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    Venture Capital: Due Diligence (Online)
    Columbia Business School

    Venture Capital: Due Diligence (Online)

    Columbia Business School, New York
    HomeFinanceColumbia Business SchoolVenture Capital: Due Diligence (Online)
    7 weeksDuration
    onlineFormat
    EnglishLanguage
    FinanceTopic

    Next Available Cohort

    Choose your preferred start date

    Sep 24 - Nov 12, 2026
    7 weeks · online · Instructor-Led
    Open
    $2,600

    All-inclusive program fee

    About This Program

    Due diligence can create transparency and insights when evaluating potential investments. The process helps investors drive profitability and minimize risk, and startups can use it to improve their potential for securing funding. Despite these benefits, many do not build due diligence into their dealmaking strategy. According to PwC, 8 out of 10 companies fail the M&A process due to a lack of pre-transition due diligence. Designed and led by expert faculty Angela Lee, Professor of Professional Practice at Columbia Business School and founder of 37 Angels, a startup investment network that has evaluated over 25,000 deals, the VC Due Diligence (Online) program provides a framework for learning the due diligence process, focusing on the core elements that help indicate whether a deal has the potential to succeed in today’s volatile market.

    Why Columbia Business School?

    Few business schools can claim a campus embedded in one of the world's most consequential cities — and actually mean it. Columbia Business School has built its entire executive education philosophy around New York as a living laboratory: finance, media, technology, healthcare, and policy all intersect within walking distance of campus, and the faculty who teach executives are the same people advising the institutions that drive those industries.

    Your Profile

    • Venture capital and private equity investors, including angel investors and HNIs, who are interested in investing in startups and wish to build the skills and confidence to conduct thorough evaluations, minimize risk, and maximize fund performance in a volatile market
    • Entrepreneurs who want to develop an understanding of the investor’s perspective and learn strategies to increase their potential to secure funding for early-stage startups during uncertain times
    • Mid-to senior finance professionals who wish to learn an exact due diligence framework that will help them succeed in an M&A role, particularly one that evaluates startup acquisitions
    • Consultants and financial advisors who want to excel at comprehensive due diligence in order to build investment solutions for their clients

    Benefits

    • Identify the success and risk factors investors look for during diligence
    • Gauge the current and future business environment to uncover the potential challenges and liabilities of investing in a startup
    • Utilize valuation methodologies to pressure test a startup’s stated valuation
    • Interpret the fundamental characteristics of term sheets to outline the terms and conditions of a deal, thereby facilitating the diligence process
    • Conduct due diligence for a potential venture capital fund from two perspectives, as a limited partner and potential employee, to expand your influence in the field
    • Apply learnings to a number of real startup case studies

    What You'll Learn

    • Module 1 People — How to Assess - Understand the makeup of a due diligence team, the people, their roles, how they work together, and if they possess that “it factor” you are seeking.
    • Module 2 Problems — What to Look For - Learn to assess the market based on factors investors use when performing diligence of a problem.
    • Module 3 Progress — Metrics That Matter - Discover how startups measure their progress and the success of their customer acquisition plans.
    • Module 4 Price — Terms That Matter - Dive deeper into term sheets. Which instrument should you raise on? How much has the founder raised and at what valuation?
    • Module 5 Conducting Diligence for a Fund - Learn the qualitative and quantitative measurements for evaluating a venture fund or general partner, whether you are an employee, a limited partner, or a startup.
    • Module 6 Lessons in Diligence - Explore the last decade of innovations in sourcing, selecting, and supporting startups, and learn how to review your anti-portfolio.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How to Apply

    1. 1

      Check your eligibility

      Review the entry requirements listed on this page. Most executive programs require 8–15 years of professional experience.

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    3. 3

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    4. 4

      Prepare your application

      Gather your CV, reference letters, and any required test scores. Many EMBA programs waive standardised tests for senior candidates.

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