 |
|
ab |
|
|
|
|
Funding Your Home Business - What Investors Want |
|
 |
|
Different types of investors investing at various stages of the company's
growth and development will have different expectations.
| |
 |
|
|
August 13, 2009 (PowerHomeBiz.com)
-
What do Investors want?
(article continued below)
1. A strong return on investment. Ranges from 8% (friendly, debt) to 40%
- Different types of investors investing at various stages of the
company's growth and development will have different expectations. (Notice
the emphasis on and repeated use of the word different!) An angel investor
who is taking on the most risk by investing when the company is still in its
nascent (i.e., very early) stage and has yet to generate much revenue, if
any, has no contracts, and has negative cash flow, will want the highest
return of 40% or close to it. If the company is successful, due to the early
entry stage, one would expect the company to generate at least that. Often,
though, the angel investor will sell out during one of the subsequent
financing periods. Rarely does an angel investor stay on board until the
company reaches maturity.
- Venture capitalists come in later but still before the company is
cash flow positive. Therefore, they typically want returns of 30-35%.
- Mezzanine financiers provide a mixture of debt and equity to more stable
and established businesses so they expect blended returns of 16-20%.
2. A clear pay-off date (exit strategy) - typically 3 - 7 years
- Very few investors wish to wait indefinitely for their money. They are
investing not to make you feel good but because they believe in you and your
business and the ability of the business under your management (and
sometimes with their additional efforts) to generate enough revenue and cash
flow and/or grow large enough in value to return them their investment and
their expected return within a specific time frame.
- This varies based on the investor. Angel investors prefer a shorter
period of time (3 years). Private equity funds typically expect 4-5 years.
Strategic investors derive a number of benefits so their investment
timeframe tends to be the longest, with a trend of ~7 years.
3. A strong management team
- There are many great ideas out there. It's not so much the idea that
counts (look at all the inventors who never get anywhere) but the ability of
the management team to capitalize on that idea and provide the leadership,
strategy, sales, marketing, and operational skills and acumen to bring that
idea to market. Or to apply those same skills to a purchase of an existing
business and continue to generate similar growth if acquiring a high growth
business or turn around the enterprise and grow it, if acquiring an
under-performing company.
- The management team is the most important component. A great management
team can make a good idea or a so-so company into a great company. But a
great idea may never make it off the ground with poor management and a great
company can go rapidly downhill with mediocre management.
4. A base valuation of the company
- You don't want to approach investors with no idea of what your company
is worth. How do you know if the investor is proposing a good price for the
portion of their investment? Angel investors sometimes are not highly
financial savvy and can't do their own valuations. So you need to do one or
have one done for your company and be able to explain it to the interested
investor. You need to show them in these pro-forma financials how their
investment will help move your business to the next level. And they need to
see in this valuation how the requested investment amount was determined.
Venture capital firms will do their own valuation but you should have your
own in order to understand the financial impact of your company's strengths.
This will facilitate your negotiations with these firms.
- Since they usually deal with existing stable businesses, mezzanine firms
and private equity funds expect you to tell them what your firm is valued
at, how you arrived at the numbers, and what amount you expect from them to
invest. They will run their own valuation but want something to compare it
to. Also, if your firm has $10 - 20 million or more in revenue (typical for
companies that attract this type of equity investment), your management team
should have someone with financial acumen -a CFO - or have access to someone
(a consultant,...) who can do this. Otherwise, your ability to financially
manage the company could be called into question.
5. A business plan to accomplish goals
- You need an abbreviated business plan. If you have a full strategic
business plan, that's even better. If you also have an operational business
plan, that's all the more impressive. But you need something that provides
an overview of the market, background on the business, industry and
competitor assessment, management overview, sales and marketing plan, risks,
financial snapshot, goals, and the strategy to accomplish these goals. Most
investors only want to see an Executive Summary - 3-5 pages - to determine
if they're interested. Then, once they've expressed full interest, they'd
like to see the complete business plan.
- Remember, the business plan is an ongoing work in progress. The purpose
is not to clearly map out exactly what you'll do but to chart a course for
what you'll do that enables you to respond to market changes and new
information that may differ from the assumptions you made. If you're not
fully aware of your ideas of the market, competitor, and customer behavior,
then you don't know what to do when things don't go as expected. A business
plan gets you to think creatively.
- Review your business plan on a quarterly basis and make changes
semi-annually as needed. Remember, the business plan shows an investor that
you treat your business seriously and have thought about what it takes to
get to where you need their money to help you go. The business plan says to
the investor, "Here's what I'm going to do with your money to make sure you
get it back with the return you seek".
About the Author:
Tiffany Wright is a turnaround consultant and small business
advisor who has written several books and ebooks. She is the author of
Help! I Need Money for My Business Now!!, an ebook with easy-to-follow
examples, case studies, and templates that will lead you step-by-step
through the process of raising capital for your business available at
http://www.moneytogrowbusiness.com . She is also the publisher of
Equal Construction Record, a commercial construction newspaper based in
Georgia. She has helped companies raise over $31 Million in financing
and revamp their operations and financial structure. Also view her blog
at
http://smallbusinessfinanceforum.blogspot.com .
|
| ab |
|
 |