Title: Obtaining Venture
1Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Venture Planning
- Chapter 14
- Dowling
- Fall 2005
2Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Cover your equity
- Balance the need for
- startup and growth capital
- with preservation of equity
- The earlier the capital
- enters, regardless of the source, the more costly
it is - Creative bootstrapping strategies can be great
preservers of equity
3Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Considerations
- Does the venture need outside equity capital?
- Do the founders want outside equity capital?
- Who should invest?
- An equity investment requires that the management
team firmly believe that investors can and will
add value to the venture.
4Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Timing
- It is unwise for a startup to delay looking for
capital since it is likely to take six months or
more to raise money.
5Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Angels and informal investors
- Who they are
- Typical informal investor will invest from
10,000 to 50,000 in any one venture. Theyre
appropriate for - Ventures with capital requirements from
50K-500K - Ventures with sale potential from 2-20 million
in 5-10 years. - Small, established, privately held ventures with
sales and profit growth of 10 to 20 percent per
year - Special situations
6Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Evaluation process
- An informal investor will want to review a
business plan, meet the full management team, see
any product prototype or design that may exist,
etc. - The decision
- Agreement with informal investors will most often
include a put, whereby the investor has the
right to require the venture to repurchase his or
her stock after a specified number of years at a
specified price.
7Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Venture capital
- Key is to seek investors who will truly add value
to the venture, beyond the money - Carefully screen potential investors to determine
how specifically they might fill in some gaps in
the founders know-how and networks - The right investors can open doors to new
customers, vendors, and additional investors
8Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Venture capital What is it?
- The venture capital industry supplies capital
and other resources to entrepreneurs in
businesses with high growth potential in hopes of
achieving a high rate of return on invested
funds. - Most credit Ralph Flanders, then president of
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, with the idea. - VC investors commonly expect returns of 5 to 10
times initial investment in 5 to 10 years.
9Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Venture capital
- No more than 2 to 4 percent of ventures seeking
VC actually receive financing from them - An entrepreneur may give up 25 to 75 percent of
his or her equity for seed/startup financing - Most VC investors are limited partnerships, with
fund managers serving as general partners and
investors as limited partners
10Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Sources and guides
- A good place to start is Pratts Guide to Venture
Capital Sources - What to look for
- Entrepreneurs are well advised to screen
prospective investors to determine the appetites
of such investors for the stage, industry,
technology and capital requirements proposed
11Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Early-stage entrepreneurs need investors who
- Are considering new financing proposals and can
provide the required level of capital - Are interested in companies at the particular
growth stage - Understand and have a preference for investments
in the particular industry - Can provide good business advice, moral support
- Are reputable and ethical and with whom founder
can get along - Have successful track records of 10 years or more
advising and building smaller companies
12Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- What to look out for
- Attitude
- Over-commitment
- Inexperience
- Unfavorable reputation
13Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Dealing with venture capitalists
- If possible, obtain a personal introduction from
someone the investors know well - Identify several prospects create a market for
your idea by marketing it - Do not stop selling until the money is in the
bank. Let the facts speak for themselves. Be able
to deliver on the claims.
14Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Due Diligence A two-way street
- DD can take several weeks or months at startup
- Involves a painstaking investigation for
investors
15Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Other equity sources
- SBA 7(a) Guaranteed Business Loan Program
- Small business investment companies
- Licensed and loan-funded by SBA
- Limited to taking minority shareholder positions
- Can invest only 20 of equity capital in any one
firm - Common options include long-term loans with stock
options, convertible debentures, straight loans,
and preferred stock
16Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Other equity sources
- Mezzanine capital
- Capital that is between senior debt financing and
common stock - Most often, its subordinated debt carrying an
equity kicker consisting of warrants or a
conversion feature into common stock - Generally unsecured, with maturity in 5 to 10
years - Can be burdensome in its claims on cash
- Subordinated debt often contains covenants
relating to net worth, debt and dividends
17Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Other equity sources
- Private placement investors. Could include
- Dealers, franchisors or wholesalers
- Professional investors always on the lookout for
a good, small company in its formative years - Others seek opportunities to buy shares of
smaller growth firms in the expectation that the
firms will soon go public - Attractive to venture capitalists wwho hope to
benefit when the company goes public or when the
company is sold
18Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Other equity sources
- Initial public stock offerings (IPO)
- Raises capital through federally registered and
underwritten sales of the companys shares - More mature companies get better terms at IPO
19Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Advantages of going public
- Raise more capital with less dilution
- Improve balance sheet or reduce/eliminate debt
- Obtain cash for pursuing other opportunties
- Access other capital suppliers and increase
bargaining power - Improve credibility
- Achieve liquidity for owners and investors
- Create equity incentives for new and existing
staff
20Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Disadvantages of going public
- Legal, accounting and administrative costs
- Management time, effort and expense is required
to comply with SEC rules and reporting
requirements. - Management can become more interested in
maintaining the price of the companys stock than
in running the company - Liquidity of company stock achieved through a
public offering may be more apparent than real
21Obtaining Venture Growth Capital
- Private placement after going public
- Can tide you over in the event the public turns
sour - SEC Regulation D
- Employee stock option plans (ESOPs)
- Used by firms with high confidence in the
stability of their future earnings and cash flow.
An ESOP is a program in which the employees
become investors in the company. Tax-qualified
benefit plans.