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Board & Governance
Scale business operations while board structuring, audit oversight, risk management, and full compliance are managed by our expert teams.
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Client Engagements
Years of Experience
Compliance
Rate
Private Equity Investee companies
Client
Engagements
Years of
Experience
Compliance
Rate
Private Equity Investee companies
From boardroom confusion to governance clarity, we manage every compliance, filing, and regulatory requirement.
With 15+ years of experience and a portfolio of 600+ retainer client companies, we offer end-to-end board and governance support, including compliance calendar management. Our team advises on the Companies Act and SEBI Regulations, conducts board evaluations and director induction programmes, and manages share allotments and transfers, charge creation and satisfaction, and governance policy drafting. Having guided 5+ IPOs annually, we also assist with secretarial audits and help embed robust governance frameworks align with regulatory requirements and best-practice standards.
Service Areas Within Board & Governance
Board & GM support (SS-1/SS-2)
We advise on board / committee structure, meeting management, board disclosures, NFRA-aligned auditor–TCWG communication, risk oversight, and ethical governance for listed / unlisted companies.
Governance Framework & Policies
We draft and review governance policies, board charters, committee terms of reference, codes of conduct, and whistle-blower frameworks to strengthen corporate governance structures.
Compliance Risk Review
We assist in identifying governance and compliance gaps, assessing regulatory risk exposure and maintaining a structured compliance calendar to mitigate regulatory risks.
Related-party Transactions (RPT)
Our experts assist in identification, approval and disclosure of RPTs to the board / committees / shareholders to make an informed decision.
Board Trainings on GRC
Our team conducts tailored training sessions for directors, managements, KMPs on governance best practices, regulatory obligations, fiduciary duties, risk awareness, and emerging compliance requirements.
CSR Governance & Advisory
We advise on CSR policy and formulation of Annual Action Plan, Committee Governance, Project identification, compliance in spending, impact assessment, and mandatory disclosures.
Ascentium Insights
Frequently Asked Questions
Companies can improve board / committee meeting effectiveness by ensuring timely circulation of agenda notes to the board, enabling them to take well informed decisions. Agendas should prioritise strategic matters over routine compliance updates. The Chairperson of the meeting plays the most critical role in facilitating focused, and fearless honest discussions. Minutes should accurately capture decisions, with a robust follow-up mechanism. Regular board evaluations help identify gaps in dynamics and decision-making. Leveraging technology for virtual participation, digital board portals further enhances efficiency and engagement.
Governance frameworks are becoming critical for modern businesses as regulatory expectations intensify, stakeholder scrutiny increases, and business complexities grow. A robust governance framework defines clear accountability, decision-making authority, reporting structures, compliance ownership, and ethical boundaries, reducing the risk of fraud, mismanagement, and regulatory penalties. For listed entities, SEBI’s evolving compliance requirements demand structured governance practices. Sound governance builds stakeholder trust, enhances board effectiveness, supports sustainable growth, and strengthens the organisation’s long-term resilience and reputation.
A compliance risk review evaluates whether the entity is meeting its statutory and regulatory obligations under applicable laws — including the Companies Act, SEBI Regulations, FEMA, labour laws, and sector-specific regulations. It assesses the adequacy of internal control / compliance frameworks, identifies gaps between current practices and regulatory requirements, evaluates the timeliness of filings and disclosures. It also reviews the effectiveness of compliance monitoring mechanisms, board oversight, and escalation processes. The outcome is a structured risk assessment highlighting areas of non-compliance, potential penalties, and prioritised recommendations for corrective action and process strengthening.
In-house compliance teams identify related parties through multiple sources, with MBP-1 (Director’s disclosure of interest) serving as the primary source. Additional sources include annual filings such as MGT-7 and shareholding patterns to identify 10%+ shareholders, promoter group disclosures filed with stock exchanges, auditor confirmations, management representations, HR records for identifying Key Managerial Personnel (KMP), and subsidiary or associate registers for entity-level relationships. IND AS 24 or IFRS definitions further guide the identification of close family members and controlled entities.
Continuous monitoring of Related Party Transactions is critical as RPTs carry inherent risks of conflict of interest, fund diversion, and value erosion for minority shareholders. Regular monitoring ensures transactions remain at arm’s length, comply with the law, and receive timely audit committee approvals. It helps in preventing regulatory violations, and strengthens corporate governance. Without ongoing oversight, even initially approved RPTs can drift into non-compliance, exposing companies to penalties, reputational damage, and investor distrust. Additionally, it gives Independent Directors confidence in management’s integrity and decision-making.
Training sessions on board governance equip boards and senior management with a deeper understanding of fiduciary duties, regulatory obligations, and best governance practices. These sessions help directors and KMPs stay updated on evolving SEBI regulations, Companies Act requirements, and global governance standards. It helps in strengthening decision-making, improving effectiveness of audit committee, and foster a culture of accountability and transparency. Such training helps proactively manage compliance, governance frameworks, disclosures, and decisions in complex matters, empowering boards to manage risks effectively and build lasting investor confidence.
Governance is not merely a compliance checkbox but a strategic imperative and part of the culture of any organisation. The most common challenges in governance faced by listed entities include inadequate engagement of Independent Directors, unidentified RPTs and delays in its approvals, fragmented compliance tracking, inadequate documentation, weak approval controls, inconsistent policy implementation, weak whistle-blower mechanisms, and poor succession planning. Addressing these proactively through robust frameworks, regular training, and a culture of transparency is essential for long-term corporate credibility.
Strong internal governance policies are the backbone of effective compliance management. It gives clarity to the management in operational controls, approval hierarchies, escalation mechanisms, reporting responsibilities, and compliance monitoring across the organisation. Well-defined policies ensure that every function understands its obligations, reducing ambiguity and minimising the risk of non-compliance. It helps in establishing accountability at every level, enabling timely identification and resolution of governance gaps. Robust governance policies foster a culture of discipline, transparency, and proactive compliance, strengthening the organisation’s overall credibility.
Companies manage NFRA-aligned auditor–TCWG (those charged with governance) communication by establishing structured protocols between the statutory auditor and the audit committee. This includes timely sharing of audit observations, significant risks, internal control deficiencies, and independence declarations as required under NFRA guidelines. The Audit Committee ensures all critical auditor communications are formally documented, discussed, and minuted. We support in facilitating this communication, maintaining records, and ensuring transparency between auditors and the Board, thereby strengthening financial reporting integrity and regulatory compliance.
Governance and compliance frameworks must be reviewed periodically by the managment to remain effective in a constantly evolving business and regulatory landscape. Laws, industry standards, and organisational structures change over time and what was compliant yesterday may be outdated today. Regular reviews help identify gaps, address emerging risks, and strengthen internal controls. It ensures policies align with current business objectives, amended provisions in law, and stakeholder expectations. It build a culture of accountability, integrity and reducing the risk of penalties, breaches, or reputational damage.