- This topic has 4 replies, 5 voices, and was last updated 8 months ago by
Carolina Palacio Posada.
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July 6, 2024 at 11:04 pm #114671
Jessica LeeParticipantStandardizing the due diligence process ensures thorough and efficient evaluations during mergers and acquisitions. By creating a consistent framework, we can streamline the collection and analysis of critical information, minimizing risks and uncovering potential issues early. It helps everyone stay on the same page, reduces redundancy, and ensures every vital detail is noticed. Standardization also enables better comparison across deals, facilitating quicker and more informed decision-making. Ultimately, a well-structured due diligence process can save time, reduce costs, and enhance the overall success rate of our transactions. How has your experience been with standardizing due diligence in your organization?
February 9, 2025 at 6:56 pm #135831Hanna Pakala
ParticipantIt might be difficult sometimes to follow the standardized DD process as each transaction may have its own peculiarities; however I agree that it is very helpful to have at least a standard process in place and start with it and then, depending on the complexity and nature of a particular deal, to adjust the standard process as required.
April 23, 2025 at 10:04 pm #140182
AbigailParticipantAs an IT consultant supporting clients through M&A, often with multiple acquisitions per year, standardizing the due diligence process is critical to ensuring consistency, efficiency, and repeatability. From our side, having a structured, repeatable IT due diligence approach allows clients to know exactly what to expect from us: what we’ll assess, how we’ll communicate findings, and what deliverables we’ll produce. That consistency builds trust and accelerates the decision-making process.
We also strongly encourage our clients to adopt standardized data collection templates and processes internally. When a company has a consistent method for evaluating targets, whether it’s the 3rd deal or the 30th, it allows them to compare key risk areas side-by-side, identify patterns, and make quicker, more confident decisions. That said, the real value comes not just from having a checklist, but from embedding that process into governance. For example:
– Making sure the right internal stakeholders are consistently engaged
– Ensuring data is stored in a centralized, reviewable format
– Having a clear path from due diligence insights to post-close planningWe’ve found that standardized due diligence reduces deal fatigue, especially for teams juggling multiple transactions at once.
May 23, 2025 at 11:19 am #141258Victor
ParticipantFrom my recent experience, CDD is increasingly becoming a commodity and standardisation becomes a must. This is implies re-thinking the entire delivery model, increasing the use of automation/ai instruments, but also building a re-usable blue-print that can be easily applied to various cases (to the extent possible, of course).
July 17, 2025 at 1:19 pm #143666
Carolina Palacio PosadaParticipantAbsolutely. Having a standardized process during Due Diligence not only saves time and reduces costs, but more importantly, it provides a clear, step-by-step framework for how to proceed. This structure helps identify both opportunities and risks with greater clarity, ensuring a more informed and efficient decision-making process
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