Title: Startup Finance An Entrepreneur’s Manual
1Startup Finance
2About Index Ventures
Index Ventures
- Over 1.5bn under management
- Active investor in web / internet
- Pan European Venture Fund
- Based London Geneva
3Agenda
4A big undertaking
- Starting a business is a big commitment
- Energy Passion
- Time
- Financial resources (yours and your investors)
- Before thinking of financing, is worth taking a
deep breath
5Key questions about you
- Why am doing this
- Make money
- Lifestyle
- Change the world
- How long do you want to commit?
- What level of financial risk are you prepared to
take?
6Key questions about the business
- Be honest with yourself about the risks /
unknowns - Do customers want the product / service?
- Do you have the competence to build the product
and the team - Can you monetise the product / service?
- How competitive is / will the space be?
- How big can the overall market become?
7Agenda
8Overview of financing options
9Self financing / bootstrapping
- Financing growth from previous cashflow and
personal funds - Obviously need to have cashflows
- Most good bootstrapped companies emerge from a
service or consulting companies that are
productising their offering - Pros
- Bootstrapped companies almost always spend cash
more effectively than equity financed companies - Already being close to existing customers, give
excellent ability to understand problems and
define good solutions - Cons
- Resources for product and market dev constrained
by cashflows - May miss a big opportunity if other players raise
finance and invest heavily
10Debt / bank finance
- Relatively limited funds will be available
likely to want security anyway - Banks only lend to predictable businesses they
can understand - If your capital requirements are limited and your
business is following a well trodden path, can be
a useful source of finance - Not particularly useful web or high growth tech
industries
11Good reasons to raise equity finance
12When NOT to raise VC
Application is a feature not a product
Market size is too small
Motivation is not financial
- Risk is not that you waste time unsuccessfully
trying to raise finance - real danger is that you do succeed in raising
VC funds - Lose opportunity for small exit which could be
personally lucrative - Lose opportunity to run lifestyle business
- Get bound in to 3 yrs work you may not enjoy
13Equity Financing
Seed
Early Stage Series A, (B)
Later Stage (B),C,D
Pre-IPO / Buy-out
Private Equity
0 - 1m
2m-20m
5m-20m
30m
Potential Sources of Funds
Grant-funding University seed funds Friends and
family Angel Investors (Venture Capital)
Venture Capital (Wealthy) Angel investors
Venture Capital
Specialist Late stage tech investment funds Hedge
Funds
14Agenda
15Venture Capital How the VC makes money
- Raise fund every 2-4 years
- Pension funds, financial institutions and
specialist fund of fund investors - Invest money over 3-5 years
- 1/2 of investments lose money
- 1/3 of investments break even
- 1/6 of investments make (lots) of money
- Very small management fee on funds managed
- 1-2.5 pa
- Carry
- 20-25x (Total Return Total Amount Invested)
16Angels How the Angel investor makes money
- Unlike the VC the Angel invests their own money
- Much smaller absolute returns can be very
meaningful to an angel - The Angel approach is to invest small amounts at
a very early stage / low valuation - 50-250k at valuations of 500k-4m
- Two exits for angel
- Firm might be sold quickly for 5-10m or less
where the Angel can make 2-5x money - Firm raises VC money, after which Angel typically
becomes more passive but has built up exposure
very cheaply to a venture backed enterprise - The key thing when selecting an Angel therefore
is whether they can help you raise VC finance - See which Angel investors have invested with
which VCs
17Venture Capital What a good VC will add
- Advice and Strategy
- Hiring
- Developers
- Country Managers
- Sales
- CEO / CFO / COO
- Advisory Board
- Partnerships
- Profile and PR
- Further access to capital
- Internationalisation
- Trusted service provider relationships
- Search / recruiting
- Branding / PR
- Finance, etc
- Exit optimisation
- Knowledge / contacts with relevant buyers
- Experience with process
18What does an investor look for?
- Can evaluate each as
- Exceptional
- Good / credible
- Mediocre / incomplete
- Misconception that being good / credible across
the board is what VCs look for - Can always add credible attributes to the mix
later - We focus on finding opportunities which rate as
exceptional in one attribute
19Identifying relevant VC partners
Has funds to invest
- Do create a shortlist
- Rifle is a better weapon than a shotgun
- Similar process for identifying angels, look at
VC funding press releases to identify prior Angel
investors
Match of Size/Stage/ Geography
Excellent track record
Shortlist
Relevant Portfolio
No directly competitive investments
20Getting on radar screens
- Out of the blue email is a longshot
- Try to build context
- Analyse portfolio companies are there any links
there? - Analyse contact network and advisors
- Analyse press coverage
- Participate in blog conversations
- Attend events and conferences
- Relevant PR around product also helps
- VCs spend their time looking for businesses with
momentum
21Agenda
22Sharing relevant information
Pre - first meeting
Pre - termsheet
Post - termsheet
- 100 page business plan not required
- 20 page ppt which clearly answers main questions
is best bet - Product
- Market
- Business Model
- Team
- Competition
- Product Roadmap
- Technology Overview
- Business Development
- Financial Status
- Dialogue rather than documentation expect lots
of meetings - Calls with current / prospective customers or
partners - Meeting broader team
- Brainstorming around strategy
- Identifying key hires post closing
- Formal presentation to VC partnership
- Some additional reference calls with partners /
customers - Personal reference calls
- Legal / accounting audit (if relevant)
- Drafting legal documentation
2-4 weeks
1-2 Months
23Types of investment
- Ordinary Share investment
- Simplest form, often used by angels
- All shareholders have similar rights
- Company Board composed according to
- Convertible Loan
- Sometimes used by both Angels and VCs
- Typically when another financing is anticipated
soon - Loan will convert (with a discount 25) into the
next financing round - Preferred Share Investment
- Typical Structure used by VCs and occasionally
larger Angels investing as a group
24Understanding a termsheet case study
- Anything between 2 and 15 pages (if points are
spelt out in fuller legalise) - Sample phrasing is
- XXX fund proposes to lead a Series A preferred
share financing of 5m at a 8m pre-money
valuation. As part of the investment process an
employee option pool of 15 on a post money basis
will be put in place. Typical venture capital
terms including participating liquidation
preference, etc. etc - What does it all mean?
25Case Study Cap Table
26Venture Capital Typical Deal Terms
but thats so unfair
- Board Representation
- Liquidation Preference
- Participation rights
- Anti-dilution rights
- Element of reverse vesting
- Certain control and veto rights
- Period of exclusivity to close legals
Photo Source Philip Greenspun, MIT
27Case Study - liquidation preference
28Case Study - liquidation preference
29Case Study - liquidation preference
30Case Study - liquidation preference
31Case Study - liquidation preference
32Case Study - Antidilution
- If a subsequent investment round is done a price
lower than the previous investment round then the
previous investment round is repriced (more stock
issued to Series A) - Two flavours
- Broad-based Series A price ratchets down based
on size of Series B relative to Previous
post-money valuation - Narrow-based Series A price ratchets down based
on size of Series B relative to Size of Series A - Say 5m Series B done at 0.75 per share
- Broad-based Series A reprices
1.00((5/(515.3)0.25) 0.93 - Narrow-based Series A reprices
1.00((5/(55)0.25) 0.875
33Case Study Reverse Vesting
- The value of startup is typically in the promise
of future labour from the founders - Investors seek to secure this by reverse vesting
founder stock, typically over 3 or 4 years - For startups typically all founder stock is
subject to reverse vesting. - For later stage companies perhaps half the stock
might be subject to vesting - NB this also protects founders from each other
34Choosing the right VC - Valuation should not be
the decisive factor
- Revenues / Profitability
- Growth rate
- Team quality
- Strategic fit with buyer community
- Well managed exit process
Entrepreneurs Equation
Value at exit
- Fewest strategic errors made
- Hiring (quality speed)
- Partnerships
- Product development
Probability of getting there
- Valuation at initial round
- Valuation and dilution at subsequent rounds
- Option grants
share of business at exit
35Key things to consider when choosing an investor
- Relationship
- With key individual(s) and
- broader team
- References
- Speak to other founders
- Portfolio
- Relevant experience
- Non competitive
- Community you want to be part of
- Valuation and associated deal terms
Right partner at a fair price vs. Any partner at
best price
36Contact us
Sam Solakyan Email samsolakyan1_at_gmail.com Tumblr
https//sam-solakyan.tumblr.com/
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