How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review,...

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How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131- 139

Transcript of How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review,...

Page 1: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

How venture capital works

Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139

Page 2: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

VCs invest in high potential growth companies that will be game changers in their industries.

Page 3: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

If you work in an industry that is attracting attention from VCs, be ready for radical change

Page 4: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

VC system works for

• Entrepreneurs• Institutional investors• Investment bankers• Venture capitalists

Page 5: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Zider, 1998

Page 6: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Filling the void

• Venture capital plays an important role in the stage of the company’s innovation life cycle when it begins to commercialize its innovation

• > 80% of VC $ goes into building infrastructure needed to grow the business – in expense investments (mfrg capacity, marketing, sales) and the balance sheet (working capital and fixed assets)

Zider, 1998

Page 7: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Timing is everything

• > 80% $ invested by VCs goes into adolescent phase of a company’s life cycle

• During this phase the financials of eventual winners and losers look highly similar

Zider, 1998

Page 8: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

The “adolescence” stage

Page 9: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Zider, 1998

Page 10: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Several moving parts in execution: Assume 80% probability of success each

Zider, 1998Failure on any single step is NOT an option

Page 11: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Logic of the deal

• Term sheets offer downside and upside protections

• Downside– Preferred stock gives VCs liquidation preference– Ratchets protect VCs from dilution if more $ needs to

be raised at lower valuation – they keep their same % ownership position

• Upside – can put additional $ into firm at predetermined prices – they can increase the stakes in successful firms below market prices

Page 12: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Typical portfolio payout per $1,000 invested

Zider, 1998

Page 13: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Zider, 1998

Page 14: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Profile of the ideal entrepreneur• Is qualified in a “hot” area of interest• Delivers sales or technical advances such as FDA

approval with reasonable probability• Tells a compelling story and is presentable to outside

investors• Recognizes the need for speed to an IPO for liquidity• Has a good reputation and can provide references

that show competence and skill• Understands the need for a team with a variety of

skills and therefore sees why equity has to be allocated to other people Zider, 1998

Page 15: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Profile of the ideal entrepreneur

• Works diligently toward a goal but maintains flexibility

• Gets along with the investor group• Understands the cost of capital and typical

deal structures and is not offended by them• Is sought after by many VCs• Has realistic expectations about process and

outcome

Zider, 1998

Page 16: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Value of an individual to a VC

• Is a function of these conditions:– # of people within the high-growth industry who are

qualified for the position– The position itself (CEO, CFO, CTO, technician)– Match of person’s skills, reputation, and incentives

to the VC firm– Willingness to take risks– Ability to sell oneself

• Entrepreneurs who satisfy these conditions have strong negotiating position with VCs

Zider, 1998

Page 17: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Entrepreneurs sought by multiple VCs should ask:

• Who will serve on board and what is that person’s position in the firm?

• How many other boards does the VC serve on?• Has the VC ever written and funded his or her own

business plan successfully?• What, if any, is the VC’s direct operating or technical

experience in this industry?• What is the firm’s reputation with entrepreneurs

who have been fired or involved in unsuccessful ventures?

Zider, 1998

Page 18: How venture capital works Zider, R. 1998. How venture capital works, Harvard Business Review, November-December, 131-139.

Considerations for entrepreneurs

• Understand what VCs want and reduce the uncertainty in their decision making• Understand how VCs will structure

capitalization – you want 20% of a $500M company, not 100% of a $100,000 one• Innovate and sell into a new, high-growth

market