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BOOTSTRAPPING STRATEGIES

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Title: Start-up Seminar -final version Author: Randy Harmon Last modified by: Randy Harmon Created Date: 5/14/1999 6:01:38 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BOOTSTRAPPING STRATEGIES


1
BOOTSTRAPPING STRATEGIES
  • Randy Harmon,
  • NJ Small Business Development
  • Centers of Rutgers Business School

2
DONT COUNT VENTURE CAPITALCOMING OUT OF THE GATE
  • Raising debt and equity financing is all about
    perceptions of risk and opportunity
  • Early stage and pre-sales companies are generally
    perceived as too risky
  • The further along you can develop the venture
    before formal financing, the better your chances
    are of survival and ultimately raising financing

3
BOOBOOTSTRAPPING
  • - 4 Fs
  • Friends
  • Family
  • Founders
  • Fools
  • - Everything else beyond the pursuit of formal
    debt and equity financing that an entrepreneur
    does to both raise and minimize the resources
    needed to launch their business and carry it
    through its early stages

4
BOOTSTRAPPING
  • Cleaning out your personal savings or retirement
    accounts
  • Home equity loans and second mortgages
  • Credit cards
  • Friends family plan
  • Research and development grants
  • Strategic alliances
  • Outsourcing activities requiring large up-front
    investments
  • Purchasing used equipment
  • Bartering your product/service for someone elses
  • Advances from professional service providers
  • Suppliers
  • Advance payments from customers
  • DOWNSIDE- There is often a trade-off between time
    and money and the delay can sometimes be
    detrimental or fatal

5
SMALL BUSINESS INNOVATIONRESEARCH PROGRAM (SBIR)
  • Best source of risk capital
  • Largest Federal RD grants program targeted to
    small business-nearly 2 billion annually
  • All Federal agencies with large external RD
    budgets participate
  • Three phase competitive program
  • Dept. of Agriculture
  • Dept. of Commerce
  • Dept. of Defense
  • Dept. of Education
  • Dept. of Energy
  • Dept. of Health and Human Services (NIH)
  • Dept. of Transportation
  • Environmental Protection Agency
  • Homeland Security
  • NASA
  • Nat. Science Foundation

6
THREE PHASE PROGRAM
  • Typically annual solicitations in which agencies
    define areas in which they are interested in
    sponsoring research
  • Phase I- up to 100,000, runs 6 months
  • Demonstrate technical feasibility
  • Phase II- up to 750,000, runs 2 years
  • Proof of concept
  • Development of a prototype
  • Phase III- no new funding
  • Commercialization of the technology

7
SMALL BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER PROGRAM (STTR)
  • Younger, poorer sister of SBIR program
  • 5 largest Federal Agencies participate
  • Department of Defense
  • NASA
  • Department of Energy
  • National Science Foundation
  • Department of Health Human Services
  • Less than 10 of the funding of SBIR
  • 3 Phase program
  • Requires 30 of contract to go to a collaboration
    with a nonprofit research organization

8
CLOSEST THING TO ENTREPRENEURS HOLY GRAIL OF
FREE MONEY
  • No loans, no equity
  • Entrepreneur maintains ownership of the
    technology
  • Good odds
  • 1 in 10 Phase I proposals are funded
  • Presently better under STTR
  • 2 in 5 Phase II proposals are funded

9
PATH TO EQUITY FINANCING
  • SBIR/STTR provides up to 850,000 in financing
    over a 3 year period to develop a technology and
    remove much of its risk.
  • Vulnerability of technology entrepreneurs to
    focus almost exclusively on the technology
  • If the company simultaneously works to reduce
    market and business risk it can become a prospect
    for equity financing.

10
ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM (ATP)
  • National Institutes of Standards and Technology
    (NIST)
  • Invests in development of innovative high
    risk/high potential economic impact technologies
  • Aims for grand slam home runs
  • Research priorities set by industry based on
    their understanding of marketplace
  • Cost sharing-at a minimum small companies pay all
    indirect costs
  • Rigorous pear reviewed competitions
  • 2 million over three years
  • Approximately 60 million available

11
STRATEGIC ALLIANCES
  • BUSINESS PARTNERSHIPS
  • You partner with another company to gain access
    to resources that you need but dont have
  • For most young businesses this typically means
    partnering with a larger, more established
    business
  • More important than ever given current risk
    adverse venture capital environment
  • SPEED ENTRY TO MARKETPLACE AND MINIMIZE THE
    REQUIRED FINANCING
  • Loss of control
  • Alliances come in several flavors
  • Financing
  • Marketing and sales
  • Manufacturing
  • Licensing

12
FINANCING
  • Large companies may invest in smaller
    entrepreneurial ventures to supplement or
    substitute for their own RD
  • Less risky and more cost effective means of
    accessing cutting edge technology
  • Strategic partners most likely to understand and
    appreciate value
  • Potentially more favorable terms of investment

13
MARKETING AND SALES
  • Partner with a company that has an established
    sales force that is selling similar but non
    competing products to your prospective customers
  • The value to the larger company is that your
    product may fill a gap in or extend their product
    line
  • No marketing/sales employees to recruit, hire and
    train no payroll
  • Access to partners network of customer contacts
  • Downside Less control, lower priority

14
MANUFACTURING
  • Identify regional manufacturer
  • Eliminates or defers costly equipment purchases
  • No manufacturing employees to recruit, hire and
    train no payroll
  • Speeds market entry
  • Often referred to outsourcing
  • Downside Less control

15
LICENSING
  • Transfer of rights to commercialize a technology,
    or an application of a technology to another
    company in return for financial consideration
  • Typically some combination of up front cash,
    consulting contract and longer term royalty
    payments
  • Use cash and validation generated from the
    license to commercialize other applications and
    build a company
  • Particularly useful for first application of a
    platform technology or the first technology of a
    company with multiple technologies
  • There is typically a tradeoff between upfront
    money and royalty payments
  • Downside Lower rate of return, loss of control,
    time lag before royalty payments flow

16
CASE STUDYINMAT, INC.
  • Nanocomposite coating to improve air retention in
    rubber
  • Initial product Air D-Fense 2000 utilized in
    premium Wilson tennis balls, official ball of
    Davis Cup
  • Ultimate market is truck and car tires, at least
    several years away
  • Client for 4 years, recipient of guidance and
    help in financing and building business including
    assistance in pursuing Springboard and Seed
    Capital loans and identifying an angel investor
  • Lack of success in raising venture capital
    because investors wanted to see second near term
    commercial product
  • Unsuccessful SBIR proposal in 2001, topic
    returned
  • Attended first annual NJ SBIR conference in
    December 2001
  • Was assigned a consultant who spent 12 hours
    reviewing critiquing and helping to strengthen
    proposal
  • Received Phase I award to explore application of
    coating to rubber gloves for treating hazardous
    chemicals
  • Strategic alliance with major glove contractor
  • Assisted InMat with Phase II proposal and
    commercialization plan
  • Invited to negotiate Phase II contract in
    December 2002
  • Bolstered by increased probably of second
    product, company closed on 1.5 million in
    venture capital in April 2003

17
NJ SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTERS (NJSBDC)OF
RUTGERS BUSINESS SCHOOL
  • Part of a national public, private and academic
    partnership
  • Free business counseling, consulting, and
    affordable business training
  • Funded in part by the U.S. Small Business
    Administration and the NJ Commerce and Economic
    Growth Commission
  • 11 regional centers and 18 satellite offices
    across NJ
  • More than 250,000 small business owners,
    prospective entrepreneurs and business
    professionals served since 1979
  • Serve businesses from pre-startup stage to those
    with 500 employees
  • Specialty programs in international trade,
    government procurement, E-business, technology
    commercialization

18
NJ SMALL BUSINESS DEVELOPMENT CENTERS (NJSBDC)
  • Services include help with
  • Business plans
  • Marketing plans
  • Financial statements
  • Loan packages
  • Record keeping
  • Taxes
  • E-commerce
  • NJSBDC Web Site www.NJSBDC.com
  • SBA Web site www.sba.gov

19
NJSBDC TECHNOLOGY COMMERCIALIZATION CENTER
  • MISSION Assist New Jersey science and
    technology entrepreneurs in commercializing their
    new technologies, financing and building their
    businesses.
  • TECHNOLOGY HELP DESK- 1-800-432-1TEC(832)
  • Telephone counseling throughout the
    commercialization process, from startup to market
    entry and equity financing
  • SBIR/STTR TRAINING AND PROPOSAL ASSISTANCE
  • Conferences, seminars and workshops
  • Assistance in identifying suitable topics
  • Consultants to guide entrepreneurs through the
    proposal development process and to review,
    critique and strengthen draft proposals
  • HELPED ENTREPRENEURS WIN 2.4 MILLION IN 2003

20
NJSBDC TECHNOLOGY COMMERCIALIZATION CENTER
  • TECHNOLOGY COMMERCIALIZATION CONSULTING
  • Targeted to SBIR and STTR award winners. Help
    with
  • Business models and plans
  • Marketing plans
  • Financial projections
  • Financing strategy
  • Approaching equity investors
  • Strategic business partnering
  • Assisted entrepreneurs in raising 1.8 million in
    equity financing during 2003
  • www.NJSBDC.com/SciTech

21
LESSONS LEARNED
  • Market entry takes more time and costs more than
    entrepreneurs most conservative estimates
  • The better and more comprehensive your planning,
    the better your chances for success, minimize
    your surprises
  • Reader should know after the first sentence what
    the company does.
  • Laymans terms, Dont make reader work hard to
    understand the technology and the business
    opportunity
  • A great technology may not be good enough, Thou
    shalt know thy markets and customers and their
    needs
  • Differentiate yourself from your competitors in a
    way that provides the perception of value to your
    prospective customers, and that you can sustain
    over time

22
LESSONS LEARNED
  • Management, management, management
  • First business hire or advisor should usually be
    a marketing and sales professional who knows your
    markets
  • Venture capitalists will expect you to understand
    your markets and customers at least as well as
    anyone
  • Validate market demand before approaching venture
    capitalists
  • Develop a bootstrapping strategy which you can
    fall back on
  • Develop your venture as far as you can before
    quitting day job
  • Network
  • If the reader is not EXCITED by the end of the
    executive summary, you have lost them
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