Archive for the ‘ venture capital ’ Category

Did the Ontario Venture Fund finally pull the trigger?

Re-posted from the Wellington Financial Blog.

The rumours have been churning for weeks that the Ontario Venture Capital Fund has made its first financial commitment to the space, some 18 months  after its launch. The figure isn’t known (US$5 or US$7.5 million perhaps), but most agree that Mayfield Fund  was the first to get the nod from TD Capital Private Equity Partners  on behalf of Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and Innovation Minister John Wilkinson.

 

Here’s the skinny on them:

We have over $2.8 billion under management and a team of ten investing professionals. Since our founding in 1969, we have raised 13 funds, invested in more than 500 companies, taken more than 100 public, and nearly 100 have merged or were acquired.

 

Mayfield has a truly great reputation, and one hears that they’ve agreed to open up a one-person office in Toronto as part of the deal. The brightside of all of this is that Toronto may have a new player in town with global links. Prior Mayfield successes include Broadvision, Citrix, Concur, Genentech, Nuance, Sandisk, etc.

 

500 investments over 40 years works out to be 12.5 per annum worldwide, counting both leads and syndicates. Which means, based upon the size of our tech economy relative to the rest of the world, Canadian entrepreneurs might imagine one incremental lead a year from their own backyard as a result of this new footprint.

 

The OVCF was designed to help arrest the death of the local start-up economy (see prior representative post “MRI Fund rumors come true” June 11-08). Critics will wonder why the first venture fund that the Ontario government invested in was an American group (particularly when the 2nd press release said that between “80% and 100%” of the capital would go into “Ontario-focused funds” ), but I find no fault with the concept.

 

The only valid criticism will be that none of this information is ever made public. 1) How can entrepreneurs tap into the Province’s capital if no one knows who is deploying the $205 million of capital and where to access it?; and 2) How can taxpayers track the performance of the strategy if Ontario doesn’t have a specific website dedicated to performance data, as one would find at CPPIB ?

 

Ontario politicians and officials have unwittingly learned two lessons over the past year. First, that it is hard to raise capital: even with the Premier himself making calls, only a few corporate and institutional LPs joined the OVCF (all of which were gov’t regulated). The second closing, which would take the $205 million figure higher, was “anticipated” to happen in 2008  — but never came to pass.

 

And second, when LPs go to commit new capital to the venture space, it is so much easier to “buy IBM” than to support a domestic VC team. This decision makes it a bit more difficult for provincial politicians to criticize the CPP Investment Board for cutting back so dramatically on their Canadian venture investments over the past few years (see prior representative posts “CPPIB general partner Q1 2007 performance numbers” August 26-07 and “Doubling Down on Private Equity at CPP Investment Board” February 20-09).

 

Welcome, Mayfield! The industry is glad to have you onboard. If the rumour that TD Capital Private Equity Partners’ second commitment is also to a U.S.-based venture fund is also true, then the notion that the OVCF was designed to help save the Ontario VC industry will start to unravel in no short order. But that’s no knock on Mayfield’s capabilities.

 

According to the Ontario government’s own stats, venture capital and follow-on financings in Ontario hit a 12 year low in 2008, the year after “first time” VC financings in Ontario reached a similar nadir.

Transplanting the U.S. venture industry to Ontario just isn’t feasible. We still need local managers if Ontario is ever to have an Innovation Economy, whether or not Chrysler’s 3 Ontario-based plants survive the next 36 months. Having almost killed the Labour-sponsored Fund Industry, and agreed that the OVCF isn’t the “silver bullet”, where’s the balance of the Ontario government’s strategy?

 

MRM

 

Why Venture Capital is essential to the Canadian Economy

By Gilles Duruflé

CVCA has just released its comprehensive study on the impact of venture capital in Canada on economy, jobs and innovation.

The report (i) explains what venture capital is and how it adds values, (ii) describes how the Canadian venture capital industry developed compared to the US industry and how it differs from the US, (iii) measures its impact on the Canadian economy in terms of jobs, economic growth, innovation and exports, (iv) through various success stories, illustrates its long term “snowball effect” generating a pool of business angels, entrepreneurs and managerial talent which benefit the next generation of technology start-ups and, finally, (v) underlines the present contraction of the Canadian venture capital industry and its growing gap with the US industry which is a major threat for the Canadian technology and innovation ecosystem.

Here are the major findings

Between 1996 and 2007, Venture Capital investors financed 2,175 technology companies in Canada. 1,740 of those are operating in Canada in 2008. In addition, prior to 1996, it financed 15 companies that are still operating and have sales larger than $ 50 million in 2008.

On average these 1,755 companies have sales of $ 10.5 million and employment of 47 direct jobs. They are a mix of small, medium and large companies.

In aggregate, they generate sales of $ 18.5 billion:

  • $ 15.4 billion in ICT,
  • $ 1.9 billion in Life Sciences,
  • $ 1.0 billion in Other Technologies.

They employ 63,955 people in Canada and 17,760 abroad.

In addition, they generate 83,549 indirect jobs in Canada for a total of 147,504 direct and indirect jobs generated in Canada which represents 1.3% of all private sector employees in Canada. Indirect jobs are jobs generated in other companies through the purchase of goods and services from these companies. They are calculated on the base of industry-weighted employment multipliers provided by Statistics Canada.

The 51,050 direct jobs in Canada in ICT venture capital-backed companies represent 8% of the total sector employment and the 5,069 direct jobs in venture capital-backed Biotechnology companies represent 34% of total employment in that sector (graph 12).

Gross domestic product (GDP) is the measure of total value created in the country during one year. In 2007, the contribution of venture capital-backed companies to the Canadian GDP was    $ 14.5 billion, 0.94% of total GDP: 0.54 % directly through compensation, profits and taxes paid by these companies and 0.40% indirectly through the activity generated in other companies and sectors in Canada due to the goods and services bought by these companies.

The impact of venture capital-backed companies on the Canadian economy is however quite significant: 150,000 jobs (1.3% of all private sector employees) and nearly 1% of GDP. The impact on growth is also important, since venture capital-backed companies which responded to the survey grow more than 5 times faster than the overall economy. Moreover, their impact on innovation (R&D and patents) and exports is very substantial.

There are additional major benefits beyond these economic measures. (i) Successful venture capital-backed companies generate wealth and talent which are reinvested in the next generation of technology start-ups; (ii) they create serial entrepreneurs; (iii) they allow investments by business angels, and (iv) they provide a source of experienced management talent. Alongside business angels, venture capital funds play a critical role in linking these pools of wealth and talent to new start-up companies. This is what we call the “snowball effect” and it is illustrated by the success stories of Q9 Networks, Axcan Pharma, Taleo, Creo and ALI technologies.

But the report makes clear that the picture is not all rosy.  While we know that Canada’s venture capital sector is younger than its American equivalent, the figures in this report demonstrate that venture capital investment in Canada has declined relative to foreign markets. 

In the period from 2003 to the third quarter of 2008, relative to the size of the economy, the investment pace in Canada has been 60% of what it was in the US and the gap is widening.  Between 2003 and the first 3 quarters of 2008:

  • Venture capital investment in the US increased by 17%, from 0.18% to 0.21% of GDP
  • Venture Capital investment in Canada meanwhile decreased by 35%, from 0.13% to 0.085% of GDP and investment by Canadian funds in Canada from 0.10% to 0.06% of GDP

This decline in investment is strongly related to the decline in fund raising by the industry.

Given the importance of venture capital’s impact on innovation and on the overall economy, the report concludes on a call to all parties – governments, investors, venture capital funds and entrepreneurs – to work together to build a strong, permanent, Canadian venture capital industry.

Link to full report ENGLISH FRENCH

 

Bridgewater Systems: The Challenges of Mature Start-Ups

Original post on 20 February, 2009

http://venturelaw.blogspot.com/2009/02/bridgewater-systems-challenges-of.html

By Suzanne Dingwall 

I’ve been fascinated by the recent press surrounding Ottawa-based Bridgewater Systems, whose current circumstances illustrate well the challenges of a public start-up. 

Bridgewater is one of the last Ottawa telecom start-ups to attract significant venture capital, from Vengrowth, EagleOne/Newbury, Terry Matthews’ Wesley Clover and even from strategic investor Alcatel-Lucent, among others. The company had been publicly contemplating an IPO since the early 2000s, before finally biting the bullet in 2007, driven in part by the desire of some of its VCs to generate some cash from their investment. 

Here’s where things get interesting. Despite becoming a public company, Bridgewater’s board post-IPO looks more like a private board – comprised of VC nominees, management and in one case a strategic consultant to the business. Great set of board members, but their strengths all appear to lie on the operational side. Which perhaps explains why the Company appears to have left itself without any defensive mechanisms to stave off the overtures of hedge funds such as Crescendo Partners.

Why is being a target an issue? It’s not, if you think your company’s stock is trading at a reasonable value. But whose is at the moment? Even in the best of cases, boards today who have received attractive offers from hedge funds find themselves unable to make a recommendation to their shareholders, due to the reluctance of advisors to give fairness opinions in support of that recommendation. 

Public company boards often have in place tools that allow them to slow down or discourage proxy fights to ensure that the best price is obtained in these kinds of circumstances. At our firm, we try to ensure that our public clients understand the kinds of shareholder defenses that can be put in place from day one following an IPO – from the simplest (staggered board terms, which make it hard to replace the entire board in a proxy fight) to a shareholder rights plan and beyond.

As more and more start-ups making the transition to the public markets to accommodate the liquidity needs of their VCs, shareholder defenses are becoming a start-up issue, too. Public company boards differ from those of private ones in that they must split their focus between (a) oversight of operations and (b) awareness of stock market dynamics and how they might affect shareholder value. It’s important to expand the skill set of any company as it transitions from private to public to include someone who understands proxy fights and market dynamics. 

The irony here is that companies like Bridgewater, who spent their formative years working towards an exit for their first backers, may well find themselves on the liquidity merry-go-round once more. Hedge Funds generally seek the same return on investment within the same time frame as VCs. Stay tuned.

 

Another View: V.C. Investing Not Dead, Just Different

Original post on 9 February, 2009

On Dealbook

 

By Alan Patricof

 

Alan Patricof, managing director of Greycroft Partners, a venture capital firm that invests in digital media companies, offers this view of how venture capital investing has been changing:

When we conceived of the idea to start Greycroft Partners, we specifically took into consideration that the paradigm had changed since I first entered the venture capital business in 1969. At that time, and continuing for the next 30 years, the ultimate “win” for a venture capital investment was “going public.” It was tantamount to winning the Triple Crown or being awarded an Oscar for best performance.

At one point, the measurement for going public was merely an exciting technical achievement or a modest amount of revenue. This ultimately transmogrified in the late 1990s to an “idea,” the word Internet attached to the name or description, or some sexy romanticizing of a multiple of future projected revenues.

 

Clearly, West Coast manifestations with brand-name venture capital firms attached to an initial public offering helped to exacerbate the phenomenon of a “hot issue.” Legitimate efforts were made by regulators to control the allocations of these new issues to prevent unfair treatment of the average investor who was shut out of the process and to dampen speculative excesses.

 

Nevertheless, “going public” remained the ultimate goal for most start-ups in spite of the fact that more than one-third of the actual exits for venture capitalists were through mergers and acquisitions. Today, that percentage has shifted even further to 80-20 in favor of M.&A. exits.

 

The underlying support for all of this “irrational exuberance” was the myriad small and mid-sized investment banking firms that thrived across the country in the 1970s and 1980s, primarily in New York City and San Francisco, but also in hometown America. They included names like C.E. Unterberg Towbin; Marron, Eden & Sloss; Carter Berlind; Potoma & Weill; Fahnestock; Wessels, Arnold; Adams Harkness & Hill; Robertson Stephens; Montgomery Securities (the old firm with that name);Laird & Company; D.H. Blair; Raymond James; Black & Company; Robinson Humphrey; Loeb Rhoades & Company; G.H. Walker and, of course, Hambrecht & Quist.

 

These names filled the map with a whole slew of firms willing to take you public with a good story, raising $10 million, $5 million or even $2 million, with a total market value of $10 million to $50 million. It was a great time to be in the venture business and young companies had access to angels, A rounds, B rounds and I.P.O.s at a relatively young age of development. The biotechnology, semiconductor, disc drive and personal computer industries were nurtured on a system of raising capital that supported young companies with access to capital. It was the time of Data General, DEC, Intel, Genentech andSeagate, to mention just a few.

 

Small investment firms were the lifeblood of the new-issue business. They not only took these companies public, but also made aftermarkets in the shares, at often-times egregious spreads, which created a viable aftermarket and generated sufficient profits to make up for the small floats. This trading “over the counter,” as it was referred to, was done over the phone. When markets went down, one would often hear “1,000 shares offered — no bids.” It was in many respects the Wild West.

 

Electronic trading and the development of Nasdaq gradually served to reduce these spreads on net trades and lowered commission rates for the others. This made for a somewhat more orderly market, but also reduced profitability on individual transactions for the underwriting firms and market makers.

I remember specifically taking a medical electronics company, Datascope, public in 1971 through C.E. Unterberg Towbin with an initial offering of 100,000 shares at $19 a share. The total market capitalization was $10 million. The same firm had brought Intel public the year before with a not much greater offering and market value.

 

It wasn’t until the 1980s and 1990s, when offering sizes began to increase, that big investment firms like Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs and First Boston started to recognize the potential in the market for young venture-backed companies. Such names as Diasonics, Cordis, Cisco and Network Appliance, along with Apple, AOL andMicrosoft, made for a robust marketplace.

 

In the late 1990s, the market for high-tech I.P.O.s reached a series of crescendos with valuations based on multiples of projected revenues in the hereafter. It was a heady time and reached such levels that new issues were often oversubscribed by multiples of 5 to 10 times, and there was no easier way to get rich quick than by getting an allocation of an I.P.O.

 

During this period, the game gradually changed as many of the aforementioned smaller investment firms either went out of business or merged with one of the “four horsemen” as they were commonly known, or a handful of other survivors.

 

The character of the Nasdaq market also changed. The big players began to assume a more significant role towards the latter half of the 1990s as the size of offerings increased to $25 million, $50 million or even $100 million, with valuations of $200 million, $500 million or even $1 billion, partly because there was so much demand for the new flavor of the day — the Internet — with all its hyperbole of promise of growth and riches.

 

But the larger the deal, the greater the capital requirements for underwriting and making aftermarkets. The economics of the business had changed and it was no longer possible to do small deals, so small firms could not compete. The bubble finally burst in 2001 and virtually overnight the I.P.O. market dried up as the public realized that in many cases “the emperor had no clothes.”

 

This situation was exacerbated by a gradual reduction in the pool of analysts who covered small companies with small market capitalizations, as the costs just were not justified by the volume of trading. In addition, the regulators put up Chinese walls between the bankers and the analysts, making it much more difficult to follow small companies. Many companies that had managed to go public found they had no coverage and few market makers. Their shares gradually became part of the living dead: a public company with all the attendant regulatory requirements and no interest from investors.

 

The collapse of the Internet bubble only served to compound the problem as public interest in I.P.O.s dwindled to a trickle as their losses increased. Then, in 2002, in the wake of the Enron, WorldCom and Tyco debacles, the government intervened with the passage of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, which imposed tougher rules on corporations. This only added further to the cost of an I.P.O. in terms of legal and accounting requirements for both the issuer and underwriter.

 

The sum and substance of all of these developments is that the minimum economic level to bring a company public today is at least a $50 million offering at a $250 million market value. With realism back in the market and a return to rational metrics, like multiples of revenues and, better yet, profits, venture capitalists have had to face the hard reality that it is highly unlikely that taking a company from start-up to a point where it can justify this type of market capitalization in a three-, five- and even seven-year time frame is realistic, except in a limited number of situations.

 

For these reasons, I believe that the paradigm has changed for the venture business. We can no longer realistically expect the same kinds of absolute returns that were achieved in the past through a quick turnaround from start-up to liquidity through an I.P.O. Rather, I believe that most of the companies that venture capitalists are funding today will find an exit through merger or acquisition. And if we expect to achieve a return in a reasonable time frame of three to five years, we are probably looking at a sale price of $20 million to $100 million. This is the valuation range where most young companies are being acquired.

 

To compensate for these lower gross return expectations, we must establish initial valuations, usually in the single digits, that can provide an adequate multiple return and internal rate of return. Inevitably, this suggests that a true venture capital firm should be reverting to smaller-scale funds and restricting individual investments in early-stage companies to accommodate the realities of the exit opportunity. Larger funds can focus on later-stage growth opportunities that can absorb greater amounts of capital where there still exists the possibility of taking companies public in a timely manner.

 

This, in turn, requires a more disciplined approach to investing. Entrepreneurs must be guided to use capital more efficiently and we must avoid falling into the trap of C, D and even E and F rounds of funding, with successive layers of participating preferred, in order to prove an ill-conceived concept is viable. Equally concerning are the myriad projects that should not appropriately be financed in the first place by a venture capitalist. (I worry about the myriad alternative energy companies that seem to be the next wave of capital-consuming enterprises that may just be beyond our capabilities in view of the limited exit opportunities.)

 

Entrepreneurs themselves seem to be catching onto the new risk/reward equation and seem far more willing, at an early stage, to opt for a sale at a lower valuation and lock in their gains, figuring that they are young and can repeat the process later with another start-up.

 

If the scenario I have described strikes a chord of reality, then until someone solves the cost of going public and increases the liquidity in aftermarket trading, we as an industry have to downsize our expectation for exits as well as downsize the size of our funds. We still can produce significant returns for investors, but we cannot accommodate the size to which funds have grown in the past decade.

Venture capital is definitely not dead or even ill; rather it has just taken on a new set of dynamics. Entrepreneurs in this country are stronger than ever, and venture capitalists are the ones to nurture them!

 

Venture returns shine through

Original post on 4 February, 2009

http://www.wellingtonfund.com/blog/2009/02/04/venture-returns-shine-through

By Mark McQueen

I was asked to attend a meeting last month with a well-known academic. The topics centred around venture capital returns, labour-sponsored fund structures (LSIF), and the wisdom of concept that “less venture capital means better venture capital”.

It wasn’t the most productive of meetings. The Phd Professor didn’t seem interested in being challenged, and since I hadn’t read EVERYTHING he had written over the prior 10 years, we were somehow not appropriately equipped to engage him on his points of view.

Although not uncommon his thesis is remarkably simplistic, despite the attempts to dress it up in Ivy-covered complexity: the world needs more funds such as Sequoia and Kleiner Perkins, not small Canadian venture funds and LSIFs. The LSIF model drives him particularly crazy, primarily because no where else in the industrialized world is the approach utilized.

I took exception to that, citing the U.S. business development companies and the U.K. governments’ fostering of that VC market as examples of retail participation. “Those haven’t worked out, either” was the reply.

And then there’s the issue of returns. One of the key complaints by marquee academics and the C.D. Howe Institute has been that the Canadian venture fund returns are “poor” (see prior post “What do LPs want?” June 4-08). I pointed out to the Professor that venture and LSIF returns certainly swamped the S&P, NASDAQ, the Russell 2000, etc.

“Ya, now that the market has crashed,” was the rebuttal. Not true, but I bit my tongue. Venture returns exceeded all other asset classes long before the Dow and TSX crashed (see prior post “Buyout vs. Venture returns” February 20-08).

VCs have to suffer for the impact that the Tech bubble burst has had on their post-2000 returns, but public market PMs get a free pass when their market explodes? Reminds me of the scientists who throw out trial data that doesn’t fit their conclusion.

Over the past week, the Q3 2008 private equity and venture capital returnshttp://i.ixnp.com/images/v3.66.1/t.gif have been released, and they continue to tell the tale. Venture capital still beats Buyout and Public Market Investing over the long term. And, for the first time in a while, the one year returns are also superior:

All Venture:

1 year: (1.6%)
3 year: 6.6%
5 year: 8.6%
10 year: 17.3%
20 year: 17.1%

All Buyout:

1 year: (8.2%)
3 year: 7.2%
5 year: 12.2%
10 year: 7.3%
20 year: 11.2%

NASDAQ:

1 year: (21.4%)
3 year: (1.1%)
5 year: 3.1%
10 year: 2.1%
20 year: 8.7%

S&P 500:

1 year: (22.0%)
3 year: (1.7%)
5 year: 3.2%
10 year: 1.4%
20 year: 7.5%

One subset of the buyout figures is particularly striking. The one year return for “Mega Buyout” funds (more than US$1 billion under management) are negative 9.7%; a performance far worse than every venture category early/balanced/late stage. Which means that anybody who put more than $5 billion of commitments into that particular class in 2006 and 2007 is unhappy. Both in absolute and relative ways.

Which large Canadian institution was writing those cheques, while backing away from venture at the same time? If you are a regular around this space, you won’t even require a clue.

MRM

Government Investment in Venture Capital: Should There Be Rules?

By Suzanne Dingwall

Another election is over, which means the planning for the next federal budget has begun. Entrepreneurs should be taking this opportunity to place themselves at the forefront of the innovation debate, and grabbing some of the money that the government keeps allocating to research and venture capital.

Before we do that, however, we should ask ourselves whether current government initiatives can be shaped or adjusted to provide some near term relief. Take the money provided by government (through “fund of funds” programs) to venture capital funds to disburse to entrepreneurs: should there be some checks and balances on how it’s spent?

This is not an insignificant issue. Provincial “funds of funds” such as Ontario’s Technology Innovation Fund, Alberta’s Enterprise Corporation, and the like have been allocated hundreds of millions of taxpayer dollars in the aggregate to reinvest in venture capital funds. In addition, in February, the federal government also gave the BDC another $75 million in fresh capital to invest directly in high growth companies (those of you who missed that lifeline should be talking to them). Should government-provided venture capital be treated differently than money provided to VCs from private sources?

If the cycles of the last ten years have taught us anything, it’s that economic recession can lead to aggressive pricing and investing terms from venture capital investors. Down round valuations, ratchets and protective mechanisms – all the old standbys. I have even heard that the multiple liquidation preference (where an investor must get 3-4x his investment back before any other shareholder receives proceeds from a company sale) is back in town. Is it fair for those remaining angels and VCs to take advantage of market conditions? Of course. But is it appropriate to allow them to do so when the funds they are investing came from us, the taxpayers? I don’t think so.

How are Canadian entrepreneurs protected from being goudged? There needs to be some kind of oversight mechanism which will allow government to pressure VC recipients to behave in a reasonable fashion, above the market frenzy. To be specific: no multiple liquidation preferences. No usurious interest rates. And while we’re at it: if the purpose underlying these funds is to foster strong homegrown investment funds, why not insist that VCs who receive government funds embark on mandatory education, so that there is a minimum standard of financial, operational and governance competency? Surely the government entities disbursing money can insist on some strings attached to their commitments.

No question, these kinds of strings may impact the IRR of any VC who takes government money. But perhaps the best way for VCs to look at this funding is as a taxpayer bridge loan. We taxpayers don’t need to see a 30% IRR; we’re just trying to bridge VCs to the next phase in the cycle. If we get our money back, that will be perfectly fine. In the near term, however, we’ll also have kept current entrepreneurs who’ve already proven themselves in the game, with a meaningful stake in the businesses they’ve built.

Canadian Start-Ups: Where’s Our Bailout?

By Suzanne Dingwall

Originally posted at Venture Law Lines

This week, the Canadian Venture Capital Association issued a call to federal political parties to support technology commercialization programs. I don’t know exactly what “issuing a call” entails, but it seems to me that the entrepreneurial community had better get on board with its own call right away, and that call should be: “We’d like a piece of that action, too, please.”

Although Canadian entrepreneurs have built a grassroots community that other regions can only dream about, we’ve overlooked bringing into the fold those best-equipped to provide relief from the current venture capital drought – federal policy makers. We complain, but we don’t necessarily engage. And this oversight has allowed the venture capital community to co-opt the current funding crisis as exclusively theirs. The result? Government initiatives that, for the most part, propose to stimulate innovation by propping up the venture capital community first, leaving entrepreneurs to rely on trickle down benefits when those funds invest. This needs to change.

To be clear, I agree with the CVCA’s proposals for shoring up venture capital. There is no question that the venture capital industry needs help; we will not succeed as an innovation nation unless we have a strong venture capital class. I agree that the government must create a federal fund of funds to subsidize the venture capital industry. But this alone won’t bail out my clients – high tech companies that have hired, have built product, and are now starved for growth capital.

Trickle-down economics take time to have an effect, and it’s no different here. It will take time for any government money that is earmarked today for a fund of funds investing to churn through the economy to businesses. Before an entrepreneur can see relief, that money has to: (a) churn from the government to a fund of funds that the government forms, then staffs with a team (in Ontario, this took nearly 8 months from announcement to closing); (b) be deployed by the fund of funds to one or more VCs (think another 6-18 months); and (c) be invested by the VC in a company (think another 6-12 months). In other words, any money earmarked for the venture capital community today is perhaps 1.5 to 2 years from making its way into the hands of an entrepreneur.

Entrepreneurs need a near-term bailout now. I can hear the groans from Bay Street at the idea of any initiative that would create a government portfolio of venture-capital like investments, and I don’t disagree with the sentiment. But this seems to me the lesser of all evils, given the opportunity cost of waiting for trickle-down relief. Can we afford to lose another innovation cycle by starving the entrepreneurs out there today?

So, grass-roots community: it’s time to find our government voice. Let’s say something, and say it soon. If there are initiatives afoot, let’s be afoot more loudly. Maybe it’s even time we asked for our own government funding, like the National Angel Association and others have received from the MRI, to create our own policy watchdog network.

But what we cannot do is rely on organizations for other industries to carry the day for us. Drafting only works if: (a) you’re on a bicycle, and (b) the rider in front of you is headed in the same direction.

How Startups will save Venture Capital in Canada

Last night I pitched the audience for the second time on How Startups Will Save Venture Capital in Canada. I first gave this talk in Moncton at Third Tuesday NB and the response was great.

The title is “Why Startups Will Save Canadian Venture Capital”, and it doesn’t let anyone off the hook. It isn’t a criticism, but instead it is an analysis and a call to action for both Angels, VCs and Entrepreneurs. Things are pretty busted up right now and it is time to start talking about what we need to do to make a difference.

My thesis is simple: Startups just aren’t getting started in Canada nearly as often as they should. This isn’t about education levels, creativity or even for a lack of cash floating around this country. This is about ambition.

This is about hustle.

Most entrepreneurs have heard that things aren’t great for VCs right now. LPs are shaky, some funds are crashing, others are just throwing their hands up, and for a lot of startups it seems like no matter how many people you pitch, you aren’t getting anywhere. I tried to put some hard number behind that, and they paint a scary picture.

This goes two ways, and nobody wants to sit around while we all whine and moan that nobody can get funded. It’s time to build companies that are worth something.

We need to focus on building our local startup communities more than ever. Local communities are important because they are far easier for local Angels and Entrepreneurs to connect to, and they also act as a great filter to help find people who need national and international exposure.

Smart funders are going to see these communities as huge opportunities. There ROI for VCs getting connected to the startup community is not only obvious, but well documented. In the US we see VCs hustling in a way that you just don’t see much of here in Canada. Every time I hear a VC rant on about how Canadian entrepreneurs aren’t aggressive enough, it drives me nuts, because they are no different.

It is great to see Third Tuesday’s taking off on the east coast, and events like DemoCampEdmonton really starting to get going (there are 90 signups for their next one!), but we also need to focus on making sure that there are Startup-focused events where people need to answer to questions about their market, operations and sales.

If we can get early stage companies off the ground, then the outlook for VC in Canada starts to look a lot different. Canadian funds will have to compete against American money, but they will start to get to see great ideas and entrepreneurs at the early stage. There are a few missing pieces to this plan, but the point is that it is time for us all to stop fretting and just get on with it.

If we can build amazing startups, the money will find its way.

This is my manifesto for saving Venture Capital. It isn’t sexy, but it just might work.

Venture Fairs: Are they worth it?

The Canadian Innovation Exchange took place in Toronto recently. It’s one of a host of similar conferences where startup entrepreneurs pitch their stories to VCs. The topic for the day is: Are these venture fairs worthwhile?

The short answer is: it depends. You should go to these fairs if:

  • You’re a 1st time entrepreneur, have not raised VC before, and / or just don’t have connections to book meetings with VCs directly
  • You have the spare time to go and sit in the sessions and learn
  • You’re a professional and looking to get clients in the space
  • You are a speaker (on a panel, not pitching your company)

Don’t expect to hook a VC at this show. For most investors, these shows are for investor-investor networking. The company pitches can be a distraction. This is a shame because the companies there make a real effort. I’m generalizing of course, and I’m sure there are many VCs who really do check out these companies, but on the whole, it’s not their top priority.

Personally, I avoid them. The last time I went was 2004. There is a prevailing view that the best companies and most experienced entrepreneurs skip these shows. Still, for every rule, there’s an exception: There are some good companies there this week that include 1st time VC-backed entrepreneurs like Ben as well as seasoned pros like Austin. So, their presence alone contradicts my opinion.

So, I guess it’s up to you at the end of the day. Go if you need to build your relationships and / or learn about VC. Don’t go if your goal is to land the VC that will fund you. You may be disappointed…

Mark MacLeod

http://startupcfo.ca

The Art(istic side) of the Deal

Andy Nulman, Co-founder & President of Airborne Mobile.

Please visit his blog by clicking here.

Although I have spent many hours in meetings with, and accepted impressive sums of money from, VCs, I must admit that I am kind of a “fish out of water” in your world. Other than the perfunctory pitch sessions where I feel like I’m on autopilot or trial, the words I’ve exchanged with VCs over the years have been essentially limited to “Thank you” and “We will be EBITDA positive by next quarter.”

You see, I’m the “creative guy.” The “idea man.” The necessary evil for the return on your investment. I used to think that my type was about as relevant to you guys as a sea squid is to a hot air balloon, but after seeing Dr. Richard Bruno (a Venture Partner at iNovia Capital) speak at a VC conference a year or so ago, I realized just how very important I am. Not only to the end result…but to the process of getting there.

Of particular interest in Dr. Bruno’s dissertation was his “Bizplans-to-Bucks” timeline, in which he takes entrepreneurs down this startling path of reality:

1,000 Business Plans Are Written

150 Are Moderately Credible

50 Are Interesting To Read

20 Undergo Due Diligence

5 Get Funded

1 Makes Money

The big shock here is not that only 1 in 1000 makes money; the big shock is the qualifier of “Interesting To Read” as a crucial VC criteria.

Many times, as entrepreneurs try to appeal to their corporate audience, their brilliant ideas are sanded down and neutered by VC-speak. In trying to suck up to their hoped-for lifeline, they take an exciting project and render it lame, dull and, worst-of-all, unsellable.

I have a theory that goes “Everyone’s a Kid in Disneyland.” What I mean by it is that no matter how important or powerful you are, when you’re amongst flying Dumbos, giant Mickey Mouses, Space Mountains and Towers of Terror, you are stripped of all conceit and are a mere soda-sipping, popcorn-munching regular folk. Applied to the boardroom, Venture Capitalists are not robots; they are (for the most part) human beings like you and I, and as susceptible to the right excitement, creativity and sell job as the next guy.

Thus, entrepreneurs shouldn’t worry about adding some colour, some life, some pizzazz to their pitches. To put it into financial terms, it does not diminish the return; it compounds the interest.

And as Dr. Bruno points out, it may be the difference between being considered for funding…or ending up in the recycling bin.

Taking this into account, I have a little personal anecdote.

When Garner Bornstein and I put together our first business plan for Airborne Mobile (then known as Airborne Entertainment), in one of the pitch slides, I wrote that he and I were professionals with “pristine reputations.”

“Pristine?” he said. “You don’t use the word ‘pristine’ in a VC pitch! They’ll laugh us out of their offices!”

I gave in on about 14 other points in the presentation, as Garner was way better versed in the way of VCs than I, but I held my ground tough on “pristine.”

Cut to presentation day, and the VCs are sitting like statues as we plowed through our very grey presentation. Essentially, this was a one-way conversation tinged with gallons of flop-sweat.

Then came the fateful slide.

“Pristine!” Suddenly, one of the mannequins came to life. “Now there’s a word you don’t see too often!”

All of a sudden, the guys were animated and discussing the meaning of “pristine.” This led to questions about our past, and to hypothetical situations and projections of the business-to-be.

I looked over at Garner, who had a huge smile on his face, and gave me what soon came to be known as his trademark “life is strange” shoulder shrug. We were back in the game…

So we became one of the 20.

Then one of the five.

And best yet, we became the One.

So go crazy, you entrepreneurs. All you’ve got to lose is someone else’s money.

–Andy Nulman


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