An eValuation Model An eValuation Model Presentation to Investors-R-Us Board of Directors...

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Transcript of An eValuation Model An eValuation Model Presentation to Investors-R-Us Board of Directors...

An eValuation ModelAn eValuation ModelPresentation to Investors-R-UsBoard of Directors

Presentation by:

2B (or not 2B) Consulting

Neil Gall

Marek Ryfko

Richard Schwartz

Mayank Sharma

Jawad Tareen

March 18, 2000

2

Problem Statement

Develop a set of criteria and application and assessment guidelines for use in evaluating the investment and

financial potential of e-business plans.

3

Agenda

Uniqueness of E-Commerce

TraditionalValuation Methods

New Model

Rationalization

Case Study

Implementation

Conclusion

4

The Changing Face of Business

Physical Product

Digital Product

Physical Agent

Digital Agent

Digital Process

Physical Process

Traditional Commerce

E-Business

Adapted from “Electronic Commerce: A Managerial Perspective” by Efraim Truban et. al. 1999

5

How E-Commerce is Different

Pace of Change is Faster than Legislation and Regulation

Traditional Valuation Models do not Fully Capture the Value of E-Business Companies

Continuous Evolution in Terms of Customer Value

Generally Require Large Investment in Marketing as Opposed to Capital Expenditures

6

E-Business Models

E-Tailing

Auction (C2C)

Community

Professional Services

Portal

Exchange (B2C and B2B)

Search Engine

7

Traditional Firms

Main Assets are Facilities & Equipment

Debt Raised for Firm’s Operations and Asset Acquisition

Funding from Investment Banks

Lending Based on Cash Flows of the Firm

E-Business

Main Assets are Customers

Huge Marketing Expense

Debt Largely Unavailable - Investors want Equity

Funding from Venture Capital Firms

Cash Flow not Used for Firm Valuation

Dot Coms that issue Debt are rated by Moody’s as JUNK (e.g. Amazon, E*Trade)

Traditional vs. E-Business Firm Valuation Considerations

8

Traditional Valuation Methods

Method Problems

Payback Arrival of EarningsAscertaining FC & VC

P/E or P/S E’s are initially negativeSales does not mean returns

Op. Cash Flows are negativeEvaluation of Risk

Disc. Cash Flows

9

Traditional Valuation Methods

Operating Profit ???Capital intensity meaningless

Method Problems

EVA

Real Options Complexity of useNo time value of option

Market Cap inflatedCustomers are ill-defined

Market Cap / customers

Requirement of a New E-Business Framework

10

What Should the New Model Look Like?

TangiblesTangiblesIntangiblesIntangibles

eValuationeValuation

11

The eValuation Model

+Gross Revenue

# of Customers

Earnings

# of Customers

Risk Free Rate + WACC + Market Return

x [ # of Customers x (1 + Growth) ]

x [ Intangibles ]

Value =

12

The eValuation Model

Revenue Streams

• Content• Access• e-Commerce• Advertising• Affiliate Programs

Customer Types

• Subscribers• Buyers• Visitors

13

The eValuation Model

Costs

• Customer Acquisition• Updating Content• Logistics in sales process• Marketing & Promotion• Overhead

Earnings

• Reflects the payback time• Earnings reduce the risk profile• Returns get factored in the model

14

The eValuation Model

Discount Factor• Factors in risk free rate & cost of capital• Risk premium assigns the riskiness of the venture • Earnings are co-related to a reduced risk premium

# of Customers & Growth Rates• Establishes the importance of the customer• Growth rate incorporates penetration rate

15

Customers = Assets

VALUE PROPOSITION

COMPETITIVE SUSTAINABLE ADVANTAGE

CUSTOMERS

What do customers really value?

How original is the idea?

What needs are going to be met?

What is the management skills set ?

What are the back-end processes?

What are the technological resources?

16

Value Proposition

StrategyMarketing

CRM

Product-Service

VALUE PROPOSITION

Channel Conflicts

Mass Customization

Global Reach

Customer Awareness

Branding

Cross Selling

One to One

Customer Feedback

Customer Satisfaction

Customer Retention

Customer Support

Customer Involvement

R&D

Market Opportunity

Unique eBusiness Solution

Innovation

17

Competitive Sustainable Advantage

Management & HR

Tax & Legal

Processes

Technology

Alliances

COMPETITIVE SUSTAINABLE ADVANTAGE

Quality of Management

Organizational Structure

Compensation

Training

Employee Attraction/Retention

Electronic Signature

Jurisdiction

Trademark Registration

Payment

Taxation

Fulfillment

Operations

Virtual Communities Site Design

Data Warehousing

Database Management

Scalability of Infrastructure

Security

Outsourcing

Suppliers

Partners

Affiliates

18

Intangibles Score Card

Intangibles Weight1-3

Score1-10

Cut-off1-10

Weight xScore

Value PropositionProduct-ServiceMarketingStrategyCRMCompetitive Sustainable AdvantageManagement & HRAlliancesTechnologyProcessesTax & Legal

Composite TotalComposite Index

19

The eValuation Model Captures the Complete Value

TangiblesTangiblesIntangiblesIntangibles

eValuationeValuation

20

Mitigating the Risks

• Customization (Overlapping Businesses - e.g. AOL)

• Growth is Constant and based on Current Economic Situation (No Seasonality or Recession Market)

• Subjective Attribution of Weights to Intangibles by Venture Evaluators

• Hurdle eValuation Figure needs to be established based on appropriate eBusiness model

21

Model Customization

•E-Auction Houses (e.g. eBay)

• # of Customers & Growth easier to establish

• Customer Interface more critical in Intangible evaluation

• E-Brokerage (e.g. E*Trade)

• Revenue / Customer easily measurable

• Technological Infrastructure weighted more heavily

22

Customization of Intangibles

10

1

5

Tax & Legal

Alliances

Technology

Marketing

Management & HR

Products/Services

Strategy

Processes

CRM

23

Case Study

vs.

24

Comparing Models

eValuation

Current Valuation

25

Analysis of Intangibles

eV Index = .67eV Index = .67

Intangibles Weight(1-3)

Score(1-10)

Cut-off(1-10)

Weight xScore

Value PropositionProduct-Service 3 7 7 21Marketing 2 7 6 14Strategy 2 8 6 16CRM 3 7 7 21Sustainable Competitive AdvantageManagement & HR 3 6 7 18Alliances 3 7 7 21Technology 2 7 4 14Processes 1 5 2 5Tax & Legal 1 4 2 4

Composite Gross 134/200Composite Index .67

eV Index = .86eV Index = .86

26

eValuation Analysis

$135.5 Million

30 Million Visitors

- $52 Million

30 Million Visitors+

1 + 9.3%

x [30 Million Visitors x (1 + 1.41) ] x [0.67]

= $ 123.4 Million= $ 123.4 Million

= $ 1,468.2 Million= $ 1,468.2 Million

27

Current vs. eValuation Model Relative Relationship

Market Capitalization:

eValuation:

= $ 123.4 Million

= $ 1,468.2 Million

= $ 83.2 Billion

= $ 7.667 Billion

Y!:L Ratio: 10.85:1Y!:L Ratio: 10.85:1

Y!:L Ratio: 11.90:1Y!:L Ratio: 11.90:1

28

Case Study Wrap-Up

• eValuation model considers both Tangibles as well as Intangibles

• eValuation Model is to start-ups what Market Capitalization is to established E-Businesses

• Offers “Go” or “No Go” Criteria based on investor specific business model Hurdle Rate

29

Implementation Plan

Phase 1

Framework questions specificationTraining

Industry templates specificationWeb publication preparation

Feedback Maintenance& SupportTraining

Phase 2

Phase 3

Phase 4

Web publicationTraffic generation

30

Implementing the eValuation Model

Speed Cost

Acceptance

31

What About Larbi?

Client Develops Business Plan

Client Researches Funding Alternatives Online

Client Completes Online Profile

Contact is Initiated with Investors-R-Us

Face-to-Face Interview

eValuation Performed

Funding Decision

32

Conclusion

+Gross Revenue

# of Customers

Earnings

# of Customers

Risk Free Rate + WACC + Market Return

x [ # of Customers x (1 + Growth) ]

x [ Intangibles ]

Value =