Corporate Finance · Due Diligence
Transaction Readiness Reviews
Buyers do not fund potential — they fund what survives diligence.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Buyers do not fund potential — they fund what survives diligence. Most Indian promoters discover their company's real weaknesses only after a Letter of Intent is signed and a buyer's diligence team starts pulling threads: unreconciled related-party balances, undocumented ESOP grants, GST mismatches, an unassigned trademark, three years of Board minutes that were never actually written. By then, every gap becomes a valuation lever the buyer uses against you. PNPC Global runs Transaction Readiness Reviews — a structured, pre-emptive audit of your financials, tax position, corporate records, and commercial contracts, conducted from the seller's chair, months before a data room ever opens to a counterparty. We find what a buyer's diligence team will find — and fix it, disclose it, or price it in, on your terms and your timeline.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
A Transaction Readiness Review — also called vendor due diligence or sell-side due diligence — is a structured pre-transaction audit that a Chartered Accountancy firm conducts on behalf of a company's promoters or shareholders before the company is taken to market for a fundraise, strategic sale, majority stake dilution, or merger. It mirrors the scope of the financial, tax, legal, and commercial due diligence a serious buyer or investor will eventually run, but it is commissioned by the seller, conducted before any counterparty is engaged, and its findings belong to the seller — not disclosed automatically to anyone. The objective is simple: surface every issue a buyer's diligence team is likely to find, quantify its impact, and give the promoter the runway to fix it, ring-fence it contractually, or price it into expectations — instead of discovering it for the first time in a buyer's red-flag report during live negotiations, when leverage has already shifted.
The review typically spans four interlocking work streams. Financial readiness examines the integrity of the financial statements themselves — revenue recognition consistency, working capital normalisation, one-off versus recurring EBITDA adjustments, inventory and receivables quality, and whether management accounts reconcile cleanly to statutory books. Tax readiness reviews open assessment years, pending notices or reassessment proceedings under the applicable income-tax law, GST return reconciliation against books (GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-2B matching), TDS compliance history, transfer pricing documentation for any related-party or cross-border transactions, and unrecognised or contingent tax liabilities that could surface as an indemnity claim post-closing. Corporate and legal readiness reviews the statutory record at the Registrar of Companies — filing history, share capital and cap table accuracy, whether all share allotments were properly authorised and documented, ESOP grant documentation, related-party transaction approvals under Section 188 of the Companies Act, IP ownership (is the trademark, patent, or key software actually assigned to the company, or still sitting in a founder's personal name), material contract review for change-of-control clauses, and litigation or regulatory exposure. Commercial and operational readiness looks at customer concentration, key-person dependency, employee contract completeness, and whether the business narrative the promoter tells matches what the numbers and documents actually show.
This is a distinctly different engagement from M&A Advisory (which runs the live transaction — valuation negotiation, term sheet, closing) and from Financial & Tax Due Diligence performed for a buyer (which is commissioned by, and reports to, the acquiring party). Transaction Readiness sits earlier and on the other side of the table: it is preparation, not negotiation, and its client is the seller, not the buyer. Many companies run a readiness review 6–12 months before actively seeking a buyer or investor, specifically so there is time to remediate what is found — a related-party loan can be repaid, an ESOP pool can be properly documented and Board-approved, a GST mismatch can be reconciled and refiled, an IP assignment can be executed — none of which can be fixed in the compressed, adversarial window of a live deal under exclusivity.
The output of a Transaction Readiness Review is typically a structured report — often organised exactly as a buyer's due diligence report would be, sometimes literally called a Vendor Due Diligence (VDD) Report — that can, at the seller's discretion, later be shared (in whole or a redacted form) with serious, NDA-bound prospective buyers to accelerate their diligence process and build negotiating credibility. A seller who can hand a credible, professionally prepared VDD report to a buyer's team on day one of exclusivity — rather than waiting eight weeks for the buyer's own advisors to find the same issues independently — routinely compresses transaction timelines, reduces the buyer's perceived risk premium, and retains far more control over how each finding is framed and negotiated.
When a Transaction Readiness Review is the right engagement
You are planning to raise a Series A/B/C round, sell a controlling or minority stake, or pursue a strategic exit within the next 6–18 months and want to know what a buyer's diligence team will find before they find it
You have received informal interest from a strategic acquirer or financial investor and want an independent, honest picture of your transaction-readiness before entering formal talks or signing exclusivity
Your company has grown quickly with informal governance — related-party transactions handled on trust, ESOP grants promised verbally, IP registered in a founder's personal name — and you suspect (or know) the paper trail will not hold up to scrutiny
A previous fundraise or partial sale process stalled or collapsed during buyer diligence, and you want to understand and fix what caused it before running the process again
You are a family business preparing for a generational transition, partial stake sale to a strategic investor, or professionalisation ahead of external capital, and need the corporate and financial record brought up to institutional standard
Your Board or existing investors are requiring you to demonstrate transaction-readiness — clean cap table, audited financials, resolved tax positions — as a condition before authorising a sale or fundraise process
You want a Vendor Due Diligence report prepared specifically so it can be shared with prospective buyers under NDA, to accelerate their process and reduce the number of separate diligence exercises your team has to support
When a different engagement may be more appropriate first
You already have a signed term sheet and are past the readiness stage — you need live deal support: valuation negotiation, structuring, and closing coordination sit under M&A Advisory (Buy-Side & Sell-Side), not Transaction Readiness
You are the buyer or investor in a transaction and need diligence performed on a target company — that is Financial & Tax Due Diligence or Investor & Startup Due Diligence, commissioned from the buyer's side, not this seller-side service
You need a standalone valuation report for a statutory purpose (Rule 11UA share issuance, ESOP pricing, Ind AS fair value) with no active or contemplated transaction — engage Business & Share Valuation directly
There is no transaction, fundraise, or exit contemplated in any realistic near-term horizon — general annual compliance, statutory audit, and routine CA advisory will keep the company in reasonable shape without the cost of a dedicated readiness exercise
The company is in financial distress or under lender pressure with insolvency risk rather than a voluntary growth-stage transaction — Insolvency & Debt Resolution Advisory or Distressed Asset Advisory is the more accurate fit
You need only a narrow, single-issue fix — for example, just an ESOP scheme documentation cleanup, or just a GST reconciliation — a scoped engagement on that specific item may be more cost-efficient than a full readiness review
Transaction Readiness Review vs related engagements — how the scope and perspective differ
| Feature | Transaction Readiness / VDD (Seller-side) | Buyer-Side Financial & Tax Due Diligence | M&A Advisory (Live Deal) | Statutory Audit | Standalone Valuation Report |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Commissioned by | The seller/promoter, before a buyer is engaged | The buyer/investor, on an identified target | Either side, once a mandate to transact exists | The company, as a yearly statutory obligation | The company, for a specific statutory purpose |
| Timing relative to deal | Months before a buyer is approached | During live negotiation, post-term sheet | Spans the full deal lifecycle | Annual, independent of any transaction | As needed, transaction-linked or standalone |
| Primary objective | Find and fix issues before a buyer does; build a credible VDD report | Verify the target's numbers, tax position, and risk profile for pricing/protection | Negotiate and close the transaction on the best achievable terms | Opine on true and fair view of financial statements for the year | Arrive at a defensible fair value for shares/business |
| Findings shared with | The seller only, unless the seller chooses to share (redacted or full) under NDA | The buyer's deal team and, per the SPA, sometimes the seller for negotiation | Both parties, as part of negotiation and closing | Shareholders, RoC, tax authorities, lenders as required | The commissioning party and, where required, the regulator/counterparty |
| Typical depth of review | Full financial, tax, corporate, and commercial sweep, seller-controlled scope | Full sweep on the buyer's checklist, often more adversarial in tone | Encompasses diligence but adds valuation, structuring, negotiation, closing | Financial statement audit under Standards on Auditing — not a business-risk sweep | Valuation methodology and support only — not a general risk review |
| Outcome for the client | Remediated issues, disclosure strategy, and a report that can accelerate a future sale | A red-flag report informing price, indemnities, and warranties | A signed, closed transaction | An audited financial statement and auditor's report | A valuation report usable for its stated statutory purpose |
| Best run when | 6–18 months before actively seeking a buyer or investor | After a target is identified and a term sheet or LOI exists | Once there is a genuine intent and counterparty to transact | Every financial year, mandatorily | At the specific trigger event requiring a valuation |
These engagements are complementary, not mutually exclusive — a company preparing for sale typically completes a Transaction Readiness Review first, then moves into M&A Advisory once a credible buyer is engaged, at which point the buyer commissions its own Financial & Tax Due Diligence. PNPC frequently runs the readiness review and the subsequent sell-side M&A mandate for the same client, using the same institutional knowledge built during readiness.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Generic Advisors Skip | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Scoping & Mandate Definition — What is actually being prepared, and for whom | We start by understanding the realistic transaction path: a VC Series round has a different readiness bar than a strategic trade sale or a family succession dilution. We agree in writing what work streams are in scope — financial, tax, corporate/legal, commercial/operational — and what is deliberately out of scope, rather than running an undifferentiated generic checklist. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Document & Data Request — A structured list, not a vague ask for 'everything' | We issue a itemised document request organised exactly as a buyer's diligence checklist would be — statutory registers, cap table history, material contracts, tax assessment history, GST returns, payroll and ESOP records — so nothing material is missed and the client's team is not left guessing what to gather. | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | Financial Readiness Review — Quality of earnings and working capital normalisation | We reconcile management accounts to statutory books, identify one-off versus recurring items in reported EBITDA, review revenue recognition consistency against Ind AS/AS requirements, and flag any related-party transactions that a buyer's quality-of-earnings analysis would strip out or challenge. | Week 2–4 |
| 4 | Tax Readiness Review — Open exposures across every tax head | We review open assessment years and pending notices under the income-tax law, reconcile GSTR-1/GSTR-3B/GSTR-2B for consistent filing, check TDS compliance history for expense-disallowance risk on non-deduction or short-deduction, review transfer pricing documentation for related-party and cross-border transactions, and quantify any contingent tax liability that would otherwise surface as an indemnity claim during a buyer's diligence. | Week 3–5, run in parallel with financial review |
| 5 | Corporate & Statutory Record Review — The paper trail buyers actually check first | We pull the full RoC filing history and reconcile it against the actual cap table — every share allotment, transfer, and ESOP grant must have a corresponding Board or shareholder resolution and MCA filing. Undocumented allotments, missing PAS-3 filings, or a cap table that does not reconcile to the statutory register is one of the most common — and most damaging — findings in this stage. | Week 3–6 |
| 6 | IP & Material Contract Review — Ownership and change-of-control exposure | We verify that trademarks, patents, domain names, and key proprietary software are actually assigned to the company — not still registered in a founder's or early employee's personal name, which is a surprisingly common and easily fixed gap. We review material customer, vendor, and lease contracts for change-of-control clauses that could trigger termination or renegotiation rights on a sale. | Week 4–6 |
| 7 | ESOP & Employment Documentation Review — A frequent source of last-minute deal friction | We check that the ESOP scheme was approved by special resolution, that grants match Board-approved pool sizes, and that vesting schedules are documented and consistently applied. We also review key employment agreements for non-compete, IP assignment, and confidentiality clauses that a buyer will expect to see in place before closing. | Week 5–7 |
| 8 | Commercial & Operational Review — Concentration risk and key-person dependency | We assess customer and revenue concentration, contract renewal risk, and dependency on specific founders or key employees whose departure could materially affect the business the buyer thinks they are acquiring — issues that are commercial rather than purely financial but that materially affect valuation and deal structure. | Week 5–7, run in parallel |
| 9 | Findings Consolidation & Risk Rating — A single prioritised issues log | Every finding across all work streams is consolidated into one issues log, each rated by materiality and remediation difficulty — quick fixes (a missing Board resolution that can be passed retrospectively with proper disclosure) separated from structural issues (a related-party dependency that takes months to unwind) so the promoter can prioritise effort against the realistic transaction timeline. | Week 7–8 |
| 10 | Remediation Support — Actually fixing what was found, not just reporting it | For issues that can be cured before a buyer is approached, we support execution: passing catch-up Board resolutions with appropriate disclosure, completing pending RoC filings, executing IP assignment deeds, reconciling and refiling GST mismatches, formalising related-party transaction approvals, and documenting the ESOP scheme properly. For issues that cannot be cured in time, we help frame a clear, factual disclosure position. | Week 8–14, scoped to what was found |
| 11 | Disclosure & Negotiation Strategy — What to disclose, when, and how it affects positioning | For every unresolved or partially resolved finding, we advise on how and when to disclose it to a prospective buyer — proactive, well-framed disclosure early in a process is treated very differently by sophisticated buyers than the same issue being discovered independently mid-diligence, which reads as concealment even when it was not intentional. | Week 10–14 |
| 12 | Vendor Due Diligence (VDD) Report Preparation — Buyer-ready output, at the seller's discretion | Where the client wants it, we prepare a structured VDD report — organised as a buyer's own diligence report would be — that can be shared under NDA with serious prospective buyers to accelerate their process, reduce the number of separate management interviews and document requests the team has to support, and demonstrate transaction-readiness that shortens the path to a term sheet. | Week 12–16 |
| 13 | Handover into Live Transaction Support — Where the mandate continues | Once a credible buyer or investor is engaged, the readiness work feeds directly into the live deal: the same PNPC team that ran the readiness review can continue as sell-side M&A advisor, meaning the buyer's diligence team is working with people who already know exactly where every number and document comes from — materially speeding up the process from the seller's side. | As a follow-on engagement, once a counterparty is identified |
A full Transaction Readiness Review across all four work streams typically takes 8–16 weeks depending on company size, transaction history, and how quickly documents can be gathered from management, finance, HR, and legal teams. Companies with clean, well-maintained records complete faster; companies with several years of informal governance take longer — which is itself the reason to start early rather than after a term sheet is already signed.
Certificate of Incorporation, Memorandum and Articles of Association, and all amendments to date
Complete RoC filing history — AOC-4, MGT-7, all event-based forms (PAS-3, SH-7, DIR-12, CHG-1) for the last 5–7 years
Cap table showing every shareholder, class of shares, and shareholding percentage from incorporation to date, reconciled to the statutory Register of Members
Board and shareholder meeting minutes and resolutions for the last 3–5 years, including all resolutions authorising share allotments, borrowings, and related-party transactions
Statutory registers — Register of Members, Register of Directors and KMP, Register of Charges, Register of Contracts under Section 189
Details of any pending litigation, show-cause notices, or regulatory proceedings involving the company or its directors
Audited financial statements for the last 3–5 financial years, along with the auditor's report and any qualifications or emphasis-of-matter notes
Monthly management accounts and management information system (MIS) reports for the current and preceding financial year
Detailed general ledger, trial balance, and fixed asset register
Working capital schedule — receivables ageing, payables ageing, and inventory ageing where applicable
Bank statements and loan/borrowing schedules, including any charges registered against company assets
Details of one-off, non-recurring, or non-operating income and expense items in each of the last 3 years
Income-tax returns (ITR-6) and computation statements for the last 5–7 assessment years, along with any assessment orders, notices, or pending proceedings
GST registration certificates, GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, and GSTR-9/9C returns for all applicable periods, along with any GST notices or ongoing disputes
TDS returns (Form 24Q/26Q) and Form 26AS reconciliation for the last 3 years
Transfer pricing documentation (Form 3CEB and supporting study) for any related-party or cross-border transactions
Details of any tax holiday, exemption, or incentive claimed (startup tax holiday, SEZ benefits, etc.) and the underlying eligibility documentation
Advance tax payment history and any deferred tax asset/liability workings
Trademark, patent, copyright, and design registration certificates, along with confirmation of the registered owner (must be the company, not an individual)
IP assignment deeds from founders, employees, or contractors who created IP prior to or outside formal employment agreements
Domain name registration and ownership records
Software licensing agreements — both licences the company holds and licences the company grants to customers
Details of any open-source software components used in the product and their licence obligations
Data protection and privacy policy documentation, and any data processing agreements with vendors or customers
ESOP scheme document and the special resolution approving it, along with the Board-approved option pool size
Individual grant letters, vesting schedules, and exercise records for every ESOP grant made to date
Employment agreements for all key management personnel, including IP assignment, confidentiality, and non-compete clauses
Organisation chart identifying key-person dependencies and any employees whose departure would materially affect operations
PF, ESI, and gratuity compliance records and any pending employee disputes or labour proceedings
Consultant and contractor agreements, particularly for any individual performing what could be characterised as an employment relationship
Top 10–20 customer contracts by revenue, reviewed for change-of-control, termination, and exclusivity clauses
Top vendor and supplier agreements, particularly any with long-term commitments or exclusivity
Lease agreements for all business premises, reviewed for assignment and change-of-control provisions
Customer concentration analysis — revenue by customer for the last 2–3 years
Insurance policies in force, covering key-person, general liability, and professional indemnity where applicable
Any government approvals, licences, or sector-specific registrations required for the business to operate (FSSAI, IEC, sector-specific NOCs, etc.)
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC CA Guidance | Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Mandate Decision (Month -18 to -12) | Promoter begins considering a future fundraise or exit | Early-stage conversation on realistic transaction timeline and what 'ready' actually means for the target buyer type — a strategic acquirer, a growth-equity investor, and a family-office buyer each scrutinise different things. We recommend starting the readiness review with enough runway to remediate, not react. | Waiting until a buyer is already interested compresses the remediation window to weeks instead of months, forcing disclosure of unresolved issues rather than fixed ones. |
| Readiness Review Execution (Month -12 to -8) | Formal engagement commissioned | Full financial, tax, corporate, IP, ESOP, and commercial review executed across all work streams, producing a single prioritised issues log rated by materiality and remediation difficulty. | A superficial or partial review misses exactly the issues a professional buyer's diligence team is trained to find — the review only has value if it is as rigorous as the buyer's own process will be. |
| Remediation (Month -8 to -4) | Issues log finalised | Execution of fixable items — catch-up Board resolutions with proper disclosure, completed RoC filings, IP assignment deeds executed, GST reconciliation and refiling, formalised related-party approvals, ESOP documentation completed. Structural issues that cannot be fully cured are framed for proactive disclosure. | Unremediated issues discovered independently by a buyer mid-diligence are read as concealment, damage negotiating trust, and are typically used to justify price reductions well beyond the issue's actual financial impact. |
| VDD Report & Go-to-Market (Month -4 to 0) | Business is genuinely ready to be shown to buyers | Vendor Due Diligence report finalised, teaser and information memorandum prepared (in coordination with M&A Advisory if PNPC also runs the sell-side process), and outreach to a curated buyer or investor list begins with a credible, defensible readiness position. | Going to market before readiness work is complete risks a stalled or collapsed process that damages the company's reputation with the very buyer universe it may need to approach again later. |
| Live Diligence Support (During Transaction) | Buyer engaged, term sheet signed, formal diligence begins | The readiness team supports the company's response to the buyer's actual diligence requests, leveraging the VDD report and remediated documentation to answer faster and more credibly than a company that has not prepared. | Responding to live diligence requests without prior preparation is materially slower, exposes the seller to reactive rather than strategic disclosure, and increases the risk of new, unanticipated findings emerging under time pressure. |
| Post-Closing Obligations (After Sale/Investment) | Transaction closes | Support on post-closing indemnity claim management if any pre-closing issue triggers a claim under the SPA, and on the seller's continuing statutory obligations (tax filings for the pre-closing period, escrow release conditions) that survive the transaction. | Unmanaged post-closing indemnity exposure, or missed escrow-release conditions, can result in funds being withheld or claimed well after the seller assumed the matter was closed. |
What exactly is a Transaction Readiness Review, in plain terms?
It is a dress rehearsal for due diligence, run on your side of the table, months before you approach a buyer or investor. We review your financials, tax position, corporate records, IP ownership, ESOP documentation, and key contracts using the same lens a buyer's diligence team will use — and we tell you what they will find, before they find it, while you still have time to fix it.
How is this different from the due diligence a buyer will run anyway?
The scope overlaps significantly — that is the point. The difference is who commissions it, when it happens, and who controls the findings. A buyer's diligence team works for the buyer, reports adverse findings in a way that supports price reduction or additional protections, and runs its process after a term sheet is signed, under time pressure. A Transaction Readiness Review works for you, happens before any buyer is engaged, and gives you full control over whether and how each finding is disclosed or fixed.
How far in advance of a fundraise or sale should we start a readiness review?
Ideally 6–18 months before you plan to actively approach buyers or investors. This gives realistic time to remediate structural issues — an unassigned trademark can be fixed in weeks, but a customer concentration problem or a key-person dependency takes much longer to address, and some issues (like resolving an open tax assessment) run on a timeline outside your control entirely.
What are the most common findings PNPC sees in Indian companies going through this review?
In order of frequency: cap tables that do not reconcile to the actual RoC filing history (missing PAS-3 filings for past allotments); IP registered in a founder's or early employee's personal name rather than the company's; ESOP grants made verbally or by email without a Board-approved scheme or special resolution; related-party transactions that were never approved under Section 188 of the Companies Act; and GST returns that do not reconcile cleanly to books, usually from input tax credit mismatches accumulated over several years.
Can this review actually increase our valuation, or does it only prevent problems?
Both. Preventing a price reduction from a late-discovered issue is real value, but a company that can hand a serious buyer a credible, professionally prepared Vendor Due Diligence report on day one of exclusivity is also perceived as lower-risk and more institutionally mature — which supports a stronger negotiating position and, in our experience, a faster and less contentious process than a company whose diligence unfolds as a series of surprises.
Will PNPC's findings be shared with anyone without our permission?
No. The engagement is commissioned by and reports to you, the promoter or shareholder group. Nothing is shared with any third party — including a prospective buyer — unless and until you decide to share it, typically under a signed NDA once a serious buyer is engaged. You control the timing, the format (full report or a redacted version), and the recipient.
Do you review the legal side too, or only financial and tax?
PNPC's core scope covers financial, tax, corporate/statutory record, and commercial/operational readiness — the areas where our Chartered Accountancy expertise is deepest. For a full legal due diligence sweep — contract enforceability, litigation risk assessment, employment law compliance beyond documentation completeness, and definitive agreement drafting — we work alongside your transaction counsel or refer a trusted legal partner, and coordinate findings across both workstreams so nothing falls between the two disciplines.
What does a Vendor Due Diligence (VDD) report actually contain?
It is typically structured to mirror what a buyer's own diligence report would cover — financial quality of earnings, working capital analysis, tax exposure summary, corporate and cap table confirmation, IP ownership confirmation, ESOP and employment documentation status, and material contract summary — presented factually, with any residual open items clearly flagged rather than concealed. Its purpose is to accelerate and de-risk a genuine buyer's process, not to conceal problems from them.
We are a startup planning a Series A. Is a full Transaction Readiness Review overkill at our stage?
Not necessarily a full multi-month engagement, but a scoped version focused on the highest-frequency issues — cap table reconciliation, ESOP documentation, IP assignment, and related-party transaction cleanup — is worth doing even for an early-stage company, because these are exactly the items that a VC's legal and finance diligence team checks first, and they are also the cheapest and fastest to fix if caught early.
What is the difference between this and just getting our annual statutory audit done properly?
A statutory audit opines on whether your financial statements present a true and fair view for the year, following Standards on Auditing — it is not designed to surface cap table inconsistencies, unassigned IP, undocumented ESOP grants, or contract change-of-control risk, none of which are within a statutory auditor's scope. A well-run annual audit is a good foundation, but it is not a substitute for a transaction-focused readiness review.
How do you handle findings that cannot realistically be fixed before we go to market?
Not every issue can be cured in time — an open tax assessment proceeding, for example, runs on the tax department's timeline, not yours. For unfixable items, we help you build a clear, factual disclosure position: what happened, what the realistic exposure is, and how it might reasonably be addressed contractually (an indemnity, an escrow holdback, a price adjustment) rather than left as an ambush for the buyer to discover.
Does PNPC also handle the actual sale process once readiness work is done?
Yes, if the client wants continuity — the same team that ran the readiness review can transition into a sell-side M&A Advisory mandate once a credible buyer or investor is identified, which means the buyer's diligence team is working with advisors who already have deep institutional knowledge of every number and document in the business, materially speeding the process. Clients are also free to run the subsequent transaction with a different advisor if they prefer; the readiness work and its findings remain theirs either way.
What does a Transaction Readiness Review typically cost, and how is it priced?
PNPC scopes and quotes readiness engagements on a fixed-fee basis tied to the work streams and company size involved — a focused review for an early-stage startup costs materially less than a full multi-year, multi-entity review for an established company. The fee is agreed in writing before work begins, based on the scoping conversation in Stage 1 of the engagement.
Our cap table shows shares that were allotted years ago but we can't find the corresponding RoC filing. How serious is this?
This is one of the most common and most consequential findings in readiness reviews. If a share allotment was made without a corresponding PAS-3 filing (or, in earlier periods, Form 2), the allotment may be technically defective, which creates uncertainty about who actually holds valid, enforceable shares — a serious problem for any buyer relying on the cap table to determine who they are buying from or issuing shares to. Remediation typically involves regularising the filing with appropriate additional fees and, in some cases, ratification resolutions, ideally done well before a buyer's lawyers find the gap.
We have related-party loans between the company and promoter-owned entities. Will this block a transaction?
Not necessarily, but it will be scrutinised closely. Related-party transactions must comply with Section 188 of the Companies Act 2013 — requiring Board approval, and shareholder approval by ordinary resolution above prescribed thresholds, along with arm's-length pricing considerations. A buyer's diligence team will want to see that all such transactions were properly approved and were on commercially reasonable terms, and will typically require related-party balances to be settled or restructured before or at closing. Undocumented or non-arm's-length related-party dealings are treated as a governance red flag and can affect both valuation and deal terms.
What happens to ESOP holders during a sale — does the readiness review cover this?
Yes. We review whether the ESOP scheme was validly approved by special resolution, whether the option pool size matches what was Board-approved, and whether individual grants and vesting are properly documented. During an actual transaction, the treatment of unvested and vested-but-unexercised options (acceleration, cash-out, rollover into acquirer equity) is a negotiated term addressed in the transaction documents — but that negotiation is far cleaner when the underlying ESOP documentation is already in good order.
Is a Vendor Due Diligence report a substitute for the buyer running their own diligence?
No, and it should not be positioned as one. A serious buyer, especially an institutional investor or strategic acquirer, will still run its own diligence — but a credible VDD report significantly narrows the scope, reduces the number of open questions, and speeds up their process because much of the groundwork is already validated and documented. Buyers generally still verify key findings independently, particularly on financial figures and tax exposure, but a well-prepared VDD report changes their diligence from a discovery exercise into a verification exercise.
Our company has never had its trademark formally assigned from the founder to the company. How urgent is fixing this?
This should be treated as a priority item. If a core brand trademark, patent, or key domain name is registered in a founder's personal name rather than the company's, the company does not legally own one of its most important assets — a buyer acquiring the company would not automatically acquire the IP, which is a fundamental problem for any acquisition, whether structured as a share purchase or asset sale. The fix — an assignment deed, properly executed and recorded with the relevant IP registry — is usually straightforward and inexpensive, but it must be done and recorded before, not during, a transaction.
What tax exposures are buyers most concerned about finding during diligence?
Open income-tax assessment or reassessment proceedings; unreconciled GST input tax credit claims that could be disallowed; TDS shortfalls that trigger disallowance of the underlying expense plus interest and penalty; unresolved transfer pricing positions on related-party or cross-border transactions; and any tax holiday or incentive claim where the underlying eligibility conditions may not be fully satisfied. All of these represent potential liabilities that transfer, in whole or part, to a buyer depending on transaction structure. Note that income-tax provisions and section references are subject to the transition from the Income-tax Act, 1961 to the Income Tax Act, 2025 — we confirm the applicable framework and current section numbering for each specific matter at the time of review rather than relying on legacy citations.
Can a readiness review be done for just one part of the business — a division we plan to carve out and sell?
Yes. Where the transaction is structured as a slump sale or asset carve-out of a specific business division, the readiness review can be scoped to that undertaking specifically — its allocated assets, liabilities, contracts, and financial performance — while noting where shared services, shared contracts, or shared IP with the retained business will need to be separated or licensed as part of the carve-out.
How does customer concentration affect a transaction, and can anything be done about it before a sale?
High revenue concentration in one or a handful of customers is a recognised risk factor that buyers price into valuation — sometimes through a lower multiple, sometimes through an earn-out structure tied to customer retention post-closing. In the readiness window, options include diversifying the customer base where realistically possible, securing longer-term contracts with key customers to demonstrate revenue durability, or simply ensuring the concentration is well understood and transparently presented rather than discovered as a surprise.
We found a GST mismatch during our own internal review. Should we fix it before or after engaging PNPC?
Engage us before taking unilateral corrective action if the mismatch is material — the correct remediation path (revising a return within the permitted window, reversing an ineligible input tax credit claim, or responding to a potential department query) depends on the specific nature and cause of the mismatch, and an incorrect self-correction can sometimes create a new compliance issue or an inconsistent filing history that itself becomes a diligence flag.
What if the readiness review finds something serious enough that we should not sell right now?
That is a legitimate and sometimes correct outcome. If the review surfaces a structural issue — for example, a fundamental IP ownership dispute, an unresolved regulatory investigation, or a customer concentration and key-person dependency that together make the business genuinely fragile — the honest advice may be to delay a sale process by 12–24 months and use that time to strengthen the business, rather than proceed and accept a materially discounted outcome.
Do foreign investors or UAE-based buyers look for anything different during diligence on an Indian target?
The core financial, tax, and corporate readiness items are largely the same, but foreign buyers additionally scrutinise FEMA compliance history — whether past FDI inflows were correctly reported via FC-GPR, whether any ODI or downstream investment was properly structured — and, for UAE or GCC-based buyers specifically, the practical mechanics of how consideration will flow cross-border and how the India-UAE DTAA affects the structure. A target with clean FEMA filing history is materially easier to sell to a foreign acquirer.
How does a readiness review handle contingent liabilities that are disclosed in our financial statements but not yet quantifiable?
We review every contingent liability disclosed in the notes to accounts — pending litigation, guarantees given, disputed tax demands — and assess, to the extent possible, a realistic range of exposure rather than leaving it as an open-ended disclosure. Where a range can be reasonably estimated, that analysis strengthens the seller's negotiating position on any related indemnity cap discussion; where it genuinely cannot be estimated, we help frame that uncertainty honestly rather than either overstating confidence or leaving it vague.
Should minority shareholders or co-founders be involved in the readiness review process?
Generally yes, to the extent their records and agreements are part of what is being reviewed — a co-founder's shareholding, vesting status, and any personal guarantees or IP contributions are frequently part of the readiness scope. How much operational detail is shared with minority shareholders who are not part of the day-to-day process is a governance decision the promoter makes, but the underlying documentation review typically needs their records regardless.
What is 'quality of earnings' and why does it matter so much to buyers?
Quality of earnings (QoE) analysis strips reported EBITDA down to a normalised, recurring figure by removing one-off items (a large one-time contract, a government grant, a non-recurring gain), adjusting for related-party pricing that is not at arm's length, and correcting for accounting policy choices that may inflate or understate true operating performance. Buyers price the business on normalised EBITDA, not reported EBITDA — a gap between the two, discovered by the buyer rather than presented by the seller, almost always moves in the buyer's favour during negotiation.
How do you handle confidentiality when reviewing sensitive company information before any buyer is even identified?
The engagement is governed by a standard professional confidentiality undertaking as part of our engagement letter — no different in principle from any other CA advisory mandate. Because no buyer or counterparty is involved at this stage, there is no data room, no third-party access, and no disclosure beyond the PNPC engagement team and the client's own management, unless the client separately authorises broader access.
We are considering both a fundraise and a full exit — does the readiness review differ based on which path we choose?
The core financial, tax, and corporate readiness work is largely the same for either path, because both a growth-equity investor and an acquirer will scrutinise the same fundamentals. Where the emphasis shifts is in areas like ESOP and cap table structuring (more central to a fundraise where the pool needs headroom for future rounds) versus change-of-control contract clauses and key-person dependency (more central to a full exit where operational continuity under new ownership is the buyer's central concern).
What if we run the readiness review and then the transaction doesn't happen for another two or three years — does the work go stale?
The corporate, IP, and ESOP remediation work (properly filed resolutions, executed assignment deeds, documented grants) remains valid and does not need to be redone. Financial and tax positions, however, are time-bound — a readiness review is a snapshot, and a company that goes to market two or three years after its original review should expect to refresh the financial and tax work streams, since new transactions, new tax years, and new contracts will have occurred in the interim.
Does PNPC provide a written opinion or certification as part of this engagement?
The primary deliverable is a detailed findings report and, where requested, a Vendor Due Diligence report — these are advisory work products reflecting our review and professional judgement, not a statutory audit opinion or certification. Where a specific statutory certificate is separately required (for example, in connection with a specific regulatory filing), that would be scoped and delivered as a distinct, clearly identified professional service.
How does PNPC's approach to Transaction Readiness differ from a large international Big Four advisory firm?
The scope of work is broadly comparable — financial, tax, corporate, and commercial readiness review, VDD report preparation. Where PNPC differs is engagement style and continuity: a senior CA who has worked with your business, not a rotating team of juniors managed by a partner you rarely see; fixed, transparent fee structures agreed upfront rather than scope creep billed by the hour; and, for India-UAE transactions, one coordinated team across both jurisdictions rather than a cross-border handoff between separate national practices that lose context.
Can PNPC run a Transaction Readiness Review for a company it does not already act as statutory auditor or accountant for?
Yes. Many readiness engagements are new relationships, brought in specifically for this purpose — sometimes deliberately, because the promoter wants an independent perspective separate from the firm that has handled the company's routine compliance and may have blind spots to its own historical work. We are equally comfortable running a readiness review as a standalone new engagement or as an extension of an existing PNPC relationship.
| Feature | Generic Compliance Firm | Big Four / Large Advisory Firm | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perspective | Reactive — reviews what is asked, rarely anticipates a buyer's actual checklist | Buyer-diligence-grade rigour, but process-heavy and less personally engaged | Buyer-diligence-grade rigour applied from the seller's chair, run by senior CAs who stay engaged throughout |
| Continuity into the transaction | Rarely offers live M&A support beyond the readiness scope | Available, but often a different, unfamiliar deal team takes over post-readiness | Same senior team can carry through into sell-side M&A Advisory — full institutional continuity |
| Remediation support | Reports issues; rarely executes the fix | Available at premium hourly rates, scoped separately | Findings-to-fix in one engagement — resolutions, filings, assignment deeds executed as part of the mandate |
| Fee structure | Variable, often hourly with limited scope clarity | Premium hourly or day-rate billing, can scale unpredictably with findings | Fixed fee agreed in writing before work begins, scoped to company stage and complexity |
| India-UAE coordination | India-only, no cross-border capability | Available but via separate national practices with handoff friction | One coordinated team across Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai offices |
| Confidentiality management | Standard engagement terms only | Standard engagement terms, large team access footprint | Tight-scoped access, code-name engagements accommodated, senior-CA-led with minimal team footprint |
| Post-transaction availability | Engagement typically ends at report delivery | Available for follow-on work, separately scoped and billed | Same CA remains available for post-closing indemnity support and continuing compliance — direct phone and WhatsApp access |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Structured scoping call to define realistic transaction path and readiness bar before any document request goes out
- 02
Financial readiness review — quality-of-earnings analysis, working capital normalisation, management-to-statutory reconciliation
- 03
Tax readiness review — open assessment years, GST reconciliation, TDS compliance history, transfer pricing documentation check
- 04
Corporate and statutory record review — full RoC filing history reconciled against the actual cap table
- 05
IP ownership verification and assignment deed preparation where trademarks, patents, or key IP are not yet held by the company
- 06
ESOP scheme and grant documentation review against Board-approved pool and special resolution requirements
- 07
Material contract review for change-of-control, termination, and exclusivity clauses
- 08
Consolidated, prioritised issues log rated by materiality and remediation difficulty
- 09
Remediation execution support — resolutions, RoC filings, assignment deeds, GST refiling — not just a findings report
- 10
Vendor Due Diligence (VDD) report preparation, structured to accelerate a genuine buyer's own diligence process
- 11
Disclosure strategy advice for issues that cannot be fully cured before a transaction begins
- 12
Optional continuity into sell-side M&A Advisory with the same senior CA team through closing
Run your own diligence before a buyer runs theirs. Speak directly with a PNPC Chartered Accountant who has sat on both sides of the deal table — and who will still be available when the term sheet arrives, the buyer's diligence team starts asking questions, and the closing conditions need to be actually satisfied, not just promised.