Dishaya / Work Packages / Due Diligence Starter
The Public Record On A Company, Organized For A Decision
Before the deal, the partnership, or the vendor contract, turn one messy question into a client-ready report and deck where every claim taps to its source, and every contradiction in the record is flagged instead of smoothed over.
What The Package Contains
One edited question in. Three things out, built to travel together:
- A designed report. The company's history, leadership, funding, products, customers, legal and regulatory issues, and reputation signals, organized for the decision you have to make. Exportable to Word and PDF.
- A matching deck. The company snapshot as slides for the partner or committee meeting, exportable to PowerPoint.
- A source ledger. Every claim labelled verified, partial, unverified, or contradicted, with the exact source passage one tap away. When sources disagree about the company, you see both passages.
Every claim is checked against its exact source passage before it is written. What fails the check is disclosed, never hidden.
An Example Structure
An illustrative outline. The real structure follows the question you ask.
- Company History And Ownership
- Leadership And Key People
- Funding And Financial Signals
- Products, Customers, And Traction
- Legal And Regulatory Footprint
- Reputation Signals
- Where The Sources Disagree
Who Uses It
Consultants and analysts use it to arrive at the first working session already knowing the public record. Investors use it to screen a target before paying for deeper work, and operators use it to vet a vendor or partner their business is about to depend on.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is This A Complete Due Diligence?
No, and it does not pretend to be. It is a starter built from the public record: it cannot see data rooms, private financials, or anything behind an NDA, and it does not interview references. It organizes what is publicly knowable so the expensive human work starts oriented instead of from zero.
What Happens When Sources Disagree About The Company?
The claim is labelled contradicted and both passages are shown. The report never silently picks a side; the disagreement itself is often the finding that matters most in a diligence.
Does A Verified Label Mean The Claim Is True?
It means the claim is supported by the exact source passage it cites. Sources themselves can be wrong or stale, which is why every claim taps open its passage and the Confidence Ledger reports how many claims were checked and how many held. The full methodology spells out what each label promises.
Start The File On Any Company
Open the template, name the company, and get the public record organized with its sources attached.
Start This Package FreeThe question is editable before anything runs. 5 free packages a month.