Who We Actually Are

A small team in Ratchaburi that's been helping Thai businesses make sense of their finances since 2019

Based in Ratchaburi, serving businesses across Thailand

Started From Real Frustration

Back in 2019, I was working with a small manufacturing company that got hit with an audit notice. They had receipts everywhere—some in boxes, others in email, a few just... gone. The owner looked at me and said, "Where do I even start?"

That moment stuck with me. Most business owners aren't accountants. They know their products, their customers, their operations. But when audit season rolls around? It's just stress.

So we built Connect Volt around a simple idea: what if preparing for an audit didn't have to feel like pulling teeth? What if someone could just walk you through it, using language that actually makes sense?

Financial documents and planning materials on desk

What Matters to Us

These aren't just nice words on a website. They're the things we actually think about when we work with clients.

No Jargon Zone

If you need to Google what we just said, we've failed. Financial planning should be explained in words you'd use at dinner, not a textbook.

Realistic Timelines

Audit prep takes time. We're upfront about that. No magic fixes or overnight transformations—just steady, organized progress.

Local Understanding

Thai business regulations have their quirks. We've been navigating them for years, so you don't have to figure it out alone.

Organized financial planning workspace

How We Actually Work

1

We Look at Everything

First meeting, we go through your current setup. Where are your records? What software are you using? What keeps you up at night? Takes about two hours, usually over coffee.

2

Create a Plan That Fits

Every business is different. A restaurant's needs aren't the same as a consulting firm's. We map out what you actually need—not some generic checklist.

3

Work Through It Together

This isn't us disappearing for three months and then showing up with a binder. We meet regularly, tackle sections piece by piece, and make sure you understand what's happening.

4

Keep It Maintained

Getting ready once is good. Staying ready? That's the real win. We show you how to keep things organized so next year isn't another scramble.

Meet the Person Behind the Work

Small team means you're not shuffled between departments. You work with someone who actually remembers your business.

Siriporn Wattana, Lead Budget Consultant

Siriporn Wattana

Lead Budget Consultant

I started in corporate accounting back in 2013, working for a mid-sized logistics company. Learned the technical stuff, got my certifications, the whole deal. But what I really learned was that most business owners just want someone to explain things clearly.

These days I work with about fifteen active clients—mostly small to medium businesses in manufacturing, retail, and services. I've seen pretty much every type of financial mess you can imagine, and honestly? Most of them are easier to fix than you'd think.

When I'm not buried in spreadsheets, I'm usually hiking around Ratchaburi or trying new restaurants in Bangkok. And yes, I still get a little excited about a well-organized filing system.

What You Can Actually Expect

We're not going to promise you'll love doing financial paperwork. Nobody loves that. But we can make it manageable.

Most clients start with us about six to eight months before their audit. That gives us time to organize everything properly without those last-minute panic sessions. And once you're set up? Maintenance is maybe an hour or two a month.

The goal isn't to turn you into an accountant. It's to get you to a place where you feel confident when audit season arrives. Where you're not digging through shoeboxes at midnight. Where you actually know what's happening with your finances.

47
Businesses Guided Since 2019
6–8
Average Prep Months
2013
When Siriporn Started
100%
Based in Thailand
Professional financial consultation session