today funding your venture (45’) work session- financing proposal, overall plan preparation...
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What’s Next????. Today Funding your venture (45’) Work Session- Financing proposal, overall plan preparation (60’) Mon- 3/2 Work Session- Preparation of Commercialization Plan Presentation (60’) Paul Gulick “Lessons Learned from Serial Entrepreneur” (60’) Reminders: - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Today
Funding your venture (45’)
Work Session- Financing proposal, overall plan preparation (60’)
Mon- 3/2
• Work Session- Preparation of Commercialization Plan Presentation (60’)
• Paul Gulick “Lessons Learned from Serial Entrepreneur” (60’)
Reminders: 1) Review your plan with mentor and inventor2) Invite your mentor and inventor to class presentations- next Wed 3/5
What’s Next????
The home stretch…
Wed- 3/4In class presentations of Commercialization Plans (~ 12 min each + questions)
Mentors and Inventors Invited
Mon- 3/9Work Session- Revision of Commercialization Plan based on Feedback
Wed- 3/11 (5:00-7:00 pm)Judged Competition- Portland Business Roundtable
Where do I find money?
You need to know where to look!
You need to pick the right source for your point in the funding life cycle.
Capital Sources for Formation and GrowthFrom Bill Newman, NTV
R&D
Gov’t, Industry, Academic
Ongoing Growth
Public Markets
Formation
The “3 F’s” (friends, family, & fools)
Angel Institutional
Angel Investors - “early and often” - Individuals, unorganized,
limited follow-on - 2003: $18.1 billion
invested, 42,000 deals
Venture Capital funds - Home run mentality - Significant investment $$;
governance and oversight - 2003: 915 funds, $18.2 billon
invested, 2,700 deals
“Private Equity”
Commercialization Grants - SBIR/STTR, SBA - OSU venture fund - NEC
NTV
Startup Capital Sources
• Government & Incentive – SBIR/STTR, OSU venture fund, ONAMI gap, etc
• The “3 F’s” (friends, family, & fools)
• Angel Investors– “early and often”– Individuals, unorganized, limited follow-on
• Venture Capital funds– Home run mentality– Significant investment $$; governance and oversight
Obvious
Often Overlooked Sources
NTV
• Organic growth (bootstrap)
• Consulting-based funding
• Customer deals (NRE)
• Strategic partner deals
Government: SBIR and STTR • The Small Business Innovative Research Grants (SBIR) and Small
Business Technology Transfer (STTR) can be good sources of start up funds
• SBIR created in 1982
• Requires 2.5% of all “extra-mural” research funds must be set aside for small business development ($2B in 2005)
• Many government agencies participate: DOD, NIH, NASA, DOE, NSF, DOC, DoAg, EPA, DOE, DOT. Each agency has structured their program differently
• There are some differences in SBIR and STTR with respect to required partnerships and percentage of total funds allocated
• This a grant, NOT a loan. The small business is not required to repay. Also, the company can allocate up to 7% of the grant to profit.
SBIR/STTR Funding
• Structured around a 3 phase process– Phase 1- feasibility ($50K-$100K, 6 mo)– Phase 2- prototype ($500K-$750K, 2 yr)– Phase 3- commercialization (not funded by
government directly)
• Can be either a grant or contract– Grant- no expectation of a product that funding
agency will buy– Contract- expectation that in Phase 3 that agency will
be a customer
SBIR/STTR Funding
• Success rates vary among agencies– NIH: Funds 1 out of 3 proposals– NSF: Funds 1 out of 13 proposals
• Most require a PI (principal investigator) with a good academic track record
• 41% of SBIR awardees are 2-9 employees
• 33% of SBIR awardees are new
• More information is available at the website: http://www.sbirworld.com,
OSU Venture Fund
• The State of Oregon passed a bill in 2005 for the purpose of “facilitating the commercialization of university R&D”
• This fund is to provide – Capital for university entrepreneurial programs– Opportunities for students to gain experience in applying research to
commercial activities– Proof-of-concept funding– Entrepreneurial opportunities for those wishing to convert research into
commercial enterprises
• It is funded by credits applied to state income taxes on a voluntary basis-
• OSU received $5.3M last year
Other OSU Specific Funding
• OSU Venture Fund ($5.3M last year’s total) http://campaignforosu.org/venturefund/
• ONAMI Gap Funding (individual grants up to $250K)
• New Enterprise Challenge (AEP- $17 K total)
• OSU Foundation Grants (College of Science- $5K each)
Funding Cycles and Timing
• Investor funding typically occurs in “rounds” of increasing amount– First, second, mezzanine, etc– Subsequent rounds of funding can dilute the value of initial
investors
• Tie funding to specific milestones- – e.g. Prototype complete, beta testing complete– investors like to feel privy to new information to maximize their
benefit and minimize risk
NTV
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Typical Investment and Valuation, by Stage
Stage Objective Revenue Valuation Investment
SeedProof of concept
0Below $5M
$1M or less
EarlyProduct
validation<$1M $5 – 10M $5M
GrowthBusiness validation
<$10M $10 – 15M $5 – 10M
Later Expansion $10M up $15M up $10M up
Raising Money From Angels• Characteristics of a Likely Angel
– High Net Worth– Recent Liquidity Event– Industry Knowledge– Relationship Oriented
• Lead Versus Followers– Target and Negotiate the Investment with a Few Lead Investors
• Angel Networks (OEN, WIN, WVN)
• Only Take Money from Accredited Investors
• Current Climate
Local Angel Networks
There are MANY local groups of investors and forums who would like to hear about your ideas…
• SWOT (monthly Corvallis group of business leaders)
• Willamette Valley Investors Network (WVIN)- May 14th conference ($150K+) at CH2M Hill Alumni center
• Oregon Entrepreneurs Network- March 15th Annual Meeting in Portland ($250K+)– http://www.oen.org/events_ao.aspx
• Portland Angel Network (PAN)
• Women’s Investment Network (WIN)
Venture Capital• What is a Venture Capital Fund?
– “Mutual fund” for private, illiquid securities with 10 year life (in general); generally unproven businesses
• Who are investors in a VC partnership?– Who has a 10-year investment horizon and can lose 100% of
capital?• Pension funds, foundations, endowments, trusts, banks, insurance
companies, “some” high net worth individuals, corporations
• Venture Capital– Specialized: <2% of businesses formed (SBA)– Geographic concentration: 33% Silicon Valley, 50% California,
67% California and New England (role of research institution)– VC $$: metro=99.2%; non-metro=0.8%; rural=0% (infrastructure)– Home run mentality: 10% = 10x, 30-50% = write-off– Investment characteristics: high growth potential, capital efficiency,
exit potential– Significant investment $$; governance and oversight
Good and Bad Venture Deals• “faster, better, cheaper”
– if so, look for 10X; “move to the next curve”• “brave new world”
– not just new, but necessary• “are the dogs eating the dog food”
– do customers want your product?
• “science projects” (also known as ratholes)– is there a product and market in the foreseeable future?
• “putting lipstick on the pig”– no, really, this is a great deal!
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Industry Structure MatrixB
arri
ers
to E
ntry High
Low
Switching CostsHigh Low
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Industry Structure Matrix
-Monopoly / oligopoly-Excess profits-Operating systems, Jet Engines, Life Sciences
Bar
rier
s to
Ent
ry High
Low
Switching CostsHigh Low
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Industry Structure Matrix
-Monopoly / oligopoly-Excess profits
-Intense competition-Concentrated industry-Low profitability / collusion-Commodity items-Airlines, auto, resource…
Bar
rier
s to
Ent
ry High
Low
Switching CostsHigh Low
Industry Structure Matrix
-Monopoly / oligopoly-Excess profits
-Intense competition-Concentrated industry-Low profitability / collusion-Commodity items
-Fragmented industry-Growth via consolidation-Services
Bar
rier
s to
Ent
ry High
Low
Switching CostsHigh Low
Industry Structure Matrix
-Monopoly / oligopoly-Excess profits
-Intense competition-Concentrated industry-Low profitability / collusion-Commodity items
-Fragmented industry-Growth via consolidation
-Price parity-Intense competition-Margin pressure-Internet
Bar
rier
s to
Ent
ry High
Low
Switching CostsHigh Low
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Raising Institutional Capital: Overview of the Process
• Preparing the business plan– A “business plan” or a plan for the business?
• Presenting the business plan– Initial screening/filtering: status and fit
• Due diligence process– Validation; based on interviews, research, expert opinion– Market, need, defensibility, management
• Valuation– A negotiation
• Term sheet• Ongoing relationship
– Board of Directors, introductions, strategic advice• Exit strategy
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Investment Evaluation: Key Issues• Filtering process
– 100:10:1– invention : product : business : platform : investment
• Validation– Attractive Market Opportunity
• size … growth … competition– Compelling Need
• breakthrough solution– Proprietary Position
• technology … product … market– Management
• visionary, committed, market-oriented
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TOP 10: What VCs Don’t Want to Hear
1. Our projections are conservative2. Our market is $$$ billion and we only need 0.00001%
of it to succeed3. We are in final negotiations with a large partner4. We will sell only common stock to investors5. We have no competition6. Our technology cannot be duplicated7. “XYZ Co.” (a Fortune 100) is too slow moving8. We are creating / changing the market and our
product will become the standard9. We have first mover advantage10. Our goal is to attain 2% market share
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New Markets are Hard to Gauge
• "This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings to be seriously considered as a means of communication. The device is, inherently, of no value."– Western Union internal memo, 1876.
• "The wireless music box has no imaginable commercial value. Who would pay for a message sent to nobody in particular?"– RCA: David Sarnoff's associates in response to his
urgings for investment in the radio in the 1920s
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New Markets are Hard to Gauge
• "I think there is a world market for, maybe, five computers."– Thomas Watson, chairman of IBM, 1943
• "There is no reason anyone would want a computer in their home."– Ken Olson, Digital Equipment Corp.,1977
• "640K ought to be enough memory for anybody."– Bill Gates, 1981
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The Second Mouse Gets the Cheese
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Selling is What It’s All About
“Don't worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you'll
have to ram them down people's throats.”
Howard Aiken Computer Pioneer
OSU Ideas on their way…
• “Nuke in a box” (recently received VC investment- ‘06 MBA project)
• Nanobits, Inc (received 2007 ONAMI gap funding-evolved from ‘06 undergrad class)
• I5 Logic, Inc (recently received large VC investment- from ‘06 undergrad class)
• Printable electronics (received 2008 OSU Venture Grant- from ‘07 undergrad class)