Loans & Insurance · Treasury & Growth Financing
Startup, Angel & Venture Capital Fund Raising Support
Raising angel, seed, or venture capital is not just a legal exercise — it is a financial credibility exercise.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Raising angel, seed, or venture capital is not just a legal exercise — it is a financial credibility exercise. Investors decide within the first meeting whether your numbers, your cap table, and your compliance history are trustworthy. PNPC Global helps founders get investor-ready: clean financial models, defensible valuations, a curated shortlist of relevant investors from our network, and the documentation that survives due diligence. We are not a matchmaking platform that takes a cut and disappears after the intro. We are the CA firm that prepares you before the meeting, sits beside you through diligence, and stays with you as your compliance and finance partner long after the money lands.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Startup, Angel & Venture Capital Fund Raising Support is PNPC Global's treasury and growth-financing service that helps founders prepare for and navigate external capital raises — from friends-and-family and angel rounds through seed, Series A, and later institutional VC rounds. It sits at the intersection of finance and compliance: building the financial model and data room investors expect, preparing a defensible valuation, making warm introductions through our investor network, and coordinating the CA-side documentation (FEMA filings, cap table structuring, valuation certificates) that a fundraise depends on.
Most founders discover too late that a fundraise is won or lost in the preparation, not the pitch. Investors — whether an angel writing a ₹10 lakh cheque or a VC fund leading a ₹10 crore round — run a version of due diligence proportional to cheque size: financial statements, GST and TDS compliance history, cap table cleanliness, IP ownership, related-party transactions, and burn-rate credibility. A founder who walks in with audited or CA-reviewed financials, a clean cap table, a defensible 12–18 month financial model, and no outstanding MCA penalties moves through diligence in weeks. A founder without these fundamentals spends the same weeks scrambling to produce them under investor pressure — often at the cost of valuation, timeline, or the deal itself.
Our investor connect function draws on four decades of relationships across angel networks, family offices, sector-focused seed funds, and VC funds active in India and the UAE corridor. We do not operate as a licensed investment bank or broker-dealer, and we do not charge success fees contingent on investment size in a manner that would require SEBI Merchant Banker or Investment Adviser registration — our role is advisory and introductory, working alongside your own legal counsel and, where the transaction size warrants it, a registered merchant banker or investment banker for the deal-execution and placement functions that fall under SEBI's regulatory perimeter. What we bring is CA-grade financial credibility: the numbers, the structuring, and the compliance trail that make an investor comfortable saying yes.
This service works alongside — not instead of — our dedicated fund-raising legal and regulatory advisory (term sheet review, CCPS structuring, FEMA/FC-GPR filing) and our Startup Virtual CFO service. For founders raising their first external round, we typically recommend starting here: get the financial house in order and the investor conversations moving, then bring in the deeper legal-structuring engagement once a term sheet is on the table.
When this support makes sense
You have a validated product or early traction and are approaching a friends-and-family, angel, or seed round for the first time and have never prepared a fundraise data room before
You know a handful of investors casually but do not have a structured, warm-introduction pathway into angel networks, family offices, or sector-focused seed and venture funds
Your financial records are in spreadsheets or informal bookkeeping and need to be converted into a credible 12–18 month financial model and historical financial summary before any investor conversation
You are DPIIT-recognised (or planning to be) and want to understand how that status interacts with your fundraise, tax position, and compliance runway
You have received informal interest or a soft commitment and need help sequencing the round — how much to raise, at what stage, from which investor category, before formal term sheet negotiations begin
You are a repeat-round founder who wants a second, independent set of eyes on your financial narrative and burn-rate story before going back to existing or new investors
You need help distinguishing which conversations are genuine investor interest versus time-consuming, low-probability engagement, so you can prioritise founder time
When another service or path fits better
You already have a signed term sheet and need deal-structuring, CCPS drafting, and FEMA/FC-GPR compliance — go directly to our dedicated Fund Raising Advisory (legal and regulatory) service, which handles the closing-stage work
You are raising ₹25 crore or more in a single round, or the transaction requires SEBI-regulated merchant banking, private placement memorandum preparation, or formal book-running — that requires a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or Category I Investment Banker, which we can help you identify and coordinate with, but cannot substitute for
You need ongoing, embedded financial leadership — board reporting, monthly MIS, investor reporting cadence — beyond the fundraise itself; our Startup Virtual CFO service is built for that ongoing role
You are raising exclusively debt capital (venture debt, working capital loans, term loans) with no equity dilution — that sits under our separate business loan and treasury advisory services, not equity fundraising support
You want us to guarantee an investment outcome or a specific valuation — no professional advisor can or should promise that; investor decisions depend on market conditions, sector sentiment, and your own execution, which are outside any advisor's control
Your business is pre-revenue and pre-product with no founder-market fit narrative yet — in that stage, a business plan and feasibility consultation is typically the right first step, not investor outreach
How startup funding rounds typically differ by stage
| Feature | Friends & Family | Angel Round | Seed Round | Series A / VC | Venture Debt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Typical cheque size | ₹5 lakh – ₹50 lakh | ₹10 lakh – ₹2 crore | ₹50 lakh – ₹8 crore | ₹4 crore and above | Varies — structured as loan, not equity |
| Typical investor profile | Personal network, no formal process | Individual angels, angel networks (e.g., syndicate platforms) | Micro-VC funds, seed-stage institutional funds, family offices | Institutional VC funds, sometimes PE for growth-stage | NBFC or venture debt funds, alongside an equity round |
| Instrument typically used | Equity or convertible note/CCD | Equity shares or CCPS | CCPS (Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares) common | CCPS with detailed rights — liquidation preference, anti-dilution, board seats | Debentures or term loan with warrants; not equity dilution at issuance |
| Diligence intensity | Minimal — trust-based | Light — financials, basic cap table review | Moderate — financial model, cap table, IP ownership, compliance history | Extensive — legal, financial, tax, and commercial due diligence | Financial covenant and cash-flow focused; less equity-style diligence |
| Valuation formality expected | Informal, often skipped | Simple valuation logic expected; formal Rule 11UA valuation needed for share pricing | Formal valuation report from a Merchant Banker or CA recommended | Formal valuation, often with a lead investor anchoring the price | Not applicable — priced as debt (interest rate, covenants) not equity valuation |
| DPIIT / Startup India relevance | Not typically relevant | Can help with investor confidence and access to angel networks aligned with Startup India | Relevant for exemptions and scheme eligibility | Relevant for compliance and certain tax provisions | Not directly relevant |
| FEMA/FC-GPR filing needed | Only if any investor is non-resident | Only if any investor is non-resident | Yes, if any investor is a foreign angel network, fund, or NRI | Almost always — VC funds frequently include foreign LPs routed through India-registered AIFs or offshore vehicles | Yes, if the lender is a foreign venture debt fund; ECB regulations may apply |
| Typical closing timeline | Days to a few weeks | 4–8 weeks from first conversation to funds in bank | 8–16 weeks including diligence and documentation | 3–6 months including term sheet negotiation and legal closing | 4–10 weeks, often run in parallel with an equity round |
| PNPC's primary role | Light financial documentation support | Investor connect, financial model, valuation coordination | Full readiness support — data room, model, connect, valuation coordination | Readiness support plus close coordination with dedicated fund-raising legal/FEMA advisory | Financial packaging and coordination with lender; loan structuring support |
These are typical patterns, not fixed rules — every round is negotiated on its own facts. Instrument choice, cheque size, and diligence depth depend on sector, investor mandate, market conditions, and your company's specific stage and financial position. A pre-raise consultation with PNPC helps map your specific situation against these patterns.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | Why This Step Matters | Typical Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fundraise Readiness Assessment — honest first conversation | We review your current financials, cap table, compliance status (MCA filings, GST, TDS), and business narrative before recommending an approach. Some founders are genuinely ready to raise; others need 4–8 weeks of financial and compliance clean-up first. We tell you which situation you are in — not what you want to hear. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Financial Model Build — 12–18 month projection with assumptions founders can defend | Investors probe assumptions, not just outputs. We build a model with a clear, defensible unit-economics logic — customer acquisition cost, revenue per customer, gross margin, burn rate, and runway — that you can explain confidently in a live investor conversation, not just present as a spreadsheet. | Week 1–2 |
| 3 | Historical Financial Clean-Up — CA-reviewed statements for the trailing period | Investors want to see historical financial statements that reconcile with your GST returns and bank statements. Inconsistencies here are the single most common reason a promising conversation stalls at diligence. We reconcile and, where needed, prepare CA-certified financial statements for the trailing 12–24 months. | Week 1–3, run in parallel with modelling |
| 4 | Cap Table & Compliance Audit — the diligence-readiness check | We review your MCA filing history (any pending AOC-4, MGT-7, DIR-3 KYC), cap table structure (any undocumented allotments, unassigned founder IP, missing board resolutions), and DPIIT recognition status. Cleaning these up before an investor asks avoids a credibility hit mid-conversation. | Week 2–3 |
| 5 | Valuation Coordination — defensible pricing logic | We coordinate a valuation exercise appropriate to your stage — a reasoned internal valuation narrative for smaller angel rounds, or a formal report from a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or practising CA under Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules for larger rounds involving FEMA pricing-guideline compliance. | Week 2–4, in parallel |
| 6 | Data Room Assembly — the folder every serious investor will ask for | Cap table, financial statements, MoA/AoA, board resolutions, material contracts, IP assignment documents, key employee agreements, and prior fundraise documents — organised and ready before the first serious investor conversation, not assembled reactively under a diligence deadline. | Week 3–4 |
| 7 | Investor Shortlist & Warm Introductions — targeted, not scattershot | Drawing on our network of angel investors, family offices, and sector-focused funds active in India and the UAE corridor, we identify investors whose stage, cheque size, and sector focus genuinely match your round — and make warm introductions rather than a mass cold-outreach list. Quality of match matters more than quantity of names. | Week 3–6, ongoing through the raise |
| 8 | Pitch & Financial Narrative Review — before, not after, the first meeting | We review your pitch deck's financial slides and the narrative you plan to deliver — checking that the numbers you present match the model, the model matches the financial statements, and the story is internally consistent. Inconsistency between the deck and the data room is one of the fastest ways to lose investor confidence. | Ongoing, before each significant meeting |
| 9 | Term Sheet Referral to Deal-Structuring Advisory — the handoff point | Once a term sheet is on the table, this service hands off to PNPC's dedicated Fund Raising Advisory engagement for term sheet review, CCPS structuring, liquidation preference and anti-dilution analysis, and legal document coordination with your counsel. We stay involved for financial continuity through the handoff. | As soon as a term sheet arrives |
| 10 | Diligence Support — responding to investor and their counsel's requests | Once formal due diligence begins, we coordinate responses to the investor's financial and tax queries, produce supplementary schedules on request, and liaise directly with the investor's diligence team or auditors so founder time stays focused on running the business. | 4–8 weeks depending on round size |
| 11 | FEMA / FC-GPR Coordination — if any investor is non-resident | Where the round includes NRI, foreign angel, or foreign fund participation, Form FC-GPR must be filed on the RBI FIRMS portal within 30 days of share allotment. We coordinate this filing as part of the closing process, working with the legal team handling the share allotment documentation. | Within 30 days of allotment |
| 12 | Post-Round Financial Reset — updated model, updated cap table, updated compliance calendar | Once funds land, the model needs a reset against actuals, the cap table needs to reflect the new allotment, and your compliance calendar needs updating for any new investor reporting obligations (MIS, board reporting cadence, investor rights agreement covenants). We do not disappear once the wire clears. | Within 2–4 weeks of closing |
| 13 | Ongoing Investor Reporting Support — building the trust for your next round | Many rounds include a contractual obligation to share monthly or quarterly MIS, cap table updates, and financial statements with investors. We help set up a reporting cadence that satisfies these obligations and builds the credibility that makes your next round easier. | Ongoing post-close |
Realistic end-to-end timeline from first readiness conversation to funds in the bank: 6–16 weeks for an angel or seed round, 3–6 months for a Series A, depending on how investor-ready your financials and compliance position are at the start. Founders who begin with clean books and a current compliance record consistently close faster than founders who start the process while also fixing historical gaps.
Certificate of Incorporation, PAN, TAN
Memorandum of Association and Articles of Association — current, with all amendments
Board resolutions for all material corporate actions taken to date — share allotments, borrowings, related-party transactions
Register of Members and current shareholding pattern with all allotment history
DPIIT Startup India recognition certificate, if obtained
Any existing Shareholders' Agreement, Founders' Agreement, or investor rights agreement from a prior round
Audited or CA-reviewed financial statements for the last 1–3 years (or since incorporation, if younger)
Monthly management accounts / MIS for the trailing 12 months, reconciled to bank statements
GST returns (GSTR-1, GSTR-3B) for the trailing 12 months, reconciled to revenue reported in financials
TDS returns and Form 26AS reconciliation
Bank statements for all operating accounts for the trailing 6–12 months
Existing loan agreements, if any — outstanding balances, covenants, and security details
12–18 month financial projection model with clearly stated assumptions — prepared or reviewed by PNPC as part of this engagement
Current, fully reconciled cap table showing all shareholders, share classes, and percentage holdings
Share certificates and allotment records for all prior issuances
ESOP scheme document and current option pool details, if applicable
Convertible instruments outstanding — CCDs, SAFE-equivalents, or convertible notes with conversion terms
Documentation for any prior fundraise — term sheet, SHA, valuation report, FC-GPR acknowledgment
Pitch deck — current version, with financial slides consistent with the model and data room
Business plan or executive summary covering market, product, traction, and growth strategy
Key customer contracts or letters of intent demonstrating traction, where available
Material vendor or partnership agreements relevant to the business model
Any existing traction metrics — revenue, users, retention, unit economics — presented consistently across all investor materials
IP assignment documents confirming all intellectual property (code, trademarks, patents, designs) is assigned to the company, not held personally by founders
Trademark registration certificates or pending application status, if applicable
Sector-specific licences or registrations relevant to your business (FSSAI, IEC, RBI/SEBI registrations, data-protection compliance, etc.)
Any outstanding litigation, regulatory notices, or compliance defaults — disclosed proactively, since diligence will surface these regardless
Investor-ready data room, organised by category with version control
Valuation summary or formal valuation report, depending on round size and investor requirement
Fundraise readiness report — a candid internal assessment PNPC prepares before outreach begins, flagging any gaps to close first
Post-round compliance and reporting calendar — updated to reflect new investor obligations
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC's Role | Risk If Unmanaged |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-Raise Readiness (Week 1–4) | Decision to raise external capital | Financial and compliance health check, cap table review, financial model build, historical statement clean-up. We identify gaps before an investor does. | Investor discovers compliance gaps or financial inconsistencies mid-conversation — the round stalls or the valuation gets marked down. |
| Investor Outreach (Week 3–8) | Data room and model ready | Targeted introductions through our investor network, pitch narrative review, coordination of investor meetings and follow-up materials. | Scattershot outreach to mismatched investors wastes founder time and can create a reputation of 'shopping the deal too widely,' which reduces investor urgency. |
| Term Sheet Negotiation | Investor issues a term sheet | Handoff to PNPC's dedicated Fund Raising Advisory engagement for legal and structuring review — liquidation preference, anti-dilution, board rights, information rights — alongside your legal counsel. | Signing a term sheet without CA/legal review of dilution mechanics and governance terms can lock in unfavourable control or economic terms for the life of the company. |
| Due Diligence | Term sheet accepted, diligence begins | Coordinate responses to financial and tax queries, produce supplementary schedules, liaise with the investor's diligence team and auditors. | Slow or inconsistent diligence responses erode investor confidence and can cause the investor to walk away or re-negotiate the valuation downward. |
| Closing & Allotment | Definitive agreements signed | Coordinate share allotment documentation, Board and shareholder resolutions, and FC-GPR filing on the RBI FIRMS portal within 30 days if any investor is non-resident. | FC-GPR missed within the 30-day window requires RBI compounding proceedings under FEMA — a costly and time-consuming post-facto regularisation. |
| Post-Round Reset | Funds received | Update the cap table, reset the financial model against actuals, update the compliance calendar for new investor reporting obligations under the SHA. | Missing investor-mandated reporting obligations (monthly MIS, quarterly board packs) early in the relationship damages trust before the next round. |
| Ongoing Investor Relations | Life of the investment | Support monthly/quarterly MIS preparation, board reporting, and financial narrative consistency — building the credibility base for the next round. | Inconsistent or late reporting to existing investors makes them reluctant to lead or participate in your next round, and damages referenceability to new investors. |
| Next Round Preparation | 12–24 months post-close, or as growth milestones are hit | Reassess financial readiness, refresh the model and data room, and identify the right investor category for the next stage (seed to Series A, or Series A to Series B). | Starting the next round's preparation only when the cash runway is critically low forces rushed, weak-negotiating-position fundraising — often at a lower valuation than a well-timed raise. |
What exactly does PNPC's Startup Funding Support service include?
It covers the preparation and process work around raising angel, seed, or venture capital: a fundraise readiness assessment, financial model build, historical financial clean-up, cap table and compliance audit, valuation coordination, data room assembly, targeted investor introductions from our network, and pitch narrative review. Once a term sheet arrives, we hand off to our dedicated Fund Raising Advisory (legal/regulatory) engagement for deal structuring, while staying involved for financial continuity and diligence support.
Is PNPC a licensed investment bank, broker, or merchant banker?
No. PNPC Global is a Chartered Accountancy firm. We provide financial preparation, advisory, and investor-introduction support — we do not operate as a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker, Category I Investment Banker, or broker-dealer, and we do not run formal book-building or private placement processes that fall under SEBI's regulatory perimeter. For rounds large enough to require that regulated function, we help identify and coordinate with an appropriately licensed merchant banker or investment banker, and continue to provide the CA-side financial and compliance work alongside them.
How does PNPC find investors — is this a database or genuine relationships?
Our investor connections come from four decades of CA practice serving founders, family offices, and investors across India and the UAE — not a purchased database. When we introduce a founder to an investor, it is because we believe the stage, sector, and cheque size are a realistic match, and because we have an existing relationship that supports a warm introduction rather than a cold email. We do not guarantee an investor will say yes — no one honestly can — but we do control for wasted, mismatched conversations.
Does PNPC charge success fees or a percentage of the amount raised?
Our fee structure is discussed and agreed in writing before engagement begins, and typically combines a fixed advisory fee for the preparation and process work. Because we are not a licensed placement agent, we structure fees to reflect advisory work performed rather than a pure percentage-of-capital-raised success fee, which is the model used by regulated investment banking intermediaries. Exact terms are confirmed in your engagement letter.
We are a very early-stage startup with no revenue yet. Are we too early for this service?
It depends on what you are raising and from whom. For a friends-and-family round or a small angel cheque based on founder credibility and concept strength, formal financial preparation matters less. For a seed round from an institutional angel network or a micro-VC fund, even pre-revenue companies are expected to show a credible financial model, clean cap table, and a coherent path to the metrics that matter for the next round. We will tell you honestly whether you are ready for structured outreach or whether a business plan and traction-building phase should come first.
What is a financial model and why do investors care so much about it?
A financial model is a structured projection — typically 12–18 months forward, sometimes 3 years for later-stage rounds — showing revenue build-up, cost structure, burn rate, and cash runway based on stated assumptions. Investors use it to understand how much capital you actually need, how you plan to spend it, and whether your unit economics can plausibly become profitable at scale. A weak or internally inconsistent model is one of the fastest ways to lose investor confidence, regardless of how strong the product or team is.
What is a cap table and why does PNPC insist on auditing it before outreach?
A capitalisation table (cap table) is the record of who owns what percentage of your company — founders, employees with ESOPs, and any prior investors — across all share classes and convertible instruments. Investors scrutinise it early because an undocumented allotment, an unassigned founder's IP, a missing board resolution, or an unclear convertible instrument conversion mechanism are all red flags that stall or kill diligence. We audit and clean this up before outreach begins so it does not surface as a surprise mid-negotiation.
How is a startup valued for an angel or seed round?
There is no single formula. Early-stage valuation is a negotiated blend of comparable-company benchmarks, the strength of the founding team, traction metrics, market size, and investor appetite at that moment — it is far less formulaic than valuing an established, profitable business. For statutory purposes (Rule 11UA of the Income-tax Rules, and FEMA pricing guidelines where a non-resident investor is involved), a formal valuation methodology — typically Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) for early-stage companies — is applied by a SEBI-registered Merchant Banker or a practising Chartered Accountant to produce a defensible fair market value.
Does angel tax still apply to our fundraise?
The income-tax provision under Section 56(2)(viib) — informally called 'angel tax' — which taxed share premium above fair market value as income when shares were issued to resident investors, was abolished by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024, with effect from 1 April 2025 (Assessment Year 2025-26 onwards). It no longer applies to shares issued on or after that date, whether the investor is resident or non-resident. A defensible valuation remains good practice for governance and, where a non-resident invests, for FEMA pricing-guideline compliance — but the specific angel tax exposure that made early-stage valuations so contentious in the past no longer applies to current fundraises.
What is DPIIT recognition and does it help with fundraising?
DPIIT (Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade) recognition under the Startup India initiative is a status granted to eligible early-stage companies that unlocks certain tax and regulatory benefits, including provisions relevant to Section 56 exemptions historically and continued relevance for other startup-specific schemes. It signals to some investors that your company meets baseline eligibility criteria (incorporation age, turnover thresholds, innovation criteria) but it is not, by itself, a substitute for a strong financial model or traction story — it is a supporting credential, not a fundraising strategy.
What is FC-GPR and when do we need to file it?
FC-GPR (Foreign Currency — Gross Provisional Return) is an RBI reporting form filed on the FIRMS portal whenever equity shares, CCPS, or other FDI-eligible instruments are allotted to a person resident outside India — whether an NRI angel, a foreign fund, or a foreign strategic investor. It must be filed within 30 days of the share allotment date. Missing this deadline requires an application for compounding under FEMA, which involves penalties and additional professional and legal cost.
What is a CCPS and why do most VC rounds use it instead of plain equity shares?
CCPS (Compulsorily Convertible Preference Shares) are a hybrid instrument that carries preferential rights (such as a liquidation preference, meaning the investor is paid out before common shareholders in an exit or wind-down, up to a specified multiple) while being mandatorily converted into equity shares — typically at the time of a later funding round, IPO, or a specified conversion event. VC and institutional investors prefer CCPS because it gives downside protection through the liquidation preference while still aligning with founders through eventual conversion to common equity.
How long does it realistically take to close an angel or seed round?
From a genuinely investor-ready starting position — clean financials, current compliance, a defensible model — an angel round can close in 6–10 weeks and a seed round in 8–16 weeks. Founders starting from a less-prepared position (informal bookkeeping, cap table gaps, no prior financial model) should budget an additional 4–8 weeks for the readiness and clean-up phase before outreach even begins. Series A and later rounds typically take 3–6 months given the depth of diligence involved.
What if we approach investors and get rejected — does that hurt future rounds?
A well-run, professional process where an investor passes for legitimate reasons (stage mismatch, sector focus, portfolio conflict, market timing) rarely damages future prospects — most experienced angels and VCs pass on many deals and this is a normal part of the process. What damages future rounds is a poorly prepared, inconsistent, or overly wide outreach that creates a reputation of 'shopping the deal' without traction, or investors discovering financial inconsistencies during diligence that make them question founder credibility broadly, not just for that specific round.
Can PNPC help us raise from investors in the UAE as well as India?
Yes. With operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai, PNPC supports India-UAE cross-border fundraising conversations — including UAE-based family offices, angel networks, and funds interested in Indian startups, and Indian founders exploring UAE-based capital or considering a UAE holding structure. We coordinate the FEMA/RBI compliance on the India side and the relevant UAE-side considerations together, rather than splitting the engagement across two disconnected firms.
Do you help with pitch deck design, or only the financial content?
Our core focus is the financial and compliance substance — the model, the numbers, the data room, and the narrative consistency between your deck and your underlying financials. We review pitch deck financial slides closely and advise on how the numbers should be framed. We are not a design or branding agency, so for the visual design and narrative-storytelling craft of the deck itself, we typically recommend a specialist pitch deck designer or your own marketing resource, while we ensure what goes into it is financially sound and defensible.
What happens after the money lands in our account — is PNPC's role over?
No. Post-close, we help reset your financial model against actual performance, update the cap table to reflect the new allotment, coordinate any pending FC-GPR filing, and set up the investor reporting cadence (monthly MIS, quarterly board packs) that your Shareholders' Agreement likely requires. Many founders also transition into our Startup Virtual CFO service for ongoing financial leadership as the company scales post-funding.
How is this different from PNPC's separate Fund Raising Advisory service?
This service (Startup, Angel & VC Fund Raising Support) is the earlier-stage, preparation-and-connect layer — getting your financials, cap table, and compliance ready, and making investor introductions. Our dedicated Fund Raising Advisory service is the deal-structuring and regulatory layer that takes over once a term sheet is on the table — term sheet review, CCPS and liquidation preference structuring, FEMA/FC-GPR filing execution, and coordination with your legal counsel on the definitive agreements. Many clients use both, moving from this service into that one as the round progresses.
We already have one angel investor committed informally. Can PNPC help close the round around that commitment?
Yes — an anchor commitment, even informal, is a strong starting point for structuring the rest of the round. We help formalise the anchor investor's terms, use that commitment to build credibility with additional investors, and often help structure the round so other investors can come in on the same or similar terms, which speeds up the closing process considerably.
Is there a minimum round size for PNPC to take on this engagement?
We work with founders across a wide range of round sizes, from early friends-and-family and angel rounds through institutional seed and Series A. The scope and fee structure are tailored to the round size and the amount of preparation work required — a founder needing only investor connect and light documentation review has a different scope than one needing a full readiness overhaul. We discuss this openly in the first consultation.
What if our historical financials have gaps or inconsistencies — can PNPC still help us raise?
In most cases, yes — but the timeline extends. We first work through the clean-up: reconciling GST returns to reported revenue, addressing any TDS defaults, regularising any pending MCA filings, and rebuilding financial statements where records were informal or incomplete. Investors expect some informality at the very earliest stages, but material inconsistencies discovered during diligence, rather than disclosed upfront, damage trust far more than the same issue disclosed and explained proactively.
Do you help with grants, government schemes, or non-dilutive funding as an alternative to equity?
We can advise on how non-dilutive sources — Startup India Seed Fund Scheme eligibility, state-level startup grants, sector-specific government schemes, or working-capital debt — fit into your overall capital strategy, and how they interact with your equity fundraising plans and DPIIT status. For pure debt financing (term loans, working capital lines, venture debt), our broader loans and treasury advisory services handle the lender-side process; this service focuses primarily on the equity fundraising track.
What documents does an investor typically ask for in the first serious conversation?
Typically: your pitch deck, a summary financial model or projections, recent financial statements or management accounts, your cap table, and increasingly, a brief note on your compliance and regulatory status (GST registration, DPIIT recognition if applicable, any material litigation). Formal legal due diligence — the full document checklist — usually follows only after a term sheet or strong preliminary interest, not at the very first meeting.
Can foreign nationals or NRIs be part of our investor round without complications?
Yes, subject to standard FEMA conditions. Foreign investment (including from NRIs) into an eligible Indian company is generally permitted under the automatic route for most sectors, subject to sectoral caps and conditions, with FC-GPR filed within 30 days of allotment. Investment from an entity or individual based in a country sharing a land border with India (including investments routed through such jurisdictions) requires prior government approval regardless of sector — this is a common point founders overlook when structuring a round with certain foreign or NRI investors.
What is a SAFE note, and is it used in Indian fundraising?
A SAFE (Simple Agreement for Future Equity) is a US-originated instrument that grants the investor a right to future equity upon a triggering event, without immediately setting a valuation. Indian company law does not have a direct statutory equivalent, so Indian startups raising this type of round typically use a Convertible Note structured under the Companies (Acceptance of Deposits) Rules, or a CCD (Compulsorily Convertible Debenture), which achieve a broadly similar commercial outcome within Indian company law and FEMA constraints.
How do you handle confidentiality when introducing us to investors?
We only share your data room or detailed financial information with investors after your explicit approval, typically under an NDA where the investor requests one and where market practice supports it (though many active angels and funds do not sign NDAs before an initial conversation, as a matter of their own policy). Initial introductions are usually based on a summary teaser rather than your full data room, with fuller access granted as the conversation progresses and mutual interest is established.
What is the difference between pre-money and post-money valuation, and why does it matter for dilution?
Pre-money valuation is the company's agreed value before the new investment is added; post-money valuation is pre-money plus the new investment amount. The investor's ownership percentage is calculated as investment amount divided by post-money valuation. Founders sometimes negotiate a headline valuation number without clarifying whether it is pre- or post-money — a mistake that can result in materially different dilution than expected for the same investment amount.
Does PNPC only work with technology startups, or other sectors too?
We work across sectors — technology, D2C and consumer brands, manufacturing, healthcare, food and agri-business, and services businesses seeking growth capital. Our investor network spans generalist angel networks as well as sector-focused funds, so the right introduction depends on your specific sector and stage rather than a one-size-fits-all approach.
What is a term sheet, and is it legally binding?
A term sheet is a non-binding (in most material commercial terms) document outlining the proposed structure and key terms of an investment — valuation, instrument type, investor rights, board composition, and other governance provisions. Certain clauses within a term sheet, such as confidentiality and exclusivity (a 'no-shop' clause preventing you from negotiating with other investors for a defined period), are typically binding even though the overall commercial terms are not. Signing a term sheet is a significant commitment even though it is not the final legal agreement.
How much equity should we expect to give up in a seed round?
There is no universal benchmark, but typical Indian seed rounds result in dilution somewhere in a broad range depending on valuation, amount raised, and negotiating position — commonly cited market patterns suggest founders should be cautious about giving up so much in early rounds that later rounds leave them with insufficient ownership to remain motivated and in control. We model out the dilution impact of a proposed round on your cap table across two to three future funding scenarios so you can see the multi-round effect, not just the immediate one.
What ongoing compliance obligations does a funded startup take on that an unfunded one does not?
Beyond standard MCA and tax compliance, a funded company typically takes on: contractual reporting obligations to investors under the Shareholders' Agreement (monthly MIS, quarterly board packs, annual audited financials by a specified date), FC-GPR and any subsequent FEMA filings for foreign investors, board observer or board seat rights that require formal board process discipline, and information rights that may require sharing budgets, cap table updates, and material contract disclosures on a defined schedule.
Can a company raise from both Indian and foreign investors in the same round?
Yes, this is common, particularly at seed and Series A stages. Each investor's residency status determines the applicable compliance: resident Indian investors follow standard Companies Act allotment procedures; non-resident investors (NRI, foreign fund, foreign individual) trigger FEMA/FC-GPR filing requirements and sectoral cap/pricing-guideline compliance. We track each investor's status separately within the same round to ensure every applicable filing is made correctly and on time.
What if we want to raise a bridge round between two larger rounds?
A bridge round — typically structured as a Convertible Note or CCD that converts into equity at the next priced round, often at a discount to that round's valuation — is a common way to extend runway between larger, priced rounds. We help structure the discount and any valuation cap terms, and ensure the conversion mechanics are clearly documented so they do not create confusion or disputes at the next round's closing.
How do we know if an interested party is a credible investor versus a time-waster?
Credible investors typically have a track record of prior investments (checkable through public sources, portfolio pages, or references), ask specific and informed questions about your business rather than generic ones, and move through their own diligence process at a reasonable pace once genuinely interested. We help founders qualify investor interest early — checking track record and fit — before committing significant founder time to a drawn-out conversation with low closing probability.
Does PNPC's involvement in our fundraise affect our relationship with our existing statutory auditor?
No. This fundraising support engagement is separate from — and does not replace — your statutory audit function, which must be performed by an independent auditor appointed under the Companies Act. If PNPC is already your statutory auditor, we maintain appropriate separation between the audit function and this advisory engagement in line with professional independence standards. If you have a different statutory auditor, we coordinate with them on financial statement matters as needed for the fundraise.
PNPC Global vs typical fundraising alternatives
| What You Need | Startup Matchmaking Platform | Freelance 'Fundraising Consultant' | PNPC Global CA Advisory |
|---|---|---|---|
| Financial model built by someone who understands Indian tax and compliance | Rarely — usually a generic template | Varies widely by individual — no consistent standard | Yes — built or reviewed by a practising CA who also handles your compliance |
| Investor introductions based on genuine relationships, not a purchased list | Often a broad database with limited relationship depth | Depends entirely on that individual's personal network | Yes — introductions drawn from four decades of CA practice relationships across India and UAE |
| Compliance and cap table audit before you go to investors | Not typically offered | Rarely within scope | Yes — standard part of our readiness assessment |
| FEMA/FC-GPR filing competence for foreign or NRI investors | Not offered — outside platform scope | Rarely — most are not FEMA-qualified | Yes — handled directly, or coordinated with our dedicated Fund Raising Advisory team |
| Continuity after the round closes | Relationship typically ends at introduction | Typically ends when the engagement/fee concludes | Continues — post-round reset, compliance calendar, and option to move into ongoing Virtual CFO support |
| Regulatory clarity on what the advisor is and is not licensed to do | Often unclear or unaddressed | Rarely disclosed proactively | Explicit — we are advisory and introductory, not a licensed placement agent, and we say so upfront |
| Presence across your future compliance needs (MCA, GST, income tax, FEMA) | No — single-purpose platform | No — narrow scope | Yes — the same firm handles your fundraise prep and your ongoing statutory compliance |
| India-UAE coordination for cross-border investor conversations | Rarely offered | Rarely offered | Yes — Dubai office alongside Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Honest fundraise readiness assessment — financials, cap table, and compliance reviewed before outreach begins
- 02
12–18 month financial model built with defensible, explainable assumptions
- 03
Historical financial statement clean-up and reconciliation to GST and bank records
- 04
Cap table and MCA compliance audit — catching gaps before an investor does
- 05
Valuation coordination — informal guidance for smaller rounds, formal Rule 11UA valuation report coordination for larger or FEMA-relevant rounds
- 06
Investor-ready data room assembly, organised and version-controlled
- 07
Targeted, warm investor introductions from our India-UAE network — not mass cold outreach
- 08
Pitch deck financial-slide review for consistency with your model and data room
- 09
Diligence support — coordinating responses to investor and auditor queries
- 10
FC-GPR filing coordination within the 30-day RBI deadline for any non-resident investor
- 11
Seamless handoff to PNPC's dedicated Fund Raising Advisory team for term sheet review and deal structuring
- 12
Post-round compliance calendar update and option to transition into ongoing Virtual CFO support
Talk to a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your first investor meeting — not after a term sheet has already exposed a gap. We prepare your numbers, connect you with the right investors, and stay with you through diligence, closing, and everything that comes after the round.