerves, as you have a complete overview of your contracts at all times. So you can look forward to the next due diligence with confidence.

Sebastian Wengryn
CEO

You may also be interested in...

Blog

Contract automation: How modern technologies are revolutionizing the process

Find out how you can automate your contract processes with contract management software.
Read the article
Blog

Recognizing and avoiding contractual risks: What to look out for?

Find out which contractual clauses you should pay particular attention to.
Read the article
Blog

Creating contracts step by step: challenges & solutions

Learn how to create contracts and how this process can be simplified.
Read the article
Get started with ContractHero now
See ContractHero live in action! Register here for the 30-minute demonstration:
Book a demo