Oleg Didych
Expert in organising surveillance and performing tasks of increased complexity, President of the NGO ‘Association of Veterans of the Security Service of Ukraine “Seven”, Lieutenant Colonel of the reserve special services, Director of the Service seven Consulting Agency (detective services, business security), Head of the Control kids project.
Are you familiar with Due Diligence?
New terminology has long been firmly established in the everyday practice of organising a successful business, and continues to be introduced.
At INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS PROTECTION HOLDING, the term Due Diligence is considered to be a set of measures to conduct examinations by independent experts in order to provide the customer with objective information about the investment object or the proposed transaction (for example, the purchase of an object).
Very often, due diligence is interpreted as a legal audit conducted at a potential investment target with the addition of a review of the financial, organisational and tax status of business processes. In our opinion, the practical essence of this process is much broader, unless the Due Diligence contractor plans to mislead the customer.
As early as 1933, after the adoption of the Federal Securities Act in the United States, experts began to interpret Due Diligence as investigations and examinations of potential investment projects. In other words, it is probably more honest to perceive and offer Due Diligence as a set of activities conducted using private investigation techniques and providing the customer with a generalised report on the real underlying state of the potential investment object and practical (fact-based) recommendations on all aspects of the due diligence, namely
As a result of this complex, the customer of Due Diligence should receive complete information about the potential investment (purchase, study) object, namely
The issues under study can be investigated in a wider range, but always require the mandatory participation of specialists - practitioners in the fields of business intelligence and corporate business counterintelligence. In all other cases, the customer of Due Diligence runs the risk of receiving incomplete or even falsified information based on the results of the inspection.