Raising Capital in the New Economy
by Lee Traupel
We've helped a number of clients develop business plans and raise
capital from "angel" investors, corporate entities and
venture capitalists during the last 6-8 years. It's always a daunting
process that can be full of pitfalls and require a tremendous amount
of work - but it can be done! Here is some perspective gleaned from
years of experience.
The most important rule for raising capital to consider is: it's
never easy to raise capital when you need to! Meaning, investors
are inherently risk aversive, can be very picky (a real understatement!)
and they are looking for the best deal with the greatest upside
and minimal risk.
Rule number two - don't raise capital! Self fund your company (called
bootstrapping in entrepreneur-speak) by finding customers that will
purchase your products and services. This enables you to involve
your most important business asset in your business from day one
- customers!
Rule number three - use the "FAF" or "VMC" methods.
Raise seed (early stage) money from your friends and family and/or
if you are really committed, pull some cash from a Visa or MasterCard.
These methods can and do work for many entrepreneurs - be aware
it can be very painful on the back end if your company does not
make it!
Angel investors can add so much to your company - they can bring
"intelligent capital" to the business. Not only do they
invest capital but will very often take an interest in helping you
grow the company by taking a Board of Directors seat and/or temporarily
assuming a senior management role.
In my experience finding and recruiting a blue chip management team
with advanced degrees and a strong corporate pedigree can sometimes
kill a startup as quickly as no cash or revenue - yes, they look
great in your business plan and venture capitalists love a "strong
team." But, you need "fly by the seat of their pants"
manager/leaders who don't need to grind five sets of scenarios (analysis
paralysis) before they can take action - hire entrepreneurial types
who've excelled in small companies.
Dealing with venture capitalists can be a significant challenge
that is fraught with risk an no upside! Remember, they are highly
skilled at the entire process, in most cases they've done it hundreds
of times before. So, your on their turf when you step into this
arena and you better do your homework properly (market size, revenue
projections, cost of sales, marketing plan) and/or consult with
a consultant, attorney or "angel investor" who has been
through the process before to give you guidance.
Round two in dealing with venture capitalists (assuming you are
one of the 1% that submitted a business plan and/or were referred
to them by another "VC approved" entity) can also be fraught
with risk - know how to value your company (equity for capital),
look at comparable deals in the marketplace and be prepared to negotiate
hard and to give up more now than in the last 2-4 years.
Round three in dealing with venture capitalists or corporate investors.
Don't (never!) be so desperate for capital that you agree to turn
over the reins of the company if you don't meet specific performance
milestones based on a first or second round of funding. There are
too many variables in the marketplace for you too control and you're
taking too much risk for not enough upside. If this is the only
way you can raise money from this venture firm or corporate investor
then walk away, in the end you will be better off.
Here are some "cliff notes" on how to write a business
plan - there is no set formula other than covering the basics about
your company; i.e. technology, market analysis, marketing/business
development, competitive analysis, management team and a five year
set of (detailed by month from startup to year three) financials.
The Executive Summary (first 3-5 pages) is the most important, as
it is a summary of the entire plan and most investors read this
carefully and scan the rest of the business plan.
Don't get caught in the trap of endless rewrites based on investor
feedback - put your plan through one or two reviews by your BOD
members and or seasoned execs that will give you honest feedback.
Once the plan has been reviewed and approved then go to market with
this iteration and stick to it - investors should be investing in
you ultimately, not an artificial business plan that more often
than not is out of date by the time you get to market.
Think about how you are going to market your company as you would
any other product or service, blending traditional (fax, direct
mail) with interactive processes (web site postings, e-mail, etc.).
It's a numbers game, you have to aggressively market your company
and be prepared to see a return of only 1-3% versus your output
- 1K in direct or opt-in email may only lead to 10-20 casual inquiries,
generating 5-7 serious conversations, resulting in 1-3 term sheets
(what we will invest for "x" equity) discussions.
Finally, the last and most important rule of all is be tenacious,
there is no substitute for absolute commitment to growing your company
by raising capital or bootstrapping it! Your vision, guts and passion
will very often carry the day when/where others may give up!!
Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of business development and marketing
experience - he is the founder of Intelective Communications, Inc.
http://www.intelective.com, a
marketing services and software company which provides strategic
and tactical marketing services exclusively to small to medium sized
companies. Lee@intelective.com Reprinted with permission from Intelective
Communications (c) 2001-2002 by Intelective Communications, Inc.
Return to Business Plan Library Index
|
WEBSITE101 TUTORIALS
HTML Tutorial
| CGI tutorial
| Email Tutorial
| Spam
Tutorial | Cookies
Tutorial | Privacy Tutorial
| Windows
Tutorial | DreamWeaver
Tutorial | Domain
Name Tutorial | Business
Plan Tutorial | Search
Position Tutorial | Online
Advertising Tutorial | Ecommerce
Essentials Tutorial
|