Jun
20
Do’s and Don’ts with Venture Capitalists – Dave McGinn – CFO Agilix Labs, Inc.
Filed Under Business Ideas, Resources, Principles, etc.
Do’s
- Do 1: Good presentation that addresses
- Market Risk – The TAM (Total Addressable Market) should be at least 1 billion for VCs to pay any attention to you.
- Product Risk – Why your product has the qualities to capture the market share you claim it will.
- Execution Risk – Why your team can execute.
- Financial Risk – That’s what the VCs are for.
- Do 2: Have firm grasp on valuation
- DCF – discounted cash flows
- Training 12 month revenue – In technology, 1 million revenue trail makes the company worth 3-5 million.
- Projected revenues 1-2X value.
- Acquisitions – In the same industry with similar characteristics and revenue capabilities.
- It’s best to ues a triangular approach to valuation – Use 3 of the possibilities.
- Do 3: Nail the revenue! Understand your business projections because your reputation is on the line. You have to deliver or you lose credibility.
- Do 4: Smart Money – If I win, who else wins? Go for money from the companies that will benefit as you are successful.
- Do 5: VCs have two motives (Greed and Fear) – Use one or both. Always work with more than one VC firm at the same time and let the other know that you have options.
Don’t’s and Common Mistakes
- Don’t resist managment changes. “If someone can make me money better than I can make me money, why should I complain?”
- Not understanding valuation. You don’t want to lose more than 20-30 percent on the 1st or 2nd round. – “Pigs get fat, but hogs get slaughtered”
- Not paying attention to the capital table. “If cash is King, equity is Queen.”
- Not growing/hiring the right team.
- Know when the founder should step down
- A players hire other A players and B players hires C and D players so that they aren’t challenged.