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Funding Hurdles For Small Tech Firms

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Title: Funding Hurdles For Small Tech Firms


1
Funding Hurdles For Small Tech Firms
  • April 13 week 11 Management 519

2
Outline
  • Funding is important
  • A great number Hurdles to funding
  • Think of venture funding as a process
  • Knowing Who and When to Ask
  • Have a funding strategy
  • Be willing to alter focus

3
Financing the Firm
  • Every business startup needs financing
  • Especially High Tech
  • It is not a one time event but rather a process
  • The most important continuous process
  • Yet few high tech entrepreneurs have a sharp
    understanding of it
  • When, Why, How much, What flavor
  • Great Mythology Around High tech

4
The Importance of Financing
  • Financing needs driven by Cash Flow,
  • Revenues and Profits
  • Cash Flow is king
  • 5 minute elevator speech
  • Business Plan and Business Planning Process

5
Background
  • Do VC funded startups have better success rates
  • Means explain well
  • Means and end game
  • High tech needs creativity
  • The ability to chose, court and obtain financing
    is critical to the long-term survival and growth
    of High Tech enterprises

6
Types of Financing Options Language of fund
acquisitionSources
Process
  • bridge loans,
  • non-diluteable equity,
  • customer financing,
  • sweat equity,
  • VC funding
  • Angel financing the other professional equity
    options
  • pre-seed,
  • seed,
  • startup,
  • Mezzanine,
  • first round
  • Series A funding
  • Placement
  • Squash down

7
Hurdles to Funding
  • Risk Issues
  • Infrastructure Issues
  • Uniquely Attractive solution to a Problem
  • Value Chain Positioning
  • Funding Cycle
  • Management Team
  • Valuation
  • Partnerships and Market channels
  • Understanding funding sources and Process

8
The Funding Cycle
  • The Sources
  • The process of Obtaining Funds
  • The Language
  • The strategy

9
The Process
  • Know the Funding Sources
  • Know their proclivities
  • Accurately know When they fund
  • Understand the Process / Have a Strategy

10
Process Stages of Funding
  • Pre seed
  • Seed
  • Startup
  • Series A
  • Series B

11
Sources of Funds
  • Equity Investment Vehicles
  • Angels
  • VC
  • Strategic Partners
  • 3 Fs
  • Non-diluteable Equity
  • Debt
  • Customer

12
Know Their Tendencies
  • All Differ on Risk Reward Profile
  • Some willing to accept partial solutions
  • Depending on the stage of financing differing
    equity instruments dominate
  • Lets Look at the sources

13
Customer Financing
  • Many High Tech Startups do not think to seek
    out their customers for pre-seed, seed and
    startup financing
  • The use of the High Tech firms product or
    service is critical or strategically important to
    the customer.
  • Few other sources for the product or service are
    available.
  • The relationship between the firms is solid.
  • The reputation of the High Tech Founding team is
    excellent.

14
Non Diluteable Equity funding
  • The most famous form of non-diluteable equity
    funding sources for small firms in the United
    States is provided by the now more than 20 year
    old SBIR (Small Business Innovative Research)
    program
  • Well over 2 Billion
  • MTV Money for Nothing
  • Order Fast track funds for DOD SBIR provide the
    High tech Startup now up to more than 1M

15
Debt Instruments
  • Traditional
  • Houses, Cars etc
  • Semi Traditional
  • Equipment, SBA Loans, Lines of Credit, factoring
  • New
  • Credit cards

16
External sources of Funding
  • 3 Fs
  • Angels
  • VCs
  • Strategic Partners

17
3 Fs
  • Friends, Founders and family members (Fools)
  • Many firms find that this is perhaps the highest
    priced form of High tech firm equity funding
  • If not in monetary terms then certainly along
    family and social ones
  • Typical funding limit 150,000

18
Strategic Partnerships
  • Not New
  • Choices associated with this form of financing
    have lead both to highly positive outcomes for
    High Tech Startups and much less desired ones
  • The choice to obtain this type of funding has
    serious consequences on exit strategies,
    alternative forms of further financing and firm
    strategic direction
  • Largest amount of external equity funding year in
    and year out

19
Venture Capital
  • 18.2 billion in 2003, with only 2 of those
    dollars spent in seed or early-stage investments
  • Placement was 6.7 million derived from only
    2,715 deals
  • The vast majority of VC funded firms have product
    sales as well as a need for in excess of 1
    million in equity

20
VC
  • VC usually have a timeline to acquire from 1/3 to
    ½ of a firm, and have strong board of director
    positions and strong firm control.
  • They wish to obtain again a 20 to 40 times
    investment back in three to seven years.
  • They will demand a clear exit strategy, and
    focus on the efforts of the firm on hitting the
    home run.
  • The firm is weighted toward a short tem rather
    than sustainable firm strategy.
  • Often VC firms require continuous monitoring
    systems

21
Angels
  • 18.1 billion derived from 42,000 deals in 2003
  • Angels often fund enterprises in a group and they
    rarely invest more than 50,000 individually in
    any one enterprise
  • They tend to fund companies in industries that
    they are very familiar.
  • Paul Atherton NanoVentures Ltd as an example
  • Provide Mentoring

22
Funding in Stages
23
Pre -Seed
  • Pre Seed financing is a small amount of funds
    required by the nascent entrepreneurs in order to
    define their value proposition, convince
    themselves of the viability of the concept and
    initiate activity
  • primarily self funded or provided by the three
    Fs Friends, Family and Founders.
  • 150,000

24
Seed Financing
  • Usually a relatively small amount of capital
    provided to an inventor or entrepreneur to prove
    a concept and to qualify for start-up capital
  • This may involve product development and market
    research as well as building a management team
    and developing a business plan, if the initial
    steps are successful

25
Start-up Financing
  • Used to complete product development and initial
    marketing.
  • Companies are organizing or been in business for
    less than 1 year
  • They have not sold their product commercially.
  • Usually such firms will have made market studies,
    assembled the key management, developed a
    business plan and are ready to do business.

26
Seed and Startup Sources
  • Either self financed, funded by individual Angel
    investors, customer financed or provided by
    non-diluteable equity sources
  • firms in these stage are not highly embraced by
    the Venture Capital community.
  • Angels Dominate
  • Funding required is often less than 500,000.

27
Early- or First-stage Financing
  • Provided to companies that have expended their
    initial capital (often in developing and market
    testing a prototype) and require funds to
    initiate full-scale manufacturing and sales
  • Traditionally been funded by Venture capitalists
    but is increasingly being addressed by angel
    networks and large firms interested in strategic
    partnerships
  • The typical placements are under 2,500,000

28
Late Stage - Expansion financing
  • Subsequent investment rounds typically financing
    company product and/or market expansion, or
    keeping the company financially healthy shortly
    before a liquidity event such as an initial
    public offering (IPO) or acquisition
  • has traditionally been funded by Venture
    capitalists but is increasingly being provided by
    large firms seeking strategic partnerships
  • Typical placements in this stage are under
    5,000,000.

29
Attractiveness
  • Hype Pros Cons
  • Solutions more than technology
  • Management Team and Technology Team

30
Knowing What type of Funding to Attract and When
  • Who should you go after and when
  • Your time resources are not infinite
  • You have to move

31
Have a Funding Strategy
  • The flavvor of money you initially get can
    actually decrease your ooverall funding chances

32
Attracting High Tech Funding Today
  • Funding Stream Vs. Single Placement
  • Firms today must have a proactive rather than
    reactive equity strategy
  • One Process
  • Pre-seed Seed Startup Early Venture Late
    stage venture
  • Sources

33
Good or Bad
  • In the worst of all cases your strategic partner
    was actually practicing gate keeping during
    your acquisition, has lost interest, market share
    or simply has embraced other and to them more
    interesting projects.

34
How should one go about developing a Strategic
Partner?
  • Like amorous Porcupines?
  • No Shotgun Weddings
  • Proactive Selection

35
Partner Selection Process
36
Angels
  • 18.1 billion derived from 42,000 deals in 2003
  • Angels often fund enterprises in a group and they
    rarely invest more than 50,000 individually in
    any one enterprise
  • They tend to fund companies in industries that
    they are very familiar.
  • Paul Atherton NanoVentures Ltd as an example
  • Provide Mentoring

37
Angel Founder
  • Jim Von Ehr

38
VC
  • 18.2 billion in 2003, with only 2 of those
    dollars spent in seed or early-stage investments
  • Placement was 6.7 million derived from only
    2,715 deals
  • The vast majority of VC funded firms have product
    sales as well as a need for in excess of 1
    million in equity

39
VC
  • VC usually have a timeline to acquire from 1/3 to
    ½ of a firm, and have strong board of director
    positions and strong firm control.
  • They wish to obtain again a 20 to 40 times
    investment back in three to seven years.
  • They will demand a clear exit strategy, and
    focus on the efforts of the firm on hitting the
    home run.
  • The firm is weighted toward a short tem rather
    than sustainable firm strategy.
  • Often VC firms require continuous monitoring
    systems

40
How should one go about developing a Strategic
Partner?
  • Like amorous Porcupines?
  • No Shotgun Weddings
  • Proactive Selection

41
Partner Selection Process
42
3F Night mare
  • First, remembering that financing the firm is a
    series of decisions rather than just one instance
    too many other financing sources view the overuse
    of friends, family and founders as presenting
    problems in attracting investment later. One firm
    that we are consulting too presently has over 100
    owners and is still in the pre-seed stage of
    funding

43
Strategic Partners Valuation
  • firms with a strategic need for you and your
    technology often value your technology product
    paradigm highly
  • Good or Bad?
  • In the best of all cases you have a strategic
    partner that if you perform will provide the exit
    strategy for your High Tech startup.

44
Good or Bad
  • In the worst of all cases your strategic partner
    was actually practicing gate keeping during
    your acquisition, has lost interest, market share
    or simply has embraced other and to them more
    interesting projects.

45
Valuation
  • How much is the firm worth?
  • It Depends
  • Reverse valuation
  • Sales and Profit Multiples
  • NPV
  • Risk Disacounts
  • P/E ratios and market share analysis

46
Forming a Team
  • Every business startup needs additional people
    especially
  • venture capitalist state that the founding team
    is one of the most important factors that
    determine the value of an enterprise
  • that A strategies come from A teams

47
Reverse valuation
  • The Dominant form
  • It is a commonly used method by Angels and VCs
    alike to determine if they will provide funding
    to a potential firm, the timing of investments in
    your firm and the percentage ownership that they
    would need to receive from a firm for a given
    investment or placement in your firm.
  • An Angel or VC will not usually invest in a firm
    where they cannot receive a potential 20 to 40
    times their investment returned in three to seven
    years

48
Example
  • An example
  • A firm needs 10 million dollars to meet their
    strategic demands
  • The equity providing firm wants to own no more
    than 1/3 of the firm
  • The VC requires 20 x Return in the fifth year.
  • 20 x return on 10 million is 200 million
  • The value of the firm must reach with all the
    discounts would be 600 million and have an exit
    strategy that is believable to that firm with an
    acceptable level of risk.

49
Sales and profit multiples
  • Oldest Bromide
  • a multiple of single years sales often the number
    that is used is
  • one times gross sales (revenues) or
  • a multiple of this years profits

50
Born Global Product Charateristics
  • Finish, Internationalism
  • SMEs
  • IT and
  • Product features and national acceptance
  • Degree of adaptation vs. Standardization
  • Stand alone or components
  • Value chain Position and market entry
  • Tailored/modified vs. standard products and
    international

51
Why a team
  • First, entrepreneurial research has shown us that
    start-ups with members with previous
    entrepreneurial experience whether they had been
    previously successful or not form teams that have
    a better survival rate.
  • Companies that are started by teams show a higher
    success rate (2 to 1)
  • High tech cost to develop is very high

52
Why Team
  • The first thing to understand is that
    commercialization of new technologies, unlike
    inventing, is a group effort
  • The skills required for commercialization are not
    often found in one person no matter how well s/he
    multi-tasks
  • Technology is not the only hard part of a high
    tech startup

53
Team Members
  • An expert in the technology who can carry out
    additional research as required to develop a
    saleable product (remember the second first
    product experiences).
  • An expert in sales and marketing to those firms
    in your target industry, i.e. where the product
    will be sold.
  • An expert in finance, budgeting, and financial
    control.
  • An expert in manufacturing of products of similar
    type not necessarily your specific technology
    -- but technologies that are as complex and use
    similar materials.
  • Other experts as may be required to produce your
    product.

54
Tasks
  • Proper selection is vital
  • a business rather than just an idea needs much
    more than technology to thrive
  • New firm management teams rarely change during
    the first 6 years

55
Micro / Nano?
  • Micro / Nano based businesses need knowledge
    specialists from their inception.
  • The nature of Micro and Nano technology business
    are solution formed at the interface of multiple
    disciplines.

56
Proper Selection
  • Survival, success and growth
  • The Pros and Problems of accepting the first
    choice
  • People lament choice
  • The power of the 2nd enterprise

57
Consequences
  • The choices involved in forming a founding team
    are made even more important due to the long term
    consequences of these decisions
  • do not make the common mistake of limiting the
    choice of founding team members to your own
    personal network

58
Factors and Characteristics
  • First among the proper characteristics of your
    selected team members is that each of them has
    the same enthusiasm and belief in your technology
    as you have. They must be as convinced as you
    are that the technology will soon be a major
    factor in creating market success and profits

59
Factors and Characteristics
  • There should be an experienced chief executive
    officer (CEO) to oversee the business. This is
    rarely the technologist who is most often Chief
    technology Officer (CTO). If you as a
    technologist chose to be the CEO, keep in mind
    that if you later seek outside financing, you
    should have had a history of accomplishment
    either in a similar position prior to this
    business or demonstrable evidence of skill and
    experience in this start-up that will assure
    investors of your capabilities

60
Factors and Characteristics
  • Third, you need to make a list of the important
    knowledge and skills your team needs to augment
    your own. For example business owners typically
    think in terms of management functions such as
    finance and control, research and development,
    engineering and design, production, marketing and
    customer service. This is a logical way to sort
    out the businesses skill and knowledge needs.

61
Factors and Characteristics
  • There is no formula that dictates how the above
    functions should be filled. You can combine or
    separate functions as suits the people that make
    up your team.
  • Look for multiples

62
How to choose the right people?
  • Can you evaluate People?
  • Could you trust these people after a few
    important interactions?
  • Were you correct in your judgment of them as
    people or were you disappointed when they failed
    to honor your trust in them?
  • Seeing past the credentials

63
Selection
  • Selection requires that you look past
    congeniality, credentials, and personal
    attractiveness and focus on past accomplishments
    of each candidate
  • perhaps you need to add a good people evaluator
    as your first team member
  • hire a professional personnel manager

64
What Kind of People
  • A Scorpion is a scorpion is a scorpion
  • Ask the Frogg

65
What Kind of People
  • First, there are those who claim that you should
    select individuals who are much like you.
  • they are the extension of you
  • If you are an extrovert, you cannot hire someone
    who is introverted, negative and hates people.
    This does not work.

66
What Kind of People
  • The other philosophy is that your team members
    have to possess the skills that you do not have.
  • Keep outlook in mind

67
COMPENSATING TEAM MEMBERS
  • No Money Honey
  • Given the past and current reluctance of venture
    capitalists and/or angel investors to invest in
    early stage startup high-tech businesses, is not
    likely that you will have a big fund of venture
    capital at startup.
  • Ownership

68
Establish a fair formula
  • for the distribution of shares of stock among the
    team members
  • Fair does not mean equal
  • Valuation is negotiable among the team members
    and any value that is agreeable to all is
    appropriate and fair. When valuing the shares,
    pay no attention to the stocks par value

69
Distribution
  • To allow the team to avoid paying tax on their
    stock, high tech startups frequently distribute
    stock options instead of stock
  • The problem with options is they confer no voting
    rights on the holder. And team members usually
    want to have the right to vote in shareholder
    meetings
  • Plan on issuing the shares over a period of three
    to five years with so many for each year the team
    member remains employed in the firm

70
Flexibility
  • . It is possible to adjust the number of
    authorized shares rather easily if 2/3 of the
    shares are closely held by you, the founding team
    members and one or two outside investors
  • Establishing a market for your corporations
    shares, either through an IPO or an acquisition,
    will allow those with itchy feet to take their
    cash and move on. (IPO or Buyout)

71
MAINTAINING CONTROL
  • 51
  • Closely held ( founding team)
  • A few shareholders have over 50
  • Differing Stock
  • resticted etc

72
Tech abend Team formation
  • Make sure they understand the innovation cycle

73
Board
  • Board as founding team
  • Non-Team members
  • Use of an Informal board
  • Monthly scheduled meetings
  • Number of options for work as a board
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