Investor Readiness
The standards governing the financial data room, the financial narrative, what each category of investor expects, and how companies should prepare for financial due diligence.
Download Book 5 (PDF)Book 5 governs the relationship between a company's financial infrastructure and its investors. Fundraising readiness is not a pre-raise preparation activity. It is the condition that results from maintaining compliant financial infrastructure continuously. A company that requires three weeks to assemble its data room was not investor ready before the process began, and the assembly period signals this to every investor who observes it.
The investor's financial assessment begins at first contact. Materials shared in initial conversations are part of the due diligence record and must be consistent with materials shared in the formal process. There is no distinction between informal and formal financial representations from the investor's perspective.
The Financial Data Room Standard
A data room is a structured, access-controlled repository of company documents made available to prospective investors for due diligence. Its defining characteristics are structure, navigability, and document currency. A shared folder of documents without a data room index, without version control, and without consistent naming conventions is not a data room.
Required financial data room contents
Investor grade financial model with working file access, not PDF only. Current within the most recently completed month.
Management accounts for the trailing twelve months minimum. Current within fifteen business days of the most recently completed month.
Fully diluted cap table with record date stated. All convertible instruments and their terms documented. Vesting schedules for all option grants.
One-page financial summary covering cash position, net burn, runway, revenue, gross margin, and variance against plan.
Use of proceeds document specifying functional allocation, deployment period, and milestone. Required for all companies that have raised external capital.
Documented valuation analysis using the methodology appropriate to stage. Includes the peer set and selection criteria for comparable company analysis where applicable.
Compliance criteria
The Financial Narrative Standard
The financial narrative is the verbal and written account connecting the company's financial performance, position, and projections to its business strategy and investment thesis. Every financial claim made in any investor communication must be traceable to a specific figure in the financial data room. Narrative consistency requires that all figures stated across all contexts, including presentations, emails, and verbal conversations, are derived from the same underlying data.
Compliance criteria
The Investor Expectations Matrix
Different investor categories have materially different financial expectations. Preparing a uniform set of materials for all investor conversations wastes time and signals a lack of familiarity with the investor audience. The matrix below defines the minimum financial infrastructure expected for a productive engagement with each category.
| Investor Category | Typical Investment | Minimum FFI Compliance | Primary Financial Screen |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angel | Below £500K | Level 1 across financial architecture and capital structure | Cash position, runway, fully diluted cap table accuracy |
| Pre-Seed Institutional | £250K to £1.5M | Level 2 across capital structure; Level 1 across financial architecture | Unit economics, fully diluted cap table, use of proceeds |
| Seed Institutional | £1M to £5M | Level 2 across financial architecture, capital structure, and investor readiness | Three-statement model, LTV to CAC, cap table, financial narrative consistency |
| Series A Venture Capital | £4M to £15M | Level 2 across all domains; Level 3 across capital structure and investor readiness | Full model audit, cohort analysis, scenario analysis, data room completeness |
| Series B Growth Equity | £10M to £50M | Level 3 across financial architecture, performance modeling, capital structure | Departmental financial plans, annual operating plan, KPI framework, management accounts timeliness |
The Financial Due Diligence Standard
Financial due diligence is the formal process by which an investor verifies the accuracy of financial claims, assesses the quality of the financial model, and evaluates financial management practices. At Series A and above, the investor's team or advisors will conduct a financial model audit, rebuilding the projections from stated assumptions to verify that outputs are supported by inputs. A model that produces outputs inconsistent with its assumptions will not survive this process.
Closing conditions and representations
Financial closing conditions typically require confirmation that the company's financial position as represented remains accurate and that no material adverse change has occurred. A material adverse change that occurs after a term sheet is signed and before closing must be disclosed. The obligation arises from the occurrence of the event, not from its duration or the company's expectation of recovery.
Financial representations and warranties in investment documents confirm the accuracy of financial statements, the completeness of the cap table, and the absence of material adverse change. Verbal statements made in investor meetings constitute financial representations in addition to written statements in formal documents.
Compliance criteria
Common Deficiencies in Book 5
- The data room is assembled in the weeks following receipt of investor interest. The assembly process takes longer than the investor expects, signalling that the company was not maintaining investor-ready financial infrastructure before the process began.
- The data room contains a PDF of the financial model rather than the working file. The investor cannot audit the model's assumptions, formulas, or internal consistency from a PDF. This is treated as a refusal to provide the model, not as a compliant submission.
- Management accounts in the data room are three to four months old. The document currency requirement is not met. The investor cannot assess current financial position from documents reflecting the position four months ago.
- The financial narrative diverges from the financial model. A revenue trajectory described verbally in investor meetings implies a higher growth rate than the financial model projects. The divergence is identified during quantitative due diligence and constitutes a red flag regardless of its cause.
- Unit economics are presented using revenue-based lifetime value and partial customer acquisition cost in the initial investor conversations, then corrected to compliant figures in the data room. The inconsistency between the two sets of figures requires explanation and creates a credibility deficit.
- A material adverse change in revenue trajectory occurs after a term sheet is signed. The company does not disclose the change, expecting to recover before closing. The investor discovers the change through a data request. The investment does not proceed.
- Financial preparedness is inadequate. The founding team cannot state the company's gross margin, net burn rate, or LTV to CAC ratio in a live investor conversation without checking a file. The investor concludes that the founders do not manage to these metrics on a daily basis.
- The investor update sent monthly omits the revenue miss against plan for the period, reporting only the initiatives the company has taken in response. The omission is a selective presentation deficiency that erodes investor trust when identified.
Citable URL
Full citation: Founder Financial Infrastructure Standard, Beta v0.5, Book 5. ffistandard.org. 2026.