Deals rarely fail because of what’s visible.
Financials get interrogated.
Legal structures get stress-tested.
Tax is modelled to the decimal point.
And yet 12 to 24 months later, the business still underperforms. Not slightly. Materially.
The numbers were right.
The structure was sound.
The strategy made sense.
So what went wrong?
The risk that isn’t being diligenced
Most deals are underwritten on a simple assumption:
That the business can execute the plan it’s been valued on.
That assumption is almost never tested properly. Not because it’s unimportant but because it sits in a blind spot between disciplines:
- Financial diligence explains performance
- Legal diligence protects exposure
- Operational reviews validate the model
But none of them answer a more fundamental question: Can this organisation actually deliver what the deal requires it to deliver?
Where deals quietly break
Execution failure doesn’t show up as a single issue. It shows up as friction across the system.
You see it in patterns like:
- Decisions that take too long or get revisited repeatedly
- Leadership teams that appear aligned but operate differently in practice
- Founder dependency that wasn’t visible during diligence
- Roles that exist on paper but don’t translate into real ownership
- Cost bases that don’t convert into output
Individually, these look manageable. Collectively, they compound into something far more damaging: The business cannot move at the speed the plan requires.
Why traditional due diligence misses it
Because it focuses on what can be verified, not what actually drives outcomes.
Financial diligence answers:
- What has happened
- Where money is made and lost
Legal diligence answers:
- What could go wrong contractually
- Where liabilities sit
Neither examines:
- How decisions are made
- Whether ownership is clear
- If leadership can operate at the next level
- Whether the organisation is structurally capable of scaling
These are treated as “soft” issues. They are not. They are the difference between a plan being delivered or not.
The cost of getting this wrong
When execution risk isn’t identified pre-deal, it doesn’t disappear. It shows up post-deal as:
- Delayed value creation initiatives
- Slower integration than modelled
- Continued reliance on founders or key individuals
- Increased management intervention from investors
- Missed EBITDA targets
In practical terms, that often means:
- 3–6 months of lost momentum
- Hundreds of thousands sometimes millions of unrealised value
- A longer, more complex path to exit
Not because the strategy was wrong. Because the organisation couldn’t execute it.
The gap in the deal process
This is where most deal processes are structurally incomplete.
There is no consistent mechanism to assess:
- Decision ownership and accountability
- Leadership execution capability
- Organisational alignment to the plan
- Dependency risks within the system
These are typically picked up after completion, when they are harder and more expensive to fix.
What feeds to change
If execution determines outcome, it needs to be assessed with the same rigour as financials and legal risk. That means moving beyond high-level “management assessment” and into something more precise:
- Mapping value-critical decisions in the business
- Testing whether ownership is real or assumed
- Identifying where decisions stall or revert
- Assessing whether leadership can operate at the level required post-deal
- Quantifying where execution risk will impact delivery
This doesn’t require months of work. But it does require a shift in mindset: From evaluating what the business is…to evaluating what it can actually deliver.
Final thought
Every deal model assumes performance.
Very few test the organisation’s ability to deliver it.
Financial diligence explains the past. Legal diligence protects the downside. Execution capability determines the outcome. And right now, it’s the least understood and least diligence, risk in most transactions.
Assessing execution risk before the deal completes
Many transactions are diligenced financially, legally and commercially but far fewer properly assess whether the organisation itself can execute the plan it has been valued against. I work with founder-led businesses, investors and acquisition scenarios to assess the organisational and execution risks that often sit beneath otherwise strong financial performance. This includes:
- founder dependency
- leadership capability
- accountability structures
- management depth
- organisational scalability
- post-deal execution risk
If you’re working on a live or upcoming transaction and want to go beyond financial and legal diligence, we can stress‑test the execution side together. I focus on founder dependency, leadership capacity, accountability structures, organisational scalability and post‑deal execution risk so you have a clearer view of where performance could slip once the deal completes. If that would be useful for a current deal, send me a message and we can see if it’s a fit.