Mistakes Vendors Make – Poor Compliance Planning
Understanding the Impact of Poor Compliance Preparation on RTO Sales
This discussion examines how inadequate compliance preparation can materially affect the sale of a Registered Training Organisation (RTO). It focuses on a commonly overlooked issue: the role of compliance due diligence and how it influences price, deal terms and transaction timelines.
This topic is particularly relevant for RTO vendors preparing for sale, as well as buyers assessing acquisition risk. In the current regulatory environment, compliance history is not a secondary consideration—it is a core component of value and risk.
Failure to properly assess and address compliance issues before going to market can lead to delayed transactions, renegotiated terms or, in some cases, failed deals.
Compliance Due Diligence Is Not Optional
Buyers Assess More Than Financial Performance
In most RTO transactions, buyers undertake three parallel forms of due diligence:
- Financial due diligence
- Legal due diligence
- Compliance due diligence
While financial performance and legal structure are expected considerations, compliance is often underestimated by vendors.
From a buyer’s perspective, acquiring an RTO means inheriting its full regulatory history. This includes:
- Past interactions with regulators
- Audit outcomes and findings
- Funding body relationships
- Any historical non-compliance or enforcement action
Importantly, a change in ownership does not reset this history. The regulatory record remains attached to the RTO, regardless of new management.
The Reality of “Inheriting History”
When an RTO is purchased, the buyer assumes responsibility for both its strengths and its risks.
For example, if an RTO has previously been subject to regulatory scrutiny or tribunal proceedings, that history continues to carry weight. Buyers will factor this into their risk assessment, particularly where there may be ongoing implications or reputational concerns.
This principle underpins why compliance due diligence is treated with the same level of importance as financial verification.
The Role of Forensic Compliance Audits
What a Forensic Audit Involves
A forensic compliance audit is a deep, retrospective review of an RTO’s operations and regulatory history.
Unlike a standard internal review, this process typically involves:
- Examining historical compliance practices in detail
- Identifying gaps, inconsistencies or risks
- Assessing alignment with regulatory standards over time
- Highlighting any past adverse findings or actions
The approach is intentionally rigorous. It is designed to replicate the level of scrutiny a regulator or highly risk-aware buyer would apply.
Why Buyers Commission Their Own Audits
Where vendors have not undertaken a compliance review prior to sale, buyers will often make the transaction conditional on a satisfactory compliance outcome.
This usually involves commissioning their own forensic audit.
If issues are identified, the auditor will quantify:
- The nature and severity of compliance gaps
- The remediation actions required
- The likely cost and time involved to rectify those issues
This information then directly informs the buyer’s commercial position.
How Poor Compliance Preparation Affects Deal Outcomes
Price Reductions and Renegotiation
If compliance issues are identified late in the process, buyers will typically respond in one of two ways:
- Withdraw from the transaction due to perceived risk
- Renegotiate the price to account for remediation costs
In practical terms, this often results in a lower sale price than initially anticipated.
Shifts in Risk Allocation
Buyers may also seek to adjust deal terms to protect themselves, including:
- Requiring the vendor to rectify issues prior to completion
- Negotiating price holdbacks or adjustments
- Structuring conditions around compliance remediation
These changes can complicate the transaction and extend timelines.
Delays and Transaction Friction
Late discovery of compliance issues introduces uncertainty into the process.
This can lead to:
- Prolonged negotiations
- Additional due diligence phases
- Reduced buyer confidence
Collectively, these factors slow down the transaction and increase execution risk.
Preparing for Sale: A Compliance-First Approach
Why Pre-Sale Audits Matter
Engaging a forensic compliance auditor before going to market allows vendors to:
- Identify issues early
- Understand the true compliance position of the RTO
- Address gaps proactively
- Present a clearer, more transparent offering to buyers
This shifts control back to the vendor, rather than leaving findings to be uncovered during buyer-led due diligence.
Aligning Compliance With Sale Objectives
For most vendors, the key transaction objectives are:
- Achieving a strong sale price
- Minimising time on market
- Securing favourable deal terms
Poor compliance preparation undermines all three.
Conversely, early planning and remediation can:
- Support valuation expectations
- Reduce negotiation friction
- Improve buyer confidence
Practical Interpretation for Vendors and Buyers
For Vendors
The central implication is that compliance should be treated as a core sale readiness activity, not a secondary consideration.
Undertaking a detailed compliance review before listing provides:
- Greater certainty around value
- Fewer surprises during due diligence
- Stronger positioning in negotiations
It also allows vendors to make informed decisions about whether to remediate issues prior to sale or factor them into pricing strategy.
For Buyers
From a buyer’s perspective, this reinforces the importance of:
- Conducting independent compliance due diligence
- Understanding the full regulatory history of the RTO
- Assessing the cost and complexity of remediation
Even where an RTO appears commercially attractive, underlying compliance risks can materially alter the investment profile.
Considering Your Position
If you are preparing to sell an RTO or assessing an acquisition, compliance due diligence will play a central role in shaping the outcome.
If you would like to discuss how these issues apply to your specific situation, you are welcome to book a confidential meeting.