Overview

End-to-end automation

Every corporate change follows the same sequence: a decision is made, documents are produced, signatures are collected, filings go to the authorities, and records are updated. In traditional administration, each step is a separate task — often involving external counsel, manual document assembly, and days of coordination.

dCompany automates the full cycle. Completing a corporate change takes minutes, not days.

The administrative cycle

When you initiate a corporate event in dCompany — a capital increase, a board change, a share transfer — the platform takes over the administrative chain:

  1. Documents — Required notices, resolutions, and minutes are generated automatically, based on templates developed by Norwegian corporate lawyers.
  2. Signing — Documents are routed to the correct signatories for digital signing. No chasing email attachments or coordinating wet signatures.
  3. Filing — Completed documents are submitted to the Brønnøysund Register. No manual upload, no form-filling.
  4. Register update — The shareholder register and company records update automatically to reflect the outcome.

You approve every step

Automation removes the manual work between decisions — not your oversight. You review documents before they go for signing. You approve filings before they are submitted. dCompany handles the mechanics; you make the decisions.

The result is a complete audit trail, automatically: every document, every signature, every filing — timestamped and linked to the event that triggered it.

Where this changes the economics

Routine corporate changes — capital increases, board elections, share transfers — have traditionally required external legal counsel for document preparation. That adds cost and delay to events that may happen dozens of times a year across a portfolio.

dCompany makes the same quality of documentation available in-house, on demand, at a fraction of the cost. Legal counsel stays where it adds real value: on complex, judgment-heavy decisions — not on producing standard board minutes.