Secret business failure business PDF  | Print |  E-mail
Written by Noric Dilanchian   
Thursday, 22 March 2007

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Ask someone why their business failed and you'll rarely hear them say that it was because of information mismanagement. Yet the lack of record making and keeping is often present in failed businesses.

 

The extent of legally required record keeping obligations continues to grow. Hundreds of statutes in Australia now dictate the length of time certain documentation must be kept. Yet there is no statute which integrates the times, let alone the requirements.

 

The takeaway for this post is that information mismanagement sinks companies and careers. The best time to prepare is within legal deadlines, ie the law's compliance periods. Survival requires that you and your colleagues find ways to make record keeping a habit and to empty "too hard baskets" for keeping financial and other records.

 

As there are legal risks unique to companies and as the topic of required record keeping is very broad, this post touches on corporations law financial record keeping requirements and the risks of failing to keep financial records.   

 

The Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) recommends that company directors seek professional advice if they are in doubt as regards keeping financial records.

 

Accounting and law firms are pleased to accept such business. Here too a great deal more effort needs to be made to prepare systems and templates to simplify and integrate record keeping.

 

Obligations for keeping financial records 

 

Company financial records must be retained for seven years after the transactions covered by the records are completed.

 

The records include asset registers, invoices, cheque butts, contracts, debtors ledger and job or customer files. As a catch-all provision, section 286 of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) obliges a company to keep written financial records that:

  • correctly record and explain its transactions and financial position and performance; and
  • would enable true and fair financial statements to be prepared and audited.

Importantly, strict liability applies to breach of these corporations law obligations. Also, under the ASIC Act, ASIC may inspect the records.

 

As is usual with law, the Corporations Act stipulates what you must do, but not how you do it or the system or templates for it.

 

Information mismanagement sinks businesses 

 

Keeping up with financial record keeping is challeging at the best of times given the range of records which are needed to correctly record and explain a company's transactions and financial position and performance (to quote section 286 again).

 

This challenge exists whether or not a company has established systems and templates for how to do it as well as trained people to do the job.

 

The challenge turns into a problem when a company is under financial or legal pressure and enquiries arrive from the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), ASIC, other regulatory authorities and insolvency professionals. Both the company and its directors may then be exposed.

  • For the affected company, one of the risks is that when company directors cannot produce proper company records liquidators use the deemed insolvency provisions in the Corporations Act. On the appointment of a liquidator the effective management of the company falls into the hands of the liquidator and directors may be influenced to help but not get in the way. 
  • For affected company directors, a cascade of legal problems can often then arise as insolvency administrators and their lawyers examine company financial records (or the lack of them). Company directors may then become personally exposed to legal action by a range of litigants, including from the insolvency people who have influenced (to put it politely) the directors to help but not get in the way.

Good information management helps to avoid falling into the dark side of what I would dramatically described as the "secret business failure business" of the insolvency people - liquidators, administrators and other insolvency professionals involved in bankruptcy and insolvency work.

 

The advice of these professionals can help greatly if you call them in before issues become a problem.

 

Contributing to the record keeping challenge is that ASIC, ATO and others each provide record keeping guides, but generally they focus only on their own niche area of interest or responsibility.

 

There is too little effort made to integrate the myriad of requirements for specific industry sectors and types of business. In place of supplying systems and integrated templates, governments and private industry bodies and professionals are too often content to provide a mountain of words merely setting out or overviewing requirements.

 

In our firm we develop and implement document retention policies and procedures for clients in a wide variety of industries.

 

Send me an email and I'll supply a short table of dates and deadlines for compliance in record keeping under law in Australia. It is one small step towards integration and business survival.

 

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    Further reading

Blog posts

 

Library articles:

    

 

Brochure:

Business law: yesterday

   

Coping with complexity in business structuring

Regulation overkill comes full circle
 

Services - Compliance and Risk Management [PDF]

 

 

Want free initial legal advice?

   

Let's talk about your intellectual property, commercialisation and business law needs. 

Call Noric Dilanchian of Dilanchian Lawyers & Consultants: Tel (+61 2) 9269 0229.

After hours send an email or better still an Enquiry Form. We'll reply with a costed proposal.

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