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Financing Growth

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Title: International Strategic Alliances Author: College of Business Administration Last modified by: arudiak Created Date: 9/28/2004 9:36:57 PM Document presentation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Financing Growth


1
Financing Growth
  • Alex F. DeNoble, Ph.D.
  • San Diego State University
  • MEET U.S. Program

2
The Fund-raising Challenge
  • Raising funds is like a chess match. The
    entrepreneur must constantly think ahead to the
    next fundable milestone. This challenge raises 2
    fundamental questions
  • What does my company have to look like at the
    next fundable milestone?
  • What must I do to get the company ready for the
    next fundable milestone?

3
Growth of a Firm
  • Firms evolve through lifecycle stages
  • Each stage is characterized by
  • New strategic challenges and issues
  • Evolving managerial skill requirements
  • Changing levels types of risks
  • Changing financial requirements

4
(No Transcript)
5
Sources of Capital by Stage of Development
Seed Stage Self-funded Family, friends, fools (3fs) Government grants Series B Growth Angel syndicates VCs Strategic Partners
Series A Angel Investors Angel Syndicates Some early-stage VCs Rapid-Growth VCs Strategic Partners IPO Corporate Buy-outs
6
Value Drivers by Stage of Development
Seed Stage Proof of concept Initial market validation Series B Growth Referencable customers Company infrastructure Strategic alliances Strategic investors
Series A Technology validation Further Market Validation Assembling the team Rapid Growth Sales Growth Profitability
7
Challenges of a Growing Firm
  • Growth Phase
  • Building an organization
  • Infrastructure
  • Policies
  • Procedures
  • Managing people
  • Recruit
  • Train
  • Retain
  • Managing Customers Markets
  • Raising Capital
  • Seed / Development Phase
  • Defining, refining and testing products
    markets
  • Gaining credibility
  • Customers
  • Suppliers
  • Investors
  • Attracting critical talent
  • Establishing logistics distribution channels

8
Types of Equity Capital
  • Savings and other personal assets
  • Friends, family and fools (the 3 Fs)
  • Angel Investors
  • Angel Syndicates
  • Venture Capital Firms
  • Strategic Corporate Partners
  • The Public Markets
  • Corporate Buyout

9

Venture Capital Funds Flow
Portfolio Cos.
Pension funds


Insurance cos


Venture Capital Fund

Individuals




Corporations
10
Harvesting the Venture Fund
Portfolio Cos.
Pension funds
Insurance cos
Venture Capital Fund
Individuals
Corporations
Return on Investment
11
Deal Structure Issues
  • Objectives of Equity Investors
  • Maximum Return (IRR Xreturn)
  • Large Equity participation
  • Liquidity
  • IPO
  • Merger or Trade Sale
  • Put back to the Company
  • Hedge Risk

12
How Equity Investors Hedge Risks
  • Financial instruments
  • Control
  • Keep founders and motivate them
  • Avoid litigation
  • Voice in management
  • Control over major events
  • Protect proprietary information
  • Preemptive first refusal rights
  • Antidilution provisions
  • Covenants (negative affirmative)

13
Deal Structure Issues
  • Founders Objectives
  • Keep as much equity as possible
  • Minimize dilution
  • Keep control of operations
  • Incentives for founders key employees
  • Quality investors with deep pockets
  • Keep restrictions to a minimum
  • Force conversion of preferred to common as soon
    as possible

14
Deal Structure Issues
  • Companys Needs
  • Minimum funds to get to next milestone
  • Balance Sheet Considerations
  • Debt vs equity
  • Simple capital structure
  • Availability of conventional financing
  • Cash flow income statement considerations
  • Future Needs
  • Current Investors vs future investors
  • Other sources of cash

15
Art vs. Science of Equity Investing
  • Science
  • Market
  • Competition
  • Technology
  • Proprietary position
  • Financial requirements
  • Valuation
  • Art
  • Management
  • Investors
  • Location
  • The Story
  • The Deal

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
16
Science Market
  • Size/Unmet Need
  • Customer requirements
  • Customer loyalty
  • Sales cycle
  • Price sensitivity

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
17
Science Competition
  • Who else is out there?
  • What is their edge?
  • What is your unfair advantage?
  • How long can you sustain this unfair advantage?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
18
Science Technology
  • What do other experts think about the business?
  • How many technical things must go right for it to
    be a success?
  • Is it breakthrough or incremental?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
19
Science Proprietary Position
  • What is patentable and is it worth patenting?
  • Are you free to practice your art?
  • Can you block others?
  • What should stay a trade secret?
  • Is there a cohesive strategy to move the product
    to market?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
20
Science Financial Requirements
  • How much money is needed to reach the next
    financeable milestone?
  • Do you believe them?
  • What happens when that doesnt happen?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
21
Science Valuation
  • Who are you selling to?
  • What might they be willing to pay?
  • Run some numbers as a reality check
  • What type of return will justify the risk?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
22
Art Management
  • Do they have the right people?
  • Can they recruit the right people?
  • Can you work with them?
  • Are they bureaucrats?
  • How do they work up and down the organization?
  • Can they tell the right story to the right
    audience?
  • Is the chemistry right?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
23
Art Investors
  • How much is the corporation willing to risk?
  • Are other investors interested in the deal?
  • Are there investors from previous rounds still
    investing?
  • Do the investors have experience in this industry?

Source Adapted from Brian Dovey, Partner,
Domain Associates
24
Art Location
  • Will it be easy to recruit senior management to
    your location?
  • Will it be easy to recruit new employees when you
    need them?
  • Are there potential acquirers around?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
25
Art The Story
  • Is it compelling?
  • Is it understandable?
  • Is it differentiable?
  • Can it be told in 15 minutes or less?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
26
Art The Deal
  • How do you and others value the company?
  • Is it destined to be public or acquired?
  • Do you syndicate? With whom?
  • Who are you competing with for the deal?
  • Dont forget the management pool
  • Is a staged financing appropriate?

Source Brian Dovey, Partner, Domain Associates
27
Value-Added Benefits of VCs
  • Obtaining additional equity financing
  • Recruiting and selecting additional member of the
    management team
  • Interfacing with other investors
  • Monitoring financial performance
  • Serve as a sounding board to team
  • Monitor operating performance
  • Formulating business strategy

Source Ehrlich, De Noble, Moore Weaver, 1994
28
Exit Strategy
  • Some options include
  • Going public
  • Selling the business
  • A stock buy-back at the going rate
  • Leveraged buy-out
  • Second round of investment

Source Ehrlich, De Noble, Moore Weaver, 1994
29
The Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • Source Guy Kawasaki

30
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 10
  • Entrepreneur
  • Our Projections are conservative
  • Investor
  • Multiply this forecast by .1 and add five years

Source Guy Kawasaki
31
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 9
  • Entrepreneur
  • IDC (or Jupiter or Yankee Group or Gartner
    Group) forecasts that our market will be 50
    billion by 2003
  • Investor
  • This is the fifth 50 billion market Ive heard
    about today

Source Guy Kawasaki
32
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 8
  • Entrepreneur
  • Amazon will sign our deal next week
  • Investor
  • Call me when you get Bezoss signature

Source Guy Kawasaki
33
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 7
  • Entrepreneur
  • Key Employees are set to join us as soon as we
    get funded
  • Investor
  • Give me their phone numbers so I can verify this
    story

Source Guy Kawasaki
34
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 6
  • Entrepreneur
  • We have no competition
  • Investor
  • Either there is no market or you dont know how
    to use a search engine

Source Guy Kawasaki
35
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 5
  • Entrepreneur
  • We need you to sign a non disclosure agreement
  • Investor
  • Youre clueless no one signs a nondisclosure
    agreement

Source Guy Kawasaki
36
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 4
  • Entrepreneur
  • Cisco (or Oracle or HP or Sun) is too slow to be
    a threat
  • Investor
  • If arrogance were venture capital, your deal
    would be oversubscribed

Source Guy Kawasaki
37
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 3
  • Entrepreneur
  • Were glad the bubble has burst
  • Investor
  • We are too, because your valuation just dropped
    50

Source Guy Kawasaki
38
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 2
  • Entrepreneur
  • Our patents make our business defensible
  • Investor
  • Hire more engineers, not patent attorneys

Source Guy Kawasaki
39
Top Ten Lies of Entrepreneurs
  • 1
  • Entrepreneur
  • All we have to do is get 1 of the market
  • Investor
  • I want to fund a company that will get 99 of
    the market

Source Guy Kawasaki
40
  • Thank You
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