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Top 7 Things Nobody Will Ever Tell You About
How to Raise Capital and Start a New Business But Later Wish You Had Known
by Richard S. Scheur
Over the last several years, I have undertaken
a shift in the direction of my business focus from running a highly profitable
health care consulting practice to founding two private equity fundsone
which relates to the acquisition and turnaround of troubled HMOs and the
other that deals in first-stage health care technology, medical devices,
and e-commerce companies. Having managed health care start-ups and turnarounds
for fifteen years did not prepare me for the venture capital climate of
the early millennium.
To all of you would-be entrepreneurs with your ideas and
ideals held high, I hope the following lessons save you at least one more
night's good sleep.
- Just because their business ideas and reputed expertise
are great, don't go into a start-up business with people you don't already
know and have faith in. Relationships are hard enough to build when
all of the components that lead to the relationship are stable. Getting
together with a few people who have good ideas and try to create a business
will usually leave at least one of the prospective owners resentful,
believing he or she was left out, and at his or her lawyer's office.
The rule is, as with mergers, if the cultures/people don't necessarily
fit or have interpersonal synergy, the excitement over the business
deal or opportunity itself will not make it with this void.
- Never believe that people will invest in an idea in any amount beyond
$10,000 without a business plan. Even if you believe that the plan is
so obvious or that you are the greatest salesman or woman since P. T.
Barnum, you can't do it without a focused, concise document that makes
the case why people should invest in you rather than put their money
into the stock market for what has proven to be almost guaranteed returns.
- Unless your product or service involves the use of the Internet or
e-commerce (and this premise too will change), be prepared for lots
of rejection, well-meaning but crushing criticism, cynicism, rudeness,
and unkept promises. Successful private equity investors put up money
for between every 100 and 250 deals they review on average. That means
there are a lot of would-be entrepreneurs being pounded upon before
they make it.
- Finding the necessary capital is ten times harder than conceptualizing,
starting, and growing your company. Yes, there is lots of money out
there, but it always seems that it's going elsewhere. I have found that
raising money always takes a minimum of six months, and possibly up
to two years longer than I would have expected. In this climate, there
is lots of money for a small number of brilliant ideas.
- Don't confuse access with accomplishment. There are many folks who
will listen to your business proposition or idea for an interesting
new product. Even the big private equity firms will listen to you, ask
lots of questions, and maybe show some alleged real enthusiasmprior
to writing you a check. There is an old principle of the equity financing
world that we call "SHITS" (Show High In-Thusiasm, Then Stall.) The
real interest, as opposed to the platitudes, only starts when you have
a term sheet in your hand for financing, and then the fun of negotiation
really begins.
- Be very wary of self-styled investment advisors or bankers who will
just about guarantee that you will have no trouble raising money, but
who tell you you need to hire them first. "Investment advisor" is too
often becoming the new version of the chain letter hoax. Before someone
or some company asks you to pay them a retainer to either "introduce"
you to capital sources or to help you with your business plan or idea,
ask one question: Who are the people for whom you secured funding, in
what amounts, and can I call them? We all still want to believe in the
goodheartedness of the person who says: "I can get you the money." Maybe
they can, more likely they won't. Unfortunately, this may also include
a number of lawyers/erstwhile investment advisors who should probably
stick to practicing law.
- Be prepared emotionally to accept and then overcome
the rejection from those who will tell you any one of the following
things:
- You don't have the necessary track record for funding!
- Your business is undercapitalized!
- You have ten competitors in existence already much
larger than you will ever be!
- Your concept is a great idea as a "lifestyle" company,
meaning it will support your lifestyle but not with their money!
If you can't face the thought of being humiliated, facing
endless self-doubt, not sleeping, or being irritable with just about everyone
around you that you care about, think real hard about attempting to raise
money to start a business.
Bonus Tips:
- Don't be astounded at what people expect to own in
return for their investment, hence, the percentage of your company that
they will demand for a seemingly small investment. Most people who start
up businesses intend to remain in control of them, otherwise, why would
you start one up in the first place. But when it comes to serious money
(for example, over $100,000), you will too often find that the usual
and customary formula for that green stuff is fifty to eighty percent
of your business for being willing to part with it. Too often, people
get so desperate to get their ideas launched that they will give up
just about everything, only later bemoaning the fact when they discover
that too often, they have still been working to a large extent for somebody
else.
- Don't also be astounded at the return on investment that people expect,
hence, why so many business ideas don't get any funding beyond sympathetic
family and friends. Equity investors are seeking a minimum of a thirty
percent return per year from their investment, compounded. So what that
means is if you are asking somebody to give you a hundred thousand dollars
in 2000, and if they are a sophisticated investor, they will be looking
to see how their investment reasonably has a good chance of being worth
about $350,000 five years later. That means that the company has to
either grow very fast or that the would-be investor needs to own a high
percentage of the company to ensure that, when it succeeds, he or she
gets a return on his/her money.
- Don't abandon your ideas after hearing all of the reasons your shouldn't
try to raise money in connection with starting your own business. I
have been involved in two capital fund start-ups in the past three years.
Both of them have caused more to doubt my creativity and sanity, have
made me irritable with my colleagues, friends and family, and have had
me convinced that I should have never started down this road in the
first place. But proving your idea and testing your mettle to the world
and to yourself is the most stimulating, energizing, and challenging
activity in which you can ever engage. Zig Zigler is right: "There is
always room at the top."
Article by Barry S. Scheur, President
and founder of Scheur Management Group, one of the nation's largest health
care consulting firms specializing in operations, management, and strategic
business planning. He is also chairman of Catalyst Health and Technology
Partners and is chairman and founder of Venture Health Partnership Group,
a health care acquisition firm focusing on purchasing and turning around
distressed provider-owned HMOs and reshaping the practice of managed care
one health plan at a time.
Although blinded at birth, his career
as lawyer, health care executive, and corporate president is testimony
to an unquenchable spirit, a zest for challenge, and an ability to spot,
develop, mentor, and motivate talented people. Barry is a successful author
and lecturer using a combination of charisma, energy, and technical knowledge.
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