Startup Funding

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I’m not Raising Funding Now But in Six Months I Will Be . . .

While unforeseen events can overtake a startup, most CEOs simply don’t plan ahead. For every $1M you want to raise, it will take you one calendar year to raise it. Most of the time, an entrepreneur who approaches me is raising funding today and is looking for a check now.  In some cases, they need their funding within the next thirty to sixty days or something bad is going to happen. Most startups end up educating their investors during the fundraise. I once had an entrepreneur come to me saying, “I’m not raising funding now, but in six months I will be. May I keep you informed of our progress?” Of course, I said yes, because I wanted to see how it turned out. Over the next six months, the CEO sent me monthly updates about his progress. When he launched his fundraise formally, he was able to close it in just a few months.  He used those six months to educate the prospective investors about his deal.   This is a great technique for introducing your deal to a prospective investor.  More investors sign up to track along since there’s no pressure to engage the fundraise. It takes four touches or more to introduce your deal and educate the investor about it.  It’s a great idea to start that process sooner rather than later in your fundraise. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Tomorrow’s Valuation for Today’s Fundraise

I recently saw a pitch deck from a seed-stage startup which had a small amount of revenue. The deck claimed a valuation of $50M because a similar company exited at that valuation. I asked his valuation and he claimed $50M because “that’s what my company will be worth.” I reminded him that the example company exited with a $50M valuation had $15M in revenue at the time. He said, “I’ll have that too.” I often see entrepreneurs calculating valuations for today’s’ fundraise using tomorrow’s revenue. Today’s revenue determines today’s valuation. Your business tomorrow determines your valuation tomorrow. Some entrepreneurs have a strong mental block around this. They think their company will one day be worth more, so they should have that valuation today. Investors match investments with the current state of the business. As you increase sales, team, product, and IP, your valuation goes up. The takeaway here- only raise as much as you need to get to the next level. Otherwise, you’ll be raising more funding on a lower valuation which means you’re giving up more equity than necessary. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five Competitive Advantages: Virality

Competitive advantage increases revenue by 30% over the competition or decreases cost by 30%. Virality is different from Network Effects. Virality has users inviting other users to join.  Network Effects has the platform increasing in value based on more users participating. I once had a CEO tell me “I wish I had designed for virality rather than revenue.” If you have virality built into your product, revenue will follow. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: Recurring revenue Channel access Platform-based solution instead of singular products Network effects in action (the value of the product increases with the number of users) Virality (not the same as network effects; users invite other users) Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five Competitive Advantages: Network Effects

Competitive advantage increases revenue by 30% over the competition or decreases cost by 30%. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: Recurring revenue Channel access Platform-based solution instead of singular products. Network effects in action (the value of the product increases with the number of users) Virality (not the same as network effects; users invite other users) Most businesses increase in value as the customer base grows as it validates the product/service and encourages others to use it. If a business can harness that customer base and turn it into a community that more aggressively attracts other users then it’s a competitive advantage.  Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five CompetitiveAdvantages: Platform Based Solution

Competitive advantage increases revenue by 30% over the competition or decreases cost by 30%. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: Recurring revenue Channel access Platform based solution instead of singular products. Network effects in action–the value of the product increases with the number of users Virality (not the same as network effects) (users invite other users) A platform-based solution is a competitive advantage over a single product as it provides a solution that works for more than just one type of customer. Platform solutions have a lower cost than single products because you can reuse the research, design, architecture, packaging, and other aspects. Platforms also reduce the cost of supporting the customer as you can reuse support resources. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five Competitive Advantages: Channel Access

Competitive advantage increases revenue by 30% over the competition or decreases cost by 30%. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: Recurring revenue Channel access Platform-based solution instead of singular products. Network effects in action (the value of the product increases with the number of users) Virality (not the same as network effects; users invite other users) Channel access indicates you can connect to a group of customers that others cannot access. Perhaps your previous job gave you contacts throughout the industry that you can now leverage for your startup. Perhaps you have found a social media channel, SEO, email, other marketing channels that work well. It takes some experimenting to find that channel. In your pitch to investors, you want to highlight this as it’s a key differentiator. It may not be a sustainable advantage for the long haul, but it can be crucial to launching your startup. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five Competitive Advantages: Recurring Revenue

Competitive advantage increases revenue by 30% over the competition or decreases cost by 30%. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: –Recurring revenue –Channel access –Platform-based solution instead of singular products. –Network effects in action–the value of the product increases with the number of users –Virality (not the same as network effects) (users invite other users) In today’s world, you would think every business has recurring revenue.  Yet, I find most businesses who are raising funding did not structure their business that way. Recurring revenue helps your business in several ways. It opens up your business to new customers who could not afford your product previously because the one-time payment was too high. By breaking the payment into smaller steps, more customers can afford it. It provides a known revenue stream so you can plan your business better as you know how much you will have coming in. Overall this should increase your revenue in the long run by 30%. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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Five Competitive Advantages for Building a Winning Business Model

When I ask an entrepreneur what their competitive advantage is, most point to their product and say it’s better. Of course, they spend ten minutes citing anecdotal stories to “prove” it. My definition of a competitive advantage is that it increases in revenue by 30% over the competition or a decrease in cost by 30%. Here are five sources of competitive advantage: –Channel access –Recurring revenue –Platform based solution instead of singular products. –Network effects in action–the value of the product increases with the number of users –Virality (not the same as network effects, users invite other users) These advantages give your business the ability to scale. Scale comes from revenue increasing faster than cost. In raising funding, competitive advantages can make the difference in closing an investor. The key is to quantify the effects of the advantage in dollars. If you just say you have it then it will convince no one. You must demonstrate with numbers. Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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The Liquidity Challenge in the Startup Funding World

I remember the last ACA (Angel Capital Association) meeting I attended. The theme was exits and how to achieve them. It seemed like every angel or angel group had a list of the deals they’ve been in for more than ten years. The sessions focused on helping the entrepreneur achieve an exit. More than a few of the sessions talked about how to deal with entrepreneurs who no longer wanted an exit. It appears that if the entrepreneur can gain an above market salary that in many cases they’ll make more if they stay with the business for ten years or more than if they sell the business. One of the key metrics to monitor is salaries of the C-level team of your startup and compare it against market rate. It should be about 70% to 80% of the market rate. If it’s above 100% then you’ve got a problem. First, those are funds that should be growing the business. Second, the startup has most likely given up on a high dollar return on selling the business and is now taking their exit through the payroll plan. Having talked to many an entrepreneur about achieving an exit, I find that about half want an exit but can’t get to one with a large influx of new capital or they don’t want one at all. Either way, it’s a problem. There’s a saying in the financial world, “Getting into the deal is easy. It’s the getting out part that is hard.” Hall T. Martin is the founder of TEN Capital and a builder of entrepreneur ecosystems by startup funding through angel networks, funding portals, syndicates, and more. Connect with him about fundraising, business growth, and emerging technologies

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