Archive for the 'Due Diligence' Category

The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Raising Venture Capital

The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Raising Venture Capital

My current objective is to create the entrepreneur’s manual for raising venture capital.  The posts below are parts of this manual, organized in the chronological order of the fundraising process.

I generally post on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

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Disclaimer
Disclaimer

Venture Trends
The Longtail Of Venture: Why Some Companies Will Continue To Need VC And Other Won’t

Starting Your Company
Your Company Is Who It Hires
First Mover Disadvantage

Picking The VCs
Why VC Websites Stink
The Advantages Of A Local VC
Consider Available Capital When Selecting VCs
Types Of Risks VCs Take

Preparing Your Materials
What An Executive Summary Is
PPT Presentations Are Not Executive Summaries
The Importance Of Geography
Value Proposition/ Pain Point:  Make The Case
Addressable Market:  Not Market Size
Addressable Market:  Making The Estimate
Disruptive Technologies Can Shrink Addressable Markets
Competitive Landscape Overview
Barriers:  Get The Story Right
The Significance Of Patents
Major Achievements
Projections:  Nothing To Stress About
VC Financial Performance Requirements
Overview Of Funding Status
Executive Summary Management Bios
The Significance Of Grey Hair

Getting The Meeting
Why VCs May Call
Why VCs Don’t Sign NDAs
Submitting Your Executive Summary
How Not To Submit An Executive Summary
Why An Executive Summary
Who You Should Submit Your Executive Summary To
Why A VC May Be Slow To Respond
Why You Might Not Get The Meeting
VCs Have Flashback Syndrome
Another Reason You May Be Rejected: Portfolio Concentration
Entrepreneurs Should Ask Why Not
Why VCs May Not Share Insights
Being Invited For A Call
Be Nice To Assistants (Most Recent Post)

The First Meeting
Who You Should Bring To Your First Meeting
Sit On One Side Of The Table
The Objective Of The First Meeting
The Investment Overview Slide
Competition:  Provide Insight
Management:  Competency
Enlisting Your Complements
Management:  Compatibility
Good Management Takes Less Time
Concerns About Successful Entrepreneurs
Build Rapport
Pitch Is Not The Right Word
Proving You Can Execute
Figuring Out The ‘How’
Give Straight Talk
Expect Straight Talk
Present Flexibly
Solve The VC’s Issues
Do Not Stand While Presenting
Do Not Ramble
Do Not Name Drop
Don’t Focus On The Exit
Be Careful About Over-Selling Fundraising Interest
Follow-up Items
The End Of Meeting VC Pitch
Ask Questions At The End Of The Meeting
Ask The VC About Follow-On Investing
What To Do When The Meeting Ends

After The First Meeting
What To Expect After The First Meeting
Why VCs Don’t Always Cut You Loose
What To Do When Your Company Is Being Monitored

How VCs Make Decisions Internally
How To Take Advantage Of The VC Decision Making Process
Creating Momentum
Maintaining Momentum:  Create Urgency
Find A Champion
Make Younger VCs Your Champions
Respond Quickly To Follow-up Questions
VCs Are Not Like Your Parents
Reading VC Interest
Hear Feedback
Submit A Detailed Model
If You Can’t Create Interest Move On
Getting Your Executive Summary Distributed To Other VCs

Why A VC Might Not Share Your Executive Summary With Other VCs

Sharing Your Executive Summary With Anonymous VCs

The Due Diligence Phase
Why VCs Conduct Due Diligence
Why You Should Facilitate Due Diligence
Types Of Due Diligence Meetings
Exploratory Meetings:  Open Your Kimono
Manage VC Expectations About Operating Performance
Evolve

Sharing Your Cap Table
Signs You’re Close To A Term Sheet
Doing Due Diligence On The VC

Due Diligence - What to Expect

from:
http://altgate.typepad.com/blog/2007/10/due-diligence–.html

Due Diligence - What to Expect

You just signed a term sheet for your first round of venture capital.  Congratulations!  Now what?

While every fund has their own process and each deal works a bit differently, what you can expect between signing a term sheet and closing the round (to which I refer in aggregate as “diligence”) basically falls into four buckets:

  1. Confirmatory due diligence.  What this means is the investor is switching gears from “why should I do this deal?” mode to “why shouldn’t I do this deal?” mode.  There is a pretty standard set of items the investor will request.  Click here for the generic diligence request list that Softbank uses.  Depending upon the stage of the company, there are usually a 100+ documents that need to be collected and delivered.  I’m a big fan of using Microsoft Sharepoint to manage document delivery.  In fact, I recommend using it to deliver documents from the beginning of the fund raising process.  For example, when a VC asks for your “financial model” you should point them to Sharepoint instead of emailing the file.  One benefit is you can check who’s accessed the file and you can turn off access if they pass.  For $40 per month you can buy a hosted version of Sharepoint.  I’ve used this company before with good results.
  2. Syndication.  For many deals, particularly the first institutional round, the full amount of the raise won’t be spoken for.  For example, if the raise is $8MM, the lead investor might be committed to $4-5MM.  Syndication is the process of finding one or more additional investors to complete the round.  If you had the good fortune of receiving multiple term sheets to begin with (and assuming you like one of the others) the easiest way to complete the syndicate is to invite those folks to participate on your newly signed term sheet.  Failing that, you should reach out to the firms with whom you got close, but not all the way.  The expectation is that the entrepreneur leads and directs the syndication process.  The good news is that having a signed term sheet (hopefully from a reputable firm) makes it a lot easier than getting the term sheet to begin with.
  3. Documentation.  Generating about 2-inches of legal agreements codifying the investment.  Usually company counsel will take the lead on drafting documents; although it’s not unheard of for the lead investor to do the first draft.  You should ask that the syndicate use one law firm, but if they insist on each using there own, plan on the process taking a week or two longer than it would otherwise.
  4. Closing.  Signing the paperwork and wiring the money.  Yeah!  It used to be that closings were held in person at some attorney’s office (at least that was my experience early in my career) but today that almost never happens.  The closing is usually held over a couple of days after everything has been agreed and then they sign and fax their signature pages to company counsel.  Depending upon how many signatures, it can take a few days to complete.

It is rare (although not unheard of) for a deal to fall apart after signing of a term sheet.  I did an informal poll of some VCs and found that less than 10% of early stage VC deals fall apart and fail to close.  The best thing you can do as an entrepreneur to avoid this is to ask the VC (ideally right before signing the term sheet) what remaining concerns they have and what diligence they expect to perform.  The more explicit you are in asking these questions, the more likely you are to avoid surprises on either side of the table.

Diligence typically takes anywhere from 30 to 60 days, although it’s not unheard of to go longer, particularly if the company and lead investor still need to finalize the syndication of the round.