
Private equity due diligence operates under constraints that make most conventional research tools inadequate. Deal timelines compress information gathering into weeks. Management teams control the narrative in data rooms and presentations. Financial models require validation against operational reality that only practitioners can provide.
According to Accenture, 75% of private equity leaders agree that PE investments have grown more complex over the past five years, increasing the demands on due diligence processes at every stage of the deal cycle.
Expert networks have emerged as the tool that addresses this complexity directly. By connecting investment teams with practitioners who have operated inside specific markets, sectors, and functions, expert networks provide the ground-level intelligence that financial data and analyst reports structurally cannot.
The most effective private equity teams integrate expert networks systematically across every stage of the investment process, not just during confirmatory diligence.
At the earliest stage of evaluating an opportunity, the question is whether a deal is worth pursuing at all. Expert calls at this stage help investment teams quickly assess market attractiveness, competitive positioning, and the structural validity of a sector thesis before meaningful resources are allocated.
Speaking with former executives, customers, or competitors at this stage gives a fund a fast read on whether the basic assumptions of an opportunity hold up. A thesis that looks compelling from published data often looks materially different after a conversation with someone who has run a business inside that sector. Eliminating low-probability deals early through primary intelligence is one of the highest-ROI applications of expert networks in PE.
Once a deal is worth pursuing, investment teams use expert calls to test early hypotheses and sharpen the questions that will drive deeper diligence. Expert calls help investment committee preparation by improving the precision of assumptions and highlighting areas that require deeper diligence, ensuring IC materials reflect a more informed view of the opportunity.
At this stage, the most valuable practitioners are those who can speak to the sector's structural dynamics: what drives competitive advantage in this market, where the real risks sit, and whether the management team's narrative aligns with how operators inside the industry actually view the business.
This is where expert networks play their most critical role. Speaking with customers validates satisfaction levels, switching behaviour, and willingness to pay. Competitor views reveal relative strengths and weaknesses, pricing trends, and potential threats. Former insiders clarify operational realities, cost structures, and strategic decisions. Together, these insights confirm or challenge the assumptions in the investment model and help investors calibrate both valuation and risk. Usc
Management teams in buyouts and carve-outs present an optimized version of the business. Expert networks allow PE firms to triangulate management claims against independent operator perspectives, giving investment teams a more complete and accurate picture before they commit capital.
The use of expert networks does not end at close. After a deal closes, expert networks support portfolio companies by connecting operators directly with experts who have solved similar challenges in sales execution, pricing strategy, or operational scaling, giving PE-backed companies access to specialized knowledge at critical moments, often faster and more cost effectively than hiring consultants or full-time executives.
The quality of an expert call in a PE context depends on three factors.

A vague research question produces a generic expert. A specific question tied to a specific investment hypothesis produces a practitioner who has directly managed the dynamic being researched. The best PE teams approach expert call preparation with the same rigor they apply to management presentations.
The most valuable expert for a diligence question about Indonesian consumer goods distribution is not a regional FMCG analyst. It is a former distribution head who managed networks across Java and non-Java markets and understands the operational economics from the inside. For Southeast Asian mandates, matching relevance matters more than database size.
PE firms operate under regulatory requirements that make compliance non-negotiable. Every expert must be screened for conflicts of interest. Sessions must operate under non-disclosure agreements. Participants must receive pre-call compliance briefings. Working through a reputable expert network eliminates the regulatory exposure that informal channel checks cannot protect against.
For PE teams with Indonesia and Southeast Asia exposure, the value of expert networks is amplified by regional market characteristics. The gap between management presentations and operational reality is wider in emerging markets. Published data coverage is thinner. Regulatory implementation diverges from published policy in ways that only practitioners who have navigated the specific frameworks understand.
Konnect is a global expert network connecting organizations with experienced industry professionals across 500+ sub-verticals to access real-world insights and informed perspectives. With strong expertise across Southeast Asia and global markets, Konnect facilitates structured conversations that help decision-makers better understand industries, market dynamics, and emerging opportunities. Most engagements deliver an initial shortlist within hours, with first sessions scheduled within the week.

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