In institutional asset management, most managers treat Due Diligence Questionnaires (DDQs) as an administrative task. The goal is simple: complete the questionnaire before the deadline and submit it.
But in practice, the timing of your response can influence the entire evaluation process.
While many firms focus on the quality of their answers—and rightly so—the speed at which a DDQ is returned often shapes how allocators review and compare managers.
Allocators Don’t Wait for the Deadline
In theory, allocators send DDQs to a group of managers and review all submissions once the deadline passes.
In reality, that’s rarely how the process works.
Institutional DDQs often include:
- 50–300 questions
- 10–40 participating managers
- Multiple internal stakeholders reviewing responses
Because of this volume, analysts typically begin reviewing responses as soon as they arrive, not after the submission window closes.
The first responses often receive the most attention because:
- Analysts are early in the process and have more time to review carefully
- Internal evaluation models and comparison frameworks are still being built
- The allocator has not yet formed strong biases toward specific managers
Managers who submit early enter the process when attention is highest and evaluation criteria are still flexible.
Early Responses Often Shape the Benchmark
Another subtle dynamic occurs during the early stages of DDQ review.
When analysts begin reviewing responses, they typically build comparison frameworks—spreadsheets, notes, and evaluation matrices—to compare managers across key areas such as:
- Investment strategy
- Risk management
- Operations and compliance
- Organizational structure
- Performance attribution
The first few submissions frequently influence how these comparison frameworks are structured.
This means early responses can indirectly shape:
- How questions are interpreted
- Which details analysts focus on
- How managers are compared to one another
Later responses are often evaluated within a framework that has already been formed.
Early Submission Gives Internal Champions Time
In many allocation processes, a single analyst or consultant acts as the internal champion for a manager.
If that analyst finds your strategy compelling, they need time to:
- Circulate materials internally
- Ask follow-up questions
- Prepare internal summaries
- Present to an investment committee
Managers who submit early give analysts more time to advocate internally.
Late submissions compress this window, leaving less time for internal discussion before decisions are made.
Speed Signals Operational Strength
Beyond the evaluation mechanics, response time also sends an important signal.
Institutional allocators view DDQs as a proxy for operational discipline. Firms that respond quickly and consistently often demonstrate:
- Well-organized internal data
- Strong investment operations infrastructure
- Consistent messaging across mandates
- Institutional-grade reporting processes
Conversely, slow responses can suggest fragmented systems, manual workflows, or disorganized internal processes.
In many cases, speed is interpreted as a signal of operational maturity.
The Strategic Advantage of Structured Data
For many managers, the biggest challenge with DDQs is not answering questions—it’s gathering the information required to answer them.
Answers often live across multiple places:
- Old DDQ responses
- Internal documents
- Investor presentations
- Compliance policies
- Financial statements
- Emails and shared drives
This fragmentation is why DDQs frequently take weeks to complete.
Firms that structure and centralize this information gain a significant advantage. With organized data and reusable answers, they can:
- Respond to new DDQs far more quickly
- Maintain consistency across submissions
- Handle a higher volume of allocator requests
- Spend less time on repetitive administrative work
Why This Matters
DDQs are often viewed as a compliance requirement—something managers must complete to stay in a process.
But in reality, they are part of the competitive process itself.
Responding early doesn’t just save time. It can influence:
- how your strategy is evaluated
- how analysts structure comparisons
- how much attention your submission receives
- how much time internal advocates have to support your strategy
In institutional allocation processes, timing often shapes perception.
And the firms that can respond quickly—and consistently—often position themselves more effectively in the allocator’s decision cycle.
