Survey: Most regional investors want a better due diligence process
April 7, 2017 | Meghan LeVota
For investors, investigating deals isn’t always an easy process.
From examining an industry’s opportunity to loads of legal analysis, the amount of work in the due diligence process is often enough to deter financiers from investing in a firm.
That’s why in a recent survey, a majority of regional investors said they’d love a better way to conduct due diligence. Conducted by KCSourceLink and the Alternative Investment Forum, the survey found that almost two-thirds of regional investors say it would be helpful to have a standardized due diligence process for venture offerings.
“In the spring of 2016 we did a survey with KCSourceLink to find out why some investors were reluctant to invest in early stage entrepreneurial deals,” said AIF co-founder Mark Meyerdirk. “One of the major findings of that survey was that new investors don’t know how to properly investigate deals. Based on this finding we decided to do a follow-up survey at the end of 2016 of professional investors, who do this for a living, to see if there was a standardized due diligence process.”
The organizations asked 41 regional funds and investors — such as KCRise fund, Fulcrum Global Capital and Brown Cow Capital — about what the due diligence process looks like for them. Often, the biggest expense is time, the survey revealed.
The study showed that 85 percent of investors spend more than 20 hours conducting due diligence per venture opportunity considered. 36 percent spend more than 60 hours on each potential deal.
Most commonly, investors vet the target company by asking the management team for data, reviewing legal and financial details, analyzing the intellectual property and reviewing industry competition.
“Insights into what investors look for helps us educate both investors and entrepreneurs to create a better process for accessing capital in Kansas City,” KCSourceLink founder Maria Meyers said in a release.
The survey concluded that many regional investors may be interested in outsourcing due diligence work.
That’s why AIF and KCSourceLink are teaming up to create a Venture Stage Due Diligence Report Template, based on that recent data the survey secured. In addition, Meyerdirk said he will approach the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation with the possibility of conducting a similar survey on a national scale.
To read the full report, click here.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Joni Cobb and Pipeline took ‘a leap of faith’ that’s paying off
In 2006, Joni Cobb was busy coaxing Kansas business executives to apply for a program honing their leadership skills. Then a state-subsidized program, Pipeline would cultivate promising entrepreneurs that would tangentially grow the Sunflower State’s economy with their firms. Extolled as rigorous, the Pipeline sales pitch hit snags with its intensiveness and novelty. Skeptical entrepreneurs…
The Pipeline fellowship’s journey to the Emerald Isle in photos
In an educational adventure focused on finance and global business strategy, the Pipeline entrepreneurial fellowship program ventured across the pond for a week of relationship building. I tagged along not only to observe the experience — expect more on that front soon — but to capture some moments with my camera. This smattering of photos, which…
Kansas City startups flex pitch skills in national Kauffman contest
Four Kansas City area startups — and one Lawrence, Kan. firm — have qualified to the top 40 of Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation’s 1 in a Million pitch competition. The competition offers those who have presented at 1 Million Cups in the last year a chance to snag a $25,000 prize. Hundreds of applicants — who…
Big Bang leverages smart city success, LaunchKC momentum
Editor’s note: This content is sponsored by LaunchKC but independently produced by Startland News. As Kansas City becomes a hotbed for smart city tech, one local startup is providing a spine for streamlined communication among the devices cities will leverage. Kansas City-based Big Bang’s Internet of Things software aims to work as the “central nervous…
