Soul-Searching and Venture Capital: Be Careful What You Wish For

 

Last week, I discussed why your chances of getting venture capital (“VC”) financing are probably less than your odds of being struck by lightning twice (click here if you missed it). This week, in the interests of piling on, I’m going to discuss why you probably wouldn’t want VC financing even if you could get it.

Most of my corporate clients who run their own businesses decided to strike out on their own for one of two reasons: either they were tired of the headaches, bureaucracy, and limited prospects of working for others, or they’ve got a dream of successfully building, running, and growing a business. In either case, there’s no better way to send these two goals up in smoke than by accepting VC financing. If you started or are running your own business for either of these reasons, then working with VCs probably isn’t for you.

I think there’s a general misconception about what happens when a VC firm makes an investment in a company. In the interests of dispelling myths, here’s what DOESN’T happen:  the VC firm strokes a check, hands it over, and asks you to send them an email every six months to let them know how things are going. In fact, the reality of a VC investment is quite the opposite.

Once the VC investment is made, the VCs will: (1) take positions on your new and expanded board of directors (after they convert your LLC or S Corporation into a C Corporation and reincorporate it in Delaware), (2) install their own candidates as executive officers in key positions, (3) change the equity structure of your company completely (and I do mean completely), (4) provide for special rights for themselves as preferred shareholders of your company, (5) restrict the ability of other shareholders to sell their shares (that means you and your original co-owners and management team, among others), (6) restrict the ability of the company to raise more equity or bank financing, (7) require monthly financial statements and management reports, (8) require you and other key executives to enter into employment agreements (which will include terms governing your salary, hours, vacation time, benefits, dismissal events, and such), (9) restructure the operations of the company, (10) retain broad governance and voting rights within the company, and (11) grant themselves the ability to gain majority control over the board and convert their preferred shares into a majority of the outstanding common shares in the event certain trigger events occur (such as not meeting anticipated financial goals or exit strategies).

What all of this means to you as an entrepreneur is that “your” company is effectively no longer yours. You’re now working for someone else, in accordance with the employment agreement they’ve required you to sign, even if you do remain a large shareholder and an executive officer after the VC investment. Which is why I said that if the autonomy and excitement of working for yourself and being your own boss are the primary reasons you went into business, then accepting VC financing may not be for you. Once the VCs make that investment, the entire culture of your company is going to change (and not for the better, in the minds of most entrepreneurs). 

Incidentally, you’ll have to deal with the actual negotiations and legal and accounting work leading up to the closing and the investment itself. The legal documentation governing a round of VC financing usually runs hundreds of pages, and in order to get to those final, agreed-upon contracts and filings, your company (and its executives and attorneys) will spend up to two months and hundreds of hours negotiating and meeting with your potential investors. In the process, the company will incur tens of thousands of dollars in legal and accounting fees. Good thing there’s a large investment at the end of the process!

And by the way: if you thought I was kidding when I blogged a few weeks ago about the importance of choosing the right corporate form and corporate domicile, and about the importance of adhering to corporate formalities, just wait ‘til you start working with the VCs. There is little that’s more important to them from an operational and administrative standpoint than adhering to corporate formalities. Why? Because VCs never make an investment in any company without an exit strategy, and that exit strategy is either going to be a sale of your company to another company or an initial public offering (IPO). In either case, keeping meticulous books and records is essential to a successful exit.

And what of that exit strategy? Given the state of the equity capital markets these days, the VCs are more likely to sell your company or merge it into or with another company rather than go the IPO route. In all likelihood, this means you’re probably going to get fired from your own company, or be marginalized at best.  Perhaps you’ll end up significantly richer, if you’re lucky, but the odds are good that you’ll end up forced out. There are always redundancies when companies merge or when they’re acquired by larger players, and layoffs are virtually inevitable. Don’t assume that you’ll be immune simply by virtue of the fact that the company was once yours.   

So that’s basically the anatomy of a VC investment. While the upshot is that your company will have the resources (both capital and intellectual) it needs to give it the best shot of becoming a major player in its market space while potentially making you a significant sum of money, the down side for most entrepreneurs is the effective “loss” of their company to the investors.

And just to be clear: I’m not trying to imply that VCs are insensitive, intellectually-challenged bureaucrats who don’t know what’s best for the company. In fact, quite the opposite is true. The VCs I’ve dealt with (and I imagine this is true of most VCs) have been some of the sharpest, most financially savvy people I’ve ever met. They are undoubtedly a huge asset to any company in which they invest. But from the point of view of the entrepreneur, working in the post-investment company can present genuine challenges.

 

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Raise it for discussion on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

 

Why Your Company Won't Get Venture Capital Financing

A few weeks ago, I discussed several different methods of financing a new business or providing for the ongoing capital requirements of an existing business (click here to read the blog). I touched on the difficulties inherent in trying to get bank or venture capital (“VC”) financing, and promised to discuss those issues further in a future blog. Not one to break a promise, this is that blog.

Let’s start with bank financing before we get to VC financing.  I’ll be blunt: generally speaking, most start-ups aren’t bankable (meaning they’re not good candidates for a bank loan). Banks tend to require an operating history, several years of audited tax returns, net operating income at a specific multiple of the anticipated debt service, accounts receivable or hard assets that can be pledged as security, and spectacular credit scores by the principals. Not to mention personal guarantees. If your company (or you, as the case may be) isn’t/aren’t able to produce most or all of these things, guess whose house is going to be mortgaged as collateral on the loan (assuming you’ve got equity in your house)?

That said, there are certainly lending programs at most banks that are geared towards specific types of startup businesses. Dental and medical practices come to mind, which are bankable for a variety of reasons that are beyond the scope of this blog. However, most new businesses simply won’t qualify for bank financing, particularly in light of the new-found lending conservatism brought on by the latest recession. 

Which brings us to VC, and why your odds of getting VC financing are slim.

Venture capital financing is, for the most part, limited to Silicon Valley technology wonks whose companies can deliver scalable businesses, proprietary technology (i.e., patented or patentable), and a minimum 35% pro forma return on equity with an ironclad exit strategy in 5 years or less. In other words, unless you’ve got a biotech, software, or alternative energy company with a defensible patent (VCs hate competition), you’re unlikely to be attractive to a VC firm.

Additionally – and I can’t overemphasize this – VCs are looking for stellar management whom they trust implicitly. The way they get to trust you is by knowing you. And the way they get to know you is by being introduced to you by someone they already trust. So if you’ve got a couple Wharton MBAs and a Stanford electrical engineer with 4 fuel cell patents to his credit on your executive management team, and you know a guy who works for Draper Fisher Jurvetson, congratulations! You might actually stand a chance of getting a VC firm to actually read your business plan. Continuing the theme, it also wouldn’t hurt if you’ve run and successfully sold or gone public with a previous company. And made lots of money for your previous investors in the process.

Finally, it’s useful to recognize that most VC investments don’t occur at the startup phase, but rather in a later round of financing, and most often in an amount equal to several million or tens of millions of dollars. This means that even if you do eventually get VC financing, you’d still need to rely on the 3 F's in the earlier stages of financing your business. Now, I realize that the idea of getting an infusion of capital amounting to several million dollars from a VC would make the principals of most small to medium sized businesses salivate, but consider this: could you produce a realistic business plan and a full set of pro forma spreadsheets demonstrating to the VCs how you plan to turn an $8,000,000 investment in your construction framing business into a $4,000,000 profit, PLUS return of their initial investment, PLUS a successful IPO or sale of your company, all in 36 months? Probably not. 

The simple math of the matter is that very few people, or companies, will qualify for VC financing. Factor in the sheer volume of business plans and elevator pitches that the typical VC sees and hears in a given year, and the fact that the volume of all VC financing has been severely reduced as a result of the recession, and the odds of a successful VC investment in your company become slimmer still. Which is why I pointed out in my last blog that the most likely source of funds for your business is the 3 Fs.

Questions? Comments? Concerns? Raise it for discussion on Facebook, Twitter, or LinkedIn.

 

 
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