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Financing Food Incubators

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Title: Financing Food Incubators


1
  • Financing Food Incubators
  • 2008 Community Food Security Coalition/FoodBin
    Conference
  • Carol Coren
  • Business Association Mentor

2
Financing is a Function Of Mission and Structure
  • Financial Stability relies on multi-sectoral
    support for a business enabling environment
    equipped to support food industry entrepreneurs
  • Financial Resources will be affected by program
    and service capacity, capital and the appeal of
    your vision for the incubator
  • Financial Planning must explore a variety of
    revenue streams that often rely on collaborations
    and partnerships

3
Food Incubator Mission
  • Provide a business enabling environment for
    entrepreneurs involved in a far reaching,
    lucrative, industry with unrelenting performance
    and technology requirements

Shoals Commercial Culinary Center, AL Photo
Business Week 2007
4
Vision and Value Propositions
  • Support Local Economic Growth
  • Create Jobs
  • Link local entrepre-neurs to the food industry
    value chain
  • Forge partnerships with public service programs,
    suppliers , consumers and businesses

Artisan Baking Center Kitchen Innovations,
NY Photo Business Week 2007
5
Performance Benchmarks Attract Support
Northwest Ohio Cooperative Kitchen, OH Photo
Business Week, 2007
  • Does it deliver a service that the marketplace
    has failed to provide at affordable prices and
    acceptable quality.
  • Does it play a role as an economic development
    driver.
  • Does it serve as a core component of the value
    chain that brings foods from farms to forks
    locally, regionally, nationally, internationally?
    How?

6
Despite a CLEAR MISSION and VISION, most Food
Incubator Programs struggle financially to help
clients and communities

7
Financing is A BALANCING ACT
  • Establishing and maintaining a balance
    among these three critical components is
    essential to an organization's long-term health
    and viability.

What you do and why you do it
Your ability to do what you do Direct Services,
Technical Support, Equipment Maintenance,
Storage, Distribution, Square Footage, etc.
  • What you have and how it is distributed
  • Assets
  • Liabilities
  • Net Assets

8
Incubators Are Social Enterprises
  • Organization or venture that advances its social
    mission through entrepreneurial, earned income
    strategies and operates as a
  • For Profit Business
  • Non Profit Organization
  • Hybrid Organization

La Cocina, CA Photo Business Week
9
Do Traditional Business Structures Fit?
Individual Partnership LLC C-Corp Co-op
control Owner Partners Owners Shareholders, board elected officers Members, board elected from membership
capital owner Partners. Liability up to value of property Owners. Liability limited to investment in business Equity raised by selling shares Equity from members
earnings Profits to owner Shared gain(loss) by partners, based on partnership agreement Shared by owners Gain(loss) distributed to shareholders as dividends Allocated to members based on business done w/co-op in that year
taxes Taxed once as income of owner Taxed once as income of partners Taxed once either as partnership or corporation Taxed twice Taxed once as income of co-op when earned, or income of members when allocated
life Tied to owner Tied to partnership. Perpetual Continuing existence Perpetual
10
Hybrid Business Structures
  • MODELS
  • New Generation Cooperatives
  • Limited Private Partnerships
  • L3Cs
  • Public-Private Partnerships
  • Tri-Sector Partnership
  • BENEFITS
  • Community Engagement
  • Flexible Profit Objectives
  • Financial Advantages for Stakeholders (Taxes,
    Subsidies, Markets)
  • Economies of Scale

St. Paul Kitchen, MN Photo St. Paul Star Tribune
11
New Generation Cooperatives
  • Used primarily for value-added processing of
    agricultural commodities
  • Equity to fund start-up and growth is financed
    through the sale of delivery rights If 20
    million is needed for equity capital and the
    capacity of the facility is 5 million bushels
    then the price per delivery right share is 4 per
    share
  • Characteristics
  • delivery rights are contracted and tied to the
    level of investment
  • membership is limited to those who purchase
    delivery rights
  • higher levels of equity investment by individual
    members is required
  • shares that provide delivery rights can be
    transferred and can fluctuate in value.
  • Marketing agreements outline duties of both the
    members and the cooperative toward each other
    with respect to the delivery, quality, and
    quantity of producers commodities. .

12
Limited Private Partnerships
  • Partnership limited to 35 partners
  • Scale allows avoidance of SEC Registration
  • Enjoy protections similar to LLCs (limited
    partners enjoy protection from liability)
  • Often have timetable for existence and dissolve
    or alter when that timeframe expires
  • Typically form to invest in real estate, oil and
    gas drilling, research and development, equipment
    leasing, and other businesses.

13
L3C Low-Profit Limited Liability Co. THE
FOR-PROFIT WITH A NONPROFIT SOUL
  • Have the liability protection of a corporation,
    the flexibility of a partnership and the ability
    to be sold in pieces.
  • Bylaws provide mission statement indicating that
    the enterprise is to further a socially
    beneficial purpose
  • NOT tax-exempt but eligible for a philanthropic
    Program Related Investment (PRI) loan or
    infusion of capital
  • VT now permits this structure and firms can form
    there
  • L3C is the same as organizing as a LLC with a
    requirement that the designation be indicated
    when the articles of organization are filed and
    the name of the enterprise declares
  • must include the brand mark word L3C
  • www.americansforcommunitydevelopment.org

14
Public Private Partnerships
  • Agreement between public agency and a private
    sector entity, often regarding the provision of
    public services or infrastructure.
  • Example Riverside CA Library City owns
    buildings and Library Systems and Services, Inc.,
    a Maryland firm operates the system and is
    responsible for all library employees, except for
    the county librarian, janitorial service, and
    landscape maintenance.
  • Oregon State University owns
  • OR Food Innovation Center and
  • leases portion of it to the
  • Oregon Department of Agri-
  • culture for labs and testing.

Wasco Specialty Kitchen, WA
15
Public Private Development PartnershipsPotential
to Operate As An Economic Development Service
Provider
  • Public sector entity enters into partnership with
    private sector agency to develop a product, to
    put a new technology to use or develops a service
    to address problem such as
  • Need for a health product to treat a disease
    found only in poor and developing nations
  • Need to introduce a new production technology or
    product such as a Gatorade
  • Need to advance applications of a security
    technologies to monitor status of food while it
    is being shipped.
  • Need to transfer technology from a government
    research lab to the marketplace.

Overbrook Environmental Education Center (OEEC)
Kitchen , PA
16
Tri-Sector Partnerships
  • Business entities, nonprofit organizations
    and government working together to organize,
    start and operate programs that put communities
    at the centre of development, and deliver real
    and sustainable benefits for all. This model is
    used throughout the world for development
    purposes.

 
Jubilee Project, TN
17
Myths About Nonprofit Financing
  • 1. Start-up success relies on
  • grant-getting and
  • raising contributions
  • 2. There is a grant for every
  • problem and a program
  • for every need
  • 3. Budget transfers can serve in lieu of a line
    of credit and be repaid
  • Endowment funds are without strings
  • Qualified customers are lined up at the door

Pacific Gateway Center, HI
18
Financing Incubators Needs Three Full Pots!
Unrestricted Revenue Earned
Contributed
Temporary and Restricted Revenue Purpose
Timing
Permanent Restricted Revenue
Unrestricted Net Assets
Temporarily Restricted Net Assets
Permanently Restricted Net Assets
Source Nonprofit Finance Fund
19
Source Nonprofit Finance Fund
20
Statement of Activities Reveals
  • Revenue Dynamics Where does the organizations
    money come from? Is it well diversified or at
    risk? Do revenue streams appear
    reliable/consistent?
  • Cost Dynamics What levers does the organization
    have in its control to manage expenses? How hard
    is it to tighten the belt? Is management
    responsive to operating changes and prepared to
    make difficult decisions?
  • Profitability Savings Does the organization
    cover its costs? How large are surpluses/deficits
    relative to revenue? Is the agency saving? If so,
    is it enough?

20
La Cocina, Kitchen, CA
21
CASH FLOWS INCOME STATEMENT INFLUENCES
BALANCE SHEET
YR 2 Financial Position
YR 1 Financial Position
Statement of Cash Flows
Statement of Activities
Earned Contributed
Source Nonprofit Finance Fund
22
Statement of Position Reveals
  • Health of Assets
  • Is the distribution of assets appropriate, given
    the core business?
  • Is the organization investing in its fixed
    assets?
  • How leveraged are they?
  • What is the composition of net assets?
  • How much is unrestricted and liquid?
  • Liquidity
  • Does the agency have enough cash to cover current
    obligations?
  • How well are they managing receivables?
  • Are they asking others to pay the bills?

22
23
Filling up the Money Pots
Temporarily Restricted Contributions
Unrestricted Contributions
ENDOWMENT Permanently Restricted Contributions
Earned Revenue
Temporarily Restricted Net Assets
Permanently Restricted Endowment
Investment Income
Net Assets Released
Unrestricted Net Assets
Operating and non-operating Expenses
Source Nonprofit Finance Fund
24
Financial Instability SolutionsWays to Fill the
Money Pots
  1. Run Leaner and Make Money
  2. Grow
  3. Launch an earned income venture
  4. Liquidate Assets
  5. Build an endowment
  6. If your purpose is to spin off businesses,
    devise a way to capitalize from your clients
    success for a Reserve Fund

24
25
Ways Your Incubator Might Grow
Transformative
Organic
None
Negative
  • Presumably no change in business model
  • The most predictable option (and least likely to
    fail)
  • Still requires planning and environmental
    changes affect business results
  • Change in business model is incremental, if at
    all
  • Funded with surpluses, debt
  • No golden rule, but seldom greater than 10-15
    sustained annual rate
  • May or may not change business model
  • Often the hardest to manage, as old cost
    structure becomes obsolete
  • Financial implications are not as obvious as one
    might think
  • Changes the way you conduct business
  • Typically requires outside/one-time source of
    funding/financing
  • May or may not represent large percentage growth

25
Source Nonprofit Finance Fund
26
Liquidation is Easier Than It Sounds
  • Incubators commitment to property and equipment
    is integral to program delivery
  • Being a landlord of sorts is one of your
    businesses perhaps you should treat it as a
    subsidiary. Then If something breaks, the
    landlord that you established for this purpose
    can fix it.
  • Reserves restricted for ongoing maintenance and
    replacements might cause complications if the
    building or equipment is gone.

Former Nuestra Culinary Ventures, MA Photo Erik
Jensen for Boston Globe
26
27
Are Endowment Funds A Safety Net?
  • The return on investment involved in raising an
    endowment might not be as great as the return
    from other fundraising efforts
  • A sizable endowment is required to yield
    significant interest and dividends
  • 1 million principal _at_ 5 will yield 50,000 per
    year (gross)
  • Building and managing endowments can take energy
    away from mission and programs
  • An unrestricted INVESTMENT FUND might provide
    greater flexibility and not demand the management
    reporting and diligence that an endowment gift
    requires

27
28
Board and Staff Commitments to Financing
  • Review the fundamental concepts and structure of
    nonprofit financial statements
  • Understand how to analyze this information for
    your own organization
  • Present and Explain your financial information to
    your staff, constituents, board and potential
    funders
  • Find and implement ways to generate recurring
    revenue from your intellectual property
    investment in your clients and your communities

Kitchen Incubator (Kitchen Inc.), TX
29
For Further Information
  • Contact Information
  • Lou Cooperhouse, Director
  • Diane Holtaway, Associate Director, Business
    Development
  • Carol Coren, Business Association Mentor
  • PH 856-459-1900
  • 450 E. Broad Street
  • Bridgeton, NJ 08302
  • foodinnovation.rutgers.edu
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