Addressing
Investor Concerns
by Tim Smith, PhD, June 5, 2002
<back|
|next>
There are three legs to a new venture. Venture capitalists
evaluate a firm according to two of the legs: Can they build it?
If they build it, will the market buy it? A business manager has
to ask the third leg: Can it get funded? To help business managers
address this third leg with the affirmative, we should look at new
ventures through the eyes of the investor.
Potential investors look at a firm through multiple
lenses. The above paradigm is perhaps the bluntest; even so, investors
will rephrase these questions using various angles. In arriving
at their conclusions, investors will turn to business plans, industry
comparisons, personal knowledge, and just as often to one of two
new-venture analysis tools.
S. Rich and D. Gumpert, authors of "Business
Plans that Win $$$: Lessons Learned from the MIT Enterprise Forum"
propose using a simple two dimensional map to analyze companies.
On the horizontal axis, new ventures are evaluated by management
team strength. On the vertical axis, new ventures are evaluated
by marketing strength.
In evaluating the management team, Rich and Gumpert
suggest that investors are looking for a well-rounded, capable team.
This includes officers such as the operations, marketing, finance,
and executive officers as well as key intellectual contributors
such as the inventor, delivery team, and support team. The optimal
management team score is achieved by having all the key players
in place, each having demonstrated their commitment, and all the
managers having stellar backgrounds. In evaluating the management
team, venture capitalist are evaluating the ability of the entrepreneurial
firm to deliver the financial and market potential. Can they build
it?
Rich and Gumpert note that in evaluating the market
potential, investors look for indications of market demand. Possible
indicators include past sales and revenues, but can also be delivered
through market research, prospective customer interviews, or stated
purchase intent from key clients. For an example of this, recall
the requirement for Airbus to receive a minimum number of orders
prior to designing a super jumbo jet. The optimal market potential
score is achieved by having a completed product and substantiated
demand. In evaluating the marketing potential, venture capitalists
are answering the question: Can they sell it?
A second analysis tool used by venture capitalist
looks at a new venture with a desire to answer the question, "What
are the Risks and Rewards?" rather than "Can they deliver
on the story they tell?" As with the prior analysis tool, investors
generate a two dimensional map. On the new map's horizontal axis,
new ventures are evaluated by financial stability. On the vertical
axis, new ventures are evaluated by market commitment.
In financial stability, investors are looking to determine
the firm's potential to stay in business regardless of the economic
environment. As before, this will require examining past revenue,
but also will include such factors as the potential to deploy the
same product, team, or skill set in a second market or the potential
to manage multiple lines of business and multiple revenue streams
within the same firm. Financial stability is supported by low cost
structures, multiple revenue streams, and multiple products.
In examining the market commitment, investors are
looking to determine the depth of knowledge, targeting, and drive
in serving a particular market. While market commitment might sound
like the antithesis of financial stability, many firms with highly
targeted markets will serve their target market with multiple products
and diverse revenue streams. For instance, Intuit sells three types
of QuickBooks, upgrades, and an Application Service Provider version
while staying focused on a single market: small businesses.
New ventures scoring well on all the above dimensions
are rare, yet so are successful new ventures. Moreover, scoring
well on all the above dimensions does not guarantee success. Yet
keeping the desires of the investment community in mind will help
us managers to accomplish the third leg of making a successful new
enterprise: Securing Funding.
---
Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
------------
Also Appearing in
The May Report, TECH BUSINESS BRIEFS, June 5, 2002
<back|
|next>
|