Using Venture Capital To Fuel Your Business
One of the leading career choices of college
seniors in the past and still is today, to become an entrepreneur. Surveys
continue to show that one out of three working Americans want to be their own
boss. What’s stopping them? Lack of capital. Capital is the fuel that energizes
the business.
Money is not difficult to find. Available cash
always exists in great abundance, but you’ve got to know where to look for it
and the proper way to get it. Most start-up entrepreneurs look to family,
friends, or banks to get money for their businesses, but one the best yet often
overlooked sources of working capital is venture capitalists.
Venture capitalists are essentially risk-takers,
whose strategy is to grow their assets through judicious investment in
promising new enterprises. Such firms have the ability to offer attractive
alternatives to traditional lending sources such as banks, whose conditions for
repayment may prove exceedingly burdensome for start-up businesses.
A venture capitalist firm is interested in
future returns on investments and will invest heavily in a promising new
company, even though short-term profits may be less than stellar. The risk
inherent in such future-oriented investment is countered by financial
expectations that may far exceed those of more traditional or conservative
investments.
In some cases, the returns may prove
life-changing, not only in personal fortune, but in the impact on society as a
whole. A good example of this point is the story of Apple Computer. It took
only a few thousand dollars for Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak and their friends
in the Homebrew Computer Club to produce their first several dozen personal
computers.
It wasn’t until they received the backing from
such individuals as Mike Markkula, an engineering and
marketing expert who invested $250,000 and venture capitalist Arthur Rock who
invested 1.5 million that Apple was able to embark on its historic journey to
success. Once the company established an early track record of success it
attracted even more money, such as the 7.2 million invested by the L.R.
Rothschild Company.
Unlike family and friends venture capitalists
won’t invest in a business simply because they like the people involved, but
because they have confidence in the product and the management team’s skills,
strategy, and experience. Still the right mix of personal chemistry is
obviously an important part of that confidence, even in the most businesslike
of relations.
An important rule to remember when you’re
looking for financial capital is that it’s far more important whose money you
get than how much you get or how much you pay for it. The right backers can
indeed make all the difference, because experienced investors are often able to
provide strategic insight and industry-specific savvy as they mentor their
partners toward entrepreneurial success.
Most aspiring entrepreneurs who need working
capital to start their business raise money through family, friends, or
personal connections. For small family businesses or sole proprietorships, this
is the common route toward covering initial start-up costs. However, it is
important to always remember that loans motivated more by personal loyalty than
confidence in the business plan can often turn a good relationship into a
conflict and possibly ruin it altogether.
Family and close associates can often be the
worst sources of investment capital, especially when a new business is not
performing as well as planned. Relationships can be strained, even to the
breaking point. Demands are often made that suddenly turn your lifetime dream
of building a business and your friendships into a nightmare.
It is true that many businesses would never get
off the ground without the support of family and friends, but you need to
proceed cautiously and make sure that your family or friends who invest in the
business are fully aware of the inherent risks.
Before you start a business you must prepare a
detailed business plan. There is no standard format for a business plan, but if
you’re going to use it to obtain financing it must be professional and
persuasive.
One of the most common reasons why businesses
fail is because the owner did not develop or follow a business plan. For a
business to be successful the owner must update the business plan yearly with
new monthly goals. A good business plan not only serves a valuable monitoring
tool for all areas of the business, but is a must for any potential investors.
Here is a brief overview of what a business plan
and financing proposal should include:
• Products, services, and goals.
• Legal structure and ownership.
• Marketing and sales strategy.
• Equipment, facilities, technology, and assets.
• Management and employee resources.
• Projected financial statements for a
proscribed period.
• The purpose of the loan.
Your business plan and financing proposal needs
to have a brief 3 to 5 page summary of your situation and needs. This summary
will provide potential investors with quick overview and can be sent as part of
an initial query.
Keep the entire business plan and financing
proposal brief, no more than 50 pages. Make sure it is easy to read, realistic,
factual, and contains the information that is required by any potential
investor.
When you’re trying to get working capital from
potential investors you should always be prepared for rejection. When it
happens, don’t take it personally. Lenders and investors have their own
agendas. To be successful you must be willing to persevere, because there are
three common characteristics that all successful entrepreneurs have; they all
have persistence, they all have a willingness to do what others won’t, and they
all have a desire for financial independence.
Writer and speaker, Earl Nightingale said,
“Success is the progressive realization of a worth ideal.” In business worthy
ideals are ultimately about introducing practical ways to live better. With the
Internet and the technological explosion of the 21st century the promise and
possibility of tomorrow is bound only by the limits of human imagination and
courage.
The future will certainly belong to those who
best embrace this phrase by Goethe, “Whatever you dream you can, begin it, boldness has genius, power, and magic in it.”
Copyright©2006 by Joe Love and JLM & Associates, Inc. All rights reserved worldwide.
Joe Love draws on his 25 years of experience helping both individuals and companies build their businesses, increase profits, and achieve total success. He is the founder and CEO of JLM & Associates, a consulting and training organization, specializing in personal and business development. Through his seminars and lectures, Joe Love addresses thousands of men and women each year, including the executives and staffs of many businesses around the world on the subjects of leadership, achievement, goals, strategic business planning, and marketing. Joe is the author of three books, Starting Your Own Business, Finding Your Purpose In Life, and The Guerrilla Marketing Workbook.
Reach Joe at: joe@jlmandassociates.com
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