Case Study on Fundraising

Diligence-Ready: Preparing a Founder for a Clean Seed Round

The Situation

Arjun’s B2B software business was growing, and an overseas angel investor was ready to commit a seed cheque. It should have been straightforward. Instead, his books mixed founder funding with personal expenses, he had no financial model, his cap table had never been formally set out, and he held a term sheet with clauses he did not fully understand. He came to us a few weeks before the intended close, concerned the deal might not survive due diligence — and unclear how a foreign investor could lawfully invest in an Indian company.

What we found

  • The books were not investor-ready: mixed expenses, undocumented founder funding and unclear revenue recognition.
  • There was no financial model to show how the funds would be used and what they would deliver.
  • No clarity on the raise itself — how much to raise, at what valuation, or the dilution that would follow.
  • The cap table was informal, with equity, ESOPs and dilution undefined.
  • Term-sheet clauses were not understood: liquidation preference, anti-dilution, board rights and founder vesting.
  • Statutory compliance gaps (GST, TDS, ROC) sat waiting to surface in diligence.
  • IP and key contracts were not properly assigned to the company, and no founders’ or shareholders’ framework existed.
  • A foreign investor brought FEMA pricing rules and RBI reporting (FC-GPR) into scope.
  • There was no organised data room — documentation was scattered and runway was not clearly understood.

What we did

  • Restructured the financials into a form able to withstand diligence, with founder contributions documented.
  • Built a credible financial model and projections tied to a defined use of funds, raise size and valuation.
  • Formalised the cap table and established an ESOP framework for future hires.
  • Closed the statutory gaps and assigned IP and contracts to the company, and put a founders’ framework in place.
  • Reviewed the term sheet in plain terms, identified the clauses worth negotiating, and assembled a clean data room.
  • Set out the cross-border requirements — FEMA pricing, valuation support and FC-GPR reporting.

The Result

  • The financials, model, cap table and data room are in order, and the company is prepared for diligence.
  • Several term-sheet points are identified for negotiation, with discussions underway.
  • The cross-border structuring is mapped, so the investment can complete in full compliance with RBI and FEMA.
  • The round is progressing towards close on terms clearer and more balanced than those first presented.

The Takeaway

Investors back numbers they can rely on and a founder who understands them. Most rounds are tested in due diligence rather than in the pitch. We prepare founders to be investor-ready — clean books, a credible model, a clear cap table and compliant structuring — so the round can close.

If you are raising, or expect to, the time to put your numbers in order is well before the term sheet arrives.

Some names and identifying details in this case study have been changed to protect client confidentiality.

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Frequently Asked Questions

  1. We have an interested investor. What does a Chartered Accountant actually do in a fundraise?

    We get the company ready to be invested in: clean, investor-ready financials, a credible model and use-of-funds, a properly structured cap table, term-sheet review, and the compliance around the investment. In short, we prepare you to survive due diligence and close on sound terms.

  2. Aren’t a lawyer and an investment banker enough? Why a CA?

    They each have a role, but the financial substance — your numbers, model, valuation inputs, tax and regulatory structuring — sits with us. Most rounds are tested in financial and tax due diligence, which is exactly where a CA’s preparation makes the difference.

  3. Our books are filed and audited. Why do we need to be made “investor-ready”?

    Statutory books are built for compliance, not for investors. Diligence looks for clean revenue recognition, documented founder funding, a clear cap table and no hidden tax or regulatory gaps. We bridge the distance between “filed” and “fundable.”

  4. We have a foreign or NRI investor. What extra is involved?

    Foreign investment brings FEMA pricing rules and RBI reporting, such as the FC-GPR filing, into scope, along with valuation requirements. We handle that structuring so the investment comes in fully compliant and does not create problems later.

  5. Can you help us decide how much to raise and at what valuation?

    Yes. We work from your model, runway and plans to arrive at a sensible raise size, support the valuation with defensible numbers, and show you the dilution each scenario implies before you commit.

  6. Will you review and help negotiate the term sheet?

    We explain the term sheet in plain language, flag the clauses that carry real consequences — liquidation preference, anti-dilution, board rights, vesting — and identify what is worth negotiating, working with your lawyer on the legal drafting.

  7. How early should we engage you?

    As early as possible, ideally before the term sheet is signed. Getting the financials, cap table and compliance in order ahead of diligence is far easier than fixing them under deal pressure.

  8. How are your fees structured, and is our information confidential?

    Fees are agreed upfront for a defined scope, in line with professional norms, and discussed clearly at the outset. All deal and financial information is held under our strict professional duty of confidentiality.

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