Assurance services provide targeted confidence without always requiring a full audit. They are useful when stakeholders need independent review of specific information, controls, compliance, or governance areas.
Your situation
What this helps you avoid
A full audit may not be needed, but targeted independent review would help.
Lenders, funders, investors, or stakeholders need confidence in a specific area.
Controls, compliance, or governance processes need review before risk increases.
Useful outputs
What you can use to make decisions
Independent financial reviews
Agreed-upon procedures engagements
Financial due diligence support
Internal controls, compliance, and governance reviews
Factual findings and practical recommendations
Best fit
Best fit for your situation
Businesses needing targeted assurance over specific numbers or processes
Organisations preparing for funding, transaction, compliance, or governance review
Leadership teams wanting confidence without the full scope of an audit
Approach
A practical route forward
Agree the specific area, question, or process to review
Define procedures, evidence, and reporting expectations
Report findings clearly with practical next steps where relevant
FAQ
Questions clients often ask
What are agreed-upon procedures?
Agreed-upon procedures are targeted checks performed on specific areas agreed in advance. The report usually provides factual findings rather than a full audit opinion.
When is assurance better than a full audit?
Assurance may be suitable when the need is focused on a specific process, figure, compliance area, or stakeholder question rather than the full financial statements.
What happens after I book a consultation?
Finanzure reviews your enquiry and replies with the most relevant next step. That may be a focused discussion, a request for more context, or a recommendation for the service area that best fits your situation.
Send a short note about your business, your current challenge, and what you want to improve. Finanzure can help clarify the issue, the likely risks, and the most practical first step.