If you’re raising finance and it feels like you’re stuck in a loop – “Can you send the latest management accounts?” – “Can you explain this number again?” – “Can you provide a breakdown of” – you’re not alone.
The truth is: funding delays are usually not caused by one big problem. They are caused by small gaps that create uncertainty. And when lenders or investors feel uncertainty, they do what they are trained to do:
They slow down.
They ask more questions.
They protect themselves with tougher terms.
The good news is that this is one of the most frustrating and most avoidable reasons deals lose momentum – because the fix is usually preparation and structure, not persuasion.
Why finance takes longer than it should
Most funding processes drag for the same three reasons:
1) The numbers do not match the story
If your narrative says “we’re scaling profitably” but the accounts show margin pressure, rising overheads, or cash strain, the approval team will pause. They are not calling you dishonest – they are looking for explanations that stand up.
2) The pack is incomplete or inconsistent
If documents arrive in pieces, or one file conflicts with another, the lender or investor can’t progress to decision. They will keep asking until they can see a clear, consistent picture.
3) Risk is not addressed upfront
Approval teams are trained to look for risk early: customer concentration, weak cashflow, contract uncertainty, tax arrears, or unclear use of funds. If you do not surface and address these points proactively, you will be asked – repeatedly.
That pattern is exactly why many governments and market bodies focus on “access to finance” and application readiness for SMEs and growth businesses.
What underwriters and investors are actually doing when they “keep asking”
To you, it feels repetitive.
To them, it’s due diligence.
Lenders and investors have to answer questions like:
- Can this business repay?
- Is the cashflow real and sustainable?
- What happens in the downside case?
- Is the information reliable, complete, and current?
- Are there hidden risks we’re not being told?
This is why “lender due diligence” and financial due diligence work exists in the market – it’s structured checking, not personal preference.
The 7 most common reasons you get asked for the same things repeatedly
1) Management accounts are missing, old, or not reconciled
If the lender cannot see recent trading, they cannot make a current decision. If the accounts do not reconcile to bank statements, they will pause.
Fix: Provide up to date management accounts, with clear commentary on changes.
2) Forecasts are not credible, or do not link to real drivers
A forecast that jumps with no explanation creates questions. A forecast that ignores seasonality, staffing, or working capital creates doubt.
Fix: Build forecasts from simple drivers (sales volume, pricing, cost to serve, headcount, payment terms) and include a downside scenario.
3) “Use of funds” is vague
If you say “for growth” or “for working capital” without clarity, the lender does not know what they are funding.
Fix: Be specific. Explain what the money is for, why now, and how it changes performance or cashflow.
4) Bank statements do not match what the pack implies
Lenders look at statements to validate reality: customer receipts, supplier payments, payroll, taxes, and overdraft behaviour.
Fix: Provide clean, complete statements, and explain any unusual items proactively.
5) Customer concentration is high
If one or two customers drive most revenue, lenders will ask what happens if they leave.
Fix: Provide customer breakdown, contract strength, and mitigation plan.
6) Historic issues are not explained
Late filings, tax arrangements, margin dips, director loans, or one off costs can all trigger follow ups if unexplained.
Fix: Include a short “risk and explanation” section that addresses these points calmly.
7) The route chosen does not match the business model
For example, using a term loan to solve a working-capital timing issue often creates pressure. Or trying to raise equity without clear metrics and governance.
Fix: Choose the route that matches the cash cycle. For receivables-driven businesses, invoice finance and asset-based lending are common tools – and the UK has published standards and frameworks around this space for a reason.
A simple rule: uncertainty creates delay – and delay creates tougher terms
When approval teams feel uncertainty, the process typically changes in three ways:
- They increase information requests
- They extend decision timelines
- They protect themselves through pricing, covenants, security, or conditions
So if you want speed, you don’t push harder – you remove uncertainty.
The “lender ready pack” that speeds approvals
Here is what a clean pack usually includes. Not because it’s “nice to have” – but because it reduces questions.
Essential documents
- The last 2–3 years of accounts (where available)
- Up to date management accounts
- A 12-24 month forecast with clear assumptions
- A rolling cashflow view (often 13 weeks for working capital cases)
- Bank statements (commonly 6-12 months depending on route)
- Debtors and creditors lists (for working capital/invoice finance cases)
- A clear “use of funds” summary
- A short business overview that matches the numbers
If it is acquisition or larger funding
- A clear transaction summary and rationale
- Integration plan and expected value capture
- A downside scenario and risk controls
- Key contracts and revenue proof
If it is private equity or venture capital
- Metrics that support the story (growth, margin, retention, CAC, LTV, etc.)
- A governance and leadership overview
- A clear milestone plan for the capital
You do not need a 40 page report. You need clarity, consistency, and evidence.
A realistic timeline
Timelines vary, but the process usually moves through stages like this:
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Initial review: Are you eligible for this route?
-
Information check: Are the documents complete and consistent?
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Underwriting/due diligence: Does the story hold up under scrutiny?
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Approval/credit committee: Are risks understood and acceptable?
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Documentation and drawdown: Are legal and operational conditions met?
If you are being asked for “one more thing,” you are usually stuck between stages 2 and 3. The solution is to tighten the pack so it can move forward without repeated queries.
How to stop the “repeat request” cycle
These are the actions that shorten timelines in the real world:
- You should provide a single, organised pack, not documents sent in fragments
- You should ensure every number links, so the story and financials agree
- You should include a short explanation section for any unusual items
- You should provide a downside case, because it builds trust quickly.
- You should respond quickly and completely when questions arrive, not partially.
- You should keep one version of the truth, so different people are not sending different numbers.
What we do differently – and why it speeds things up
When finance drags, it’s usually because the application is being treated like a conversation, not a controlled process.
Our role is to bring structure:
- We clarify the requirement so the route fits your cash cycle and goal
- We shape a lender ready or investor ready pack that reduces uncertainty
- We stress test assumptions so follow up questions reduce sharply
- We keep the process organised so the journey feels controlled and credible
This is not about “selling” a lender or an investor. It’s about making your case easy to approve.
If you want a fast next step
If raising finance is taking too long, the quickest win is usually a readiness reset.
A short conversation can typically clarify:
- Why you keep getting repeat questions
- What information is missing or inconsistent
- Which funding route best fits your situation
- What you need to provide to move to approval
Information only. Funding outcomes depend on eligibility and third-party criteria.