Title: Venture Capital A 27 Year Perspective
1Venture Capital A 27 Year Perspective
- Gary Kalbach
- September 2005
2Gary Kalbach
- 27 years as a venture capitalist
- 45 million invested over 600 million value
- Founded two venture capital firms with 550
million - Seed investor in Sun Microsystems, Novellus
Systems, Integrated Device Technology - 83 companies funded, 40 board seats, 50 worked
- Created the angel/institutional fund model
- BS, The Business School, University of
California, Berkeley MBA, San Jose State
University
3Backyard
4Granddaughter In Garden
5West Coast Venture CapitalEl Dorado Ventures
- Investing since 1978
- Seed/early stage West Coast
- Information technology industry focus
- Enterprise software and services
- Communications
- 40 Entrepreneurs Technology Partners
- Senior Associate
- Scott Irwin
6Seed Investor In
- Sun Microsystems
- Integrated Device Technology
- Novellus Systems
- Access Health (acquired by McKesson/HBOC)
- Earthlink Networks
- Amati (acquired by Texas Instruments)
- Datasage (acquired by Vignette)
- NuSpeed Internet Systems (acquired by CISCO)
- Cyras Systems (acquired by CIENA)
- Efficient Networks (acquired by Siemens)
7The Process?
- Write business plan
- Raise venture capital
- Sell product
- Go public or sell company
- Retire
8Keys To SuccessMy Perspective
- Management team
- Products and markets
- Markets that are not there yet!
- Financing
- Ownership
- Opportunistic exits
9Management Teams Make Or Break A Company
PASSION
FOCUS
LEADERSHIP
DRIVE
TEAM WORK
CREATIVITY
VISION
INTEGRITY
EXPERIENCE
10Vision
- Thinking out of the box
- Example
- Sky Dayton, EarthLink Networks
- At age 22, Imaging design firm, coffee
- house operator
- Vision of the need for connection to
- exploding Internet
- 1 billion company
11Drive
- Often multiple motivating forces
- Example
- Bob Graham, Novellus
- Intel founder, built Applied Materials
- not recognized
- Driven to prove he could build a company
- Built a 1 billion company
12Leadership
- The team is usually right about the CEO Listen!
- Example
- Sun Microsystems
- Brought in professional manager
- Team revolted
- Scott McNealy promoted to President
- 18 billion company
13Problems Along The Way
- Suddenly out of money
- Key non-performing member of team
- Management team member leaves
- Product/Technology doesnt work
- Market/Competitive landscape changes
- Investor group falls apart on vision/execution
14Management Teams
- Finance them
- Build them or
- Change them
15Markets In The Late 1990s
- Idealab! Paid 50M over 10 years to license the
.tv extension from the Pacific Island country of
Tuvalu - eCompanies paid 7.4M for the domain name
business.com
162000 A New Paradigm
- Brand first
- Product later
- Profitability never
17Over-Funded Sectors
- Pet Assure
- Pet Food Giant
- Pet Food WareHouse
- Pets Choice
- Pets.com
- PETsMART
Good ads or good business models?
18Flawed Business Models
- You cannot fix slim margins with high-cost
advertising - WebVan did not have a viable business model
19What Went Wrong
- Too many inexperienced VCs
- Venture capital has traditionally financed B2B
- Most dot-coms were consumer oriented
20Whats Happening Now
- Back to basics
- Customer-oriented/market-oriented
Build the brand by building the business.
21How Do VCs Find Opportunities
- Successful entrepreneurs
- Successful entrepreneurs
- Other networks
22El Dorado Technology Partners Competitive
Advantage
- Created 27 years ago
- Successful entrepreneurs
- Recognized experts in targeted industries
- Must be involved to co-invest
- Frequent interaction
Venture capital is a team sport. No cowboys!
231,000 Deals
200 Deals
6 -7 Deals Selected
24How To Get Through The Funnel
- Business model that satisfies market
- Understanding of what it takes to build team,
product lines and business - Well thought out business plan
- Experience helps crusty sales person vs. 5 PhDs
25Non-starter Quotes
- Founder will run to 100 million
- All you need is 1 of billion dollar market
- Year 5 sales of 1,457,987,238 with 50 profit
- Product will sell itself
- There is no competition
26In Conclusion
- Venture capital is an apprenticeship business
- Careers are built brick-by-brick
- Craftsmanship comes with experience
In 1986, it cost 10 million to train a venture
capitalist. What does it cost now?
27Thank You.