When Angel Investors Reject Your Plan
By Peter S. Cohan, entrepreneur.com, 02-07-2014
In 1992, John Gray published Men Are From Mars, Women Are From Venus, highlighting what he considered to be the different worldviews of women and men. In a USA Today interview last
year, Gray summarized his advice for men who want to retreat to their
man cave and women who want to talk about their day: "If we can
understand our differences in a positive way and
challenge our
assumptions whenever we have a negative feeling, our relationships will
be much better."
And while there are entrepreneurs and capital providers
of both sexes, it seems to me, they think so differently that they
might as well be from different planets. Venture capitalists and
founders can come into conflict because the founder wants to control the
company’s future and the VC wants to triple his or her money in three
years.
These two views come into extreme conflict when the venture
capitalist wants to fire the founder, thinking this individual is
blocking the startup’s growth. The investor wants to be rich and the
founder wants to remain king. This situation forces the founder to
decide whether to give up control so as to boost the odds that he will
get rich along with the investor.
The quest for common ground. When I think of my own
investing experience, I realize that it's amazing that founders and
capital providers ever find common ground. I recently declined to invest
in a company with a technical genius of high integrity because its
growth forecast was too slow -- only about 15 percent a year. And I
failed in my attempt to invest in a rapidly growing fitness-technology
company that appears poised to go public because there were so many
others who could better help accelerate its growth that were ahead of me
in the scramble to invest.
As is the case with any market activity, both parties try to assess
whether each will be better off if they cooperate. A founder fears the
loss of control that comes with accepting outside capital and accepts an
offer if the investor buys into the founder's vision and has a track
record of helping companies succeed.
A capital provider wants different things depending on where she sits
-- but mostly wants to at least triple her investment in three years
and to a varying extent wants to help the founder to boost the venture's
growth.
Differing agendas. A founder's attitude toward
capital providers also depends on how fast the startup is growing. If a
startup is growing very fast, the founder will be flooded with offers to
invest but will take money only from an investor who will help
accelerate that growth. If a startup is growing more slowly, the
founder will be happy to take capital from any investor willing to
accept such slow growth.
Capital providers vary in their attitudes toward startups. Lenders
almost never provide capital to startups -- except unwittingly when
founders borrow money from their credit cards and against their home
equity. In these cases, lenders are receiving superhigh interest rates
(and the right to seize the home and sell it) to compensate for the risk
that they might not get paid back.
Customers can help startups by paying them quickly or even buying an
equity stake, while suppliers may finance new companies by letting them
take more than 30 days to pay.
Friends and family are often willing to write checks to new companies
because they want to help a loved one to succeed. They think there's a
small chance they'll get a return on their investment but the primary
goal is to help the founder.
Angel investors write five- and six-figure checks for equity in
startups if the venture is likely to be acquired or go public
and if they believe that their expertise can help the venture grow.
The biggest pool of startup capital comes from venture capitalists,
though. Some venture capital firms might look at 1,000 companies for
every two or three that they invest in each year. They pick companies
based on whether the startup is targeting a small market that will get
big fast and whether they believe that the entrepreneur is a great CEO
who will figure out how to win a big share of that market.
Managing the delicate investor-founder relationship. Ultimately,
Gray's advice for better relationships applies: If founders and capital
providers invest the time to understand their objectives deeply, they
will have a productive relationship.
The key is to find activities where they can make the other party better off.
The founder who accepts venture capital, for example, must carefully
hire his boss -- the general partner who will sit on the
startup's board. That person must bring industry knowledge, a valuable
skill that can help the startup grow and a reputation for helping
founders during a crisis.
And the capital provider who invests in a startup must believe that
thanks to the growth of the market it's targeting and the talent of its
management team, the new company will further enrich the investor.
Source: http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/235258
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