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An overview of venture capital fundraising methodology
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Venture CapitalFundraising Methodology
October 28, 2009
What Is Venture Capital?
What Is Venture Capital?Private equity class specialized in funding and building
early stage, high growth potential enterprises
Typical VC Fund Structure• General Partners invest capital on behalf of
Limited Partners– LPs include endowments, pension funds, charities,
corporations, individuals, and fund of funds– GP contributes personal capital as well– GP earns 2% annual management fees & 20%
carried interest, i.e., share of profits• Capital called as needed, with primary
investing done in first 5 yrs of 10 yr fund cycle• Quality fund returns 3x capital, or 18-20% IRR
– 1/3 of deals will likely fail, 1/3 will return amount invested, and 1/3 will drive majority of returns
Where Do VCs Invest?
Life Sciences
Clean Technology
InformationTechnology
Fund Example: SoftBank Capital
Select Historical Investments
Select CurrentInvestments
Experienced Team(5 former CEOs)
Focused on early stage high growth technology based businesses benefiting from the rapid deployment and adoption of broadband and mobile technologies
Industry Investment Trends
Source: MoneyTree Report – NVCA/PWC/Thomson Reuters
Renewable Energy• Renewables dominating
“Green” VC investing and expected to grow with support of Obama administration
• Billions of dollars in loans and grants available for R&D for everything from new battery technologies to more efficient use of fossil fuels
• VC challenged by capital requirements for large green infrastructure deals
Source: FastCompany/Chubby Brain
Fundraising Process
You set the valuation. I’ll set the terms.*
*Don’t be fooled by the cover price
Why Raise Venture Capital?• Guidance & Support
• Board participants; Interim executives• Product management, business development and financial
planning support• Access
• Industry contacts• Leverage portfolio
• Credibility• Stamp of approval with customers, partners and vendors
• Cash• But at a high cost of capital, so Guidance, Access and
Credibility should justify that cost
Typical Company Profile
• Team• Ranges from a single, 1st-time entrepreneur to a full
team of seasoned entrepreneurs• Stage of Development
• Ranges from pre-revenue to approaching profitability• VCs sit between angel and growth/buyout investors,
though some funds cross over into these stages• Size of Round
• Definitions vary, normalized range from $2M-$15M• Deals frequently syndicated between multiple funds
to strengthen board and diversify risk
Typical Deal Timeline• Average firm reviews 1000+
deals per year• 99% of deals turned down• Promising deals present to
partnership 2-6 weeks post initial meeting
• Partnership approved deals receive term sheet
• Accepted term sheets followed by 2-6 weeks of final diligence and legal documentation
• Average firm, in normal market, closes 8-12 new investments/yr
Note: Graphic via NVCA; Industry statistics are approximations
Deal EvaluationFocus varies by firm, but key elements include:
• Concept– What is the product or service?– Why will customers buy it?
• Opportunity– What is the market size and penetration strategy?– What is the competitive landscape?
• Team– Can they execute on development, sales and support?
Financial Projections• Focus on key revenue and expense drivers
– Sensitivities important given model immaturity– Viability of margins long term
• How much additional capital required?– What is the potential dilution from later rounds?
• Focus on model details varies based on stage– Seed stage may not yield revenue for 18-24 mos.– Later stage deals may consider debt financing,
requiring covenant maintenance
Term Sheet• Price
– Pre vs. Post $ Valuation– Option Pool implications
• Liquidation Preference– Liquidation: Sale of company as opposed to IPO– Multiples and Dividends– Participation: Full, Capped and Non-Participating– Stacked vs. pari passu– Impact on management ownership and resulting motivation
• Board Configuration• Option Pool: Pre vs. Post $ Dilution• Anti-Dilution Rights: Weighted Avg. thru Full Ratchet• Pro Rata Rights for future rounds• Protective Provisions• Term Sheet summary at www.AsktheVC.com
Term Sheet (cont’d)• Board of Directors
– Investor Seats and Observers– Founder and Independent Seats
• Protective Provisions– Veto rights for overall preferreds or by class– On changing rights of preferred class, selling existing or raising
additional shares, change of control, board composition, raising debt
• Anti-Dilution– Full Ratchet, Broad or Narrow-Based Wghtd Avg
• See term sheet series at www.AsktheVC.com
Legal Documentation• Stock Purchase Agreement
– Price and # of shares sold, reps & warranties• Certificate of Incorporation (a/k/a Charter)
– Establishes rights, preferences, privileges and restrictions of each class and series of stock
• Investor Rights Agreement– Information, registration, and pre-emptive rights
• Voting Agreement– Board composition, drag-along rights
• See www.NVCA.org for these and other template docs
Subsequent Financing
• Bridge funding– Discount into next round or warrants
• External rounds– Up rounds vs. Recaps
• Internal rounds– Potential pay to play when syndicate broken
• Venture Debt
Exit Strategy
• Acquisition– Strategic buyers– Financial buyers for high cash flow business
• IPO– Market appetite for venture-backed deals– Sarbanes Oxley
www.SoftBank.com
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