Posts tagged ‘Seed Capital’

25 November 2010

Money and Mentorship

by Jeff Lynn

Most venture capitalists and angels will tell you that the hands-on mentorship and support they provide their portfolio companies is as important as—or more important than—the capital they invest. At one level this focus on non-monetary involvement is slightly self-promotional, a way for a firm or investor to distinguish itself from its many peers (money is money, but advice and connections are unique and therefore can be a USP in a way that capital alone cannot). But generally speaking the investors are right, and for many entrepreneurs the operational support that a few experienced venture capitalists or angels can provide probably is more valuable than money. A first-time entrepreneur who’s built a great product but has little commercial experience can benefit hugely from the involvement of people who have marketed, sold, iterated and marketed again lots of products over lots of years.

However…somewhere along the road the idea that mentorship is a key component of investment moved its way from the world of later-stage startups into the very different environment of of seed-stage startups. Conventional wisdom now dictates that a seed-stage entrepreneur who is raising initial capital for her business needs to seek an angel or two who can provide wise counsel. Money taken from friends and family, or even from less-involved angels, is pejoratively called “dumb money”, and the entrepreneur is seen as having lost something for accepting it.

I disagree with this view. Mentorship and other support are absolutely crucial for a seed-stage business, but the notion that they must or should come from one or two “expert” angels who are also investing capital—and that capital isn’t worth much without that support and advice—is nonsense, for three reasons:

1.             General business knowledge and experience is not a priority for a seed-stage business. Once a startup has progressed to the point that it’s focused on commercialisation, having someone with broad commercial experience closely involved can be very helpful: there are plenty of analogies and commonalities among marketing strategies, operational issues and so forth, and having someone who’s been through it many times before providing a guiding hand can add loads of value, just as the VCs and angels say. But the same isn’t true when an entrepreneur is just starting out and the focus is on taking an innovative idea and trying to turn it into something tangible so that later-stage investors, customers and others will start talking to him. At that stage, the entrepreneur tends to know basically what he needs to do, and having someone with just general business experience closely involved rarely adds very much.

2.            Being able to find the right person to help with the right issue at the right time is far more useful.  Even though seed-stage entrepreneurs tend to have a good sense of what they need to do to take their idea and move it the first step toward being a functioning business, they certainly don’t know everything. Questions come up all the time:  How do I do X in Ruby on Rails? What did the guys who launched Y model in 2007 do wrong? Does anyone know a good accountant? What VCs should I be targeting for my next round, and how can I get an introduction to them? Getting answers to these questions adds value for the entrepreneur, but generally speaking different people will have the answers to different questions. The person who can advise on a tricky coding problem is often not the same person who has a list of good accountants at hand. So what’s most helpful for the entrepreneur is to be able to access the people she needs when she needs them—what I call “pull” rather than “push” mentorship. That’s why entrepreneurship societies, networking events, social networks and other platforms can be so useful to seed-stage entrepreneurs, and it’s why having a solitary expert investor as the source of all advice simply isn’t.  (The key exception to this is where what the expert brings is an extensive network of connections to the people who have the answers: Ron Conway is a great example of a single individual adding tremendous value to seed-stage businesses, because they he has a massive Rolodex and is able to connect entrepreneurs with pretty much anyone they want to reach; but he and a handful of other angels are exceptions, and most investors’ contacts lists are spotty, heavily biased toward that person’s industry and region, and therefore helpful to seed-stage businesses only occasionally if at all.)

3.            Money and mentorship don’t need to go together. The implication of the previous two points is probably the biggest departure from conventional wisdom, and also the most important: for a seed-stage business, there’s no reason that money and mentorship need to come from the same source. Clearly there are lots of people who are capable of helping a business but don’t have capital to invest—no one disputes that. The problem in the case of a later-stage business—where the type of help required involves a significant commitment of time and effort—is that it’s tough to motivate those people in the absence of a potential financial return (and equity-for-mentorship deals are fraught with problems). As a result, the investors who already have a vested interest in the business’s success are often best-placed to roll up their sleeves and get to work. That problem doesn’t exist when it comes to the “pull” mentorship of seed-stage businesses. Most people—friends, former professors, other entrepreneurs working in a similar space—are willing to volunteer a few minutes of time or words of advice to help an entrepreneur address a particular issue. No reward is expected other than a bit of quid pro quo, which means that the entrepreneur can draw on the expertise and wisdom of vast numbers of people who may not have capital to invest but can still add lots to the business. Put simply, seed-stage businesses can get the mentorship they need independently of the money they need. And by implication, investment that comes without mentorship works just fine too, because the entrepreneur can take the capital and then go seek support from elsewhere.

Money and mentorship are both important to seed-stage businesses (I’ll write more on the money side in future posts), but the idea that they need to come from the same source is antiquated and wrong-headed. Like much in the startup world, a perspective that originated among later-stage businesses migrated into the seed-stage arena, without anybody really thinking about its applicability. In my view it’s a perspective that simply isn’t applicable. An entrepreneur building a seed-stage startup would be well-advised to focus less on getting a single investor/”push” mentor, and more on raising capital from wherever it’s available and then identifying the right groups, networks and platforms through which to reach “pull” mentorship.

24 September 2010

The Importance of Being Early: Why Seed-Stage Businesses Matter

by Jeff Lynn

In my opening post to this blog, I observed that there are two commonly-held, alternate views of seed-stage businesses. One is that all startups are part of a single, indivisible class of enterprise, and seed-stage ones aren’t meaningfully different from their later-stage, revenue-generating counterparts. The other is they’re not real businesses at all and should be ignored until they’ve done “something”. I disagree with both of these perspectives, and in this post I lay out why I think seed-stage businesses as a group are both very distinct and very relevant.

It is widely appreciated that the core value added by most startups is their ability to innovate, and especially to innovate disruptively.  The thinking on how and why new entrants overcome their established rivals—ranging from Joseph Schumpeter’s mid-20th century writings on gales of creative destruction to Clay Christensen’s modern-day theories on disruptive innovation—is well-trodden ground.  The basic idea is that while large, established firms often handle incremental innovation, such as constructing progressively smaller microprocessors or adding wheels to suitcases, very well, they are poorly-suited to developing paradigm-shifting products and models. There are two reasons for this. First, the hierarchical, conservative and bureaucratic nature of many of these organisations makes it very difficult for “outside the box” ideas to gain sufficiently wide internal acceptance that they actually get implemented. And second, these businesses need to devote their resources to satisfying current customer needs: diverting personnel and money to projects that will, at best, produce speculative, non-specified benefits that accrue at some point in the future is not only difficult but often downright irrational. Startups, by contrast, are constrained by neither of these factors, and their small organisations and relative lack of present obligations makes them ideally suited to think about how to change the world.

That’s the part that most informed people acknowledge. The corollary to it, which is far less often expressed, is that many of the same considerations apply within the startup world, and that seed-stage businesses are much more capable of disruptive innovation than even their somewhat later-stage counterparts. Once a startup has taken a few steps forward—built its minimum viable product, begun interacting with customers etc.—it may still be a lean and agile operation as compared to a FTSE 100 company, but it’s already beginning to get tied down by legacy. The business is now focused on implementing whatever innovation it came up with when it was at seed-stage, and while there may be plenty of room to tweak, it’s difficult to do a full-on pivot even when changes to the ecosystem mean that that would be the best move. Persuading shareholders to support a change in model, telling prospective customers that you’re actually going to provide a very different product and abandoning months of work on the technology are all very difficult things to do. Some startups manage it, but the strong pressure is to keep on course with the original idea. As a result, startups at this stage are no longer really about innovating so much as implementing innovations from an earlier stage in their life cycle.

Seed-stage businesses face no such legacies. At their core they are a few people sitting around in a room (or pub) thinking about ways to address a need or create a market, and while they may have constructed a few spreadsheets or the beginnings of a codebase, taking a radically different approach requires little more than getting agreement among the team and heading back to the drawing board. So when a new competitor appears, or a new technology looks like it’s gaining acceptance, the seed-stage startup can acknowledge that its original approach is no longer innovative or viable, scrap it and innovate all over again.  If the business was a bit further down the track, it wouldn’t be so easy.

What we have, then, is a situation where the ability to innovate correlates inversely with the stage of a business’s life cycle almost from day 1.  Startups are better able to innovate than well-established businesses, but in turn seed-stage startups are better innovators than those that have already made progress.

That is why seed-stage businesses are both so interesting and so different from other startups. They are the type of business that is most capable of imagining a whole new way of doing things—of “dreaming of things that never were and asking, why not?”—and of setting out a course to turn that imagination into a reality. They are beset by plenty of limitations as compared to established businesses and even later-stage startups—lack of capital and resources, no track record, uncertainty that the technology or model is even viable and much else—and I will talk about a lot of these limitations (and how to address them) in future posts.  But fundamentally, the innovations that will create value for investors, customers and society tomorrow are being developed by the seed-stage businesses of today. And it’s only by fostering and encouraging these businesses that we can ensure that at least some of these innovations actually happen and some of this value is actually realised.

3 September 2010

Welcome to Seeds of Thought: New Thinking About New Businesses

by Jeff Lynn

Seeds of Thought is a new blog with views on how to think about seed-stage businesses, how to facilitate their growth and how to harness the immense value they can create.

In the years since I first got involved in entrepreneurship and the startup world, I’ve been surprised and disappointed to see how little attention is paid to seed-stage businesses as their own class of enterprise. There seems to be a strong tendency among investors, advisors, observers and even entrepreneurs themselves to view these nascent ventures in one of two ways: either as just another startup, subject to the same investment criteria, needing the same sorts of mentorship and advice and facing the same measures of success as businesses that are up, running and generating revenues; or else as an irrelevance, something less than a real business that should be neither seen nor heard until the entrepreneurs have “something” to show the world.

I think both of these approaches are wrong-headed. I see seed-stage businesses as a unique sort of creature with very different methods, needs and potential from later-stage startups; and far from being irrelevant because of how early they are, I think they serve as key players in the entrepreneurship ecosystem and as the locus of tomorrow’s most important and lucrative innovations. There is an elegance and a brilliance to a few people with a great idea, a plan to execute it and no legacy obligations or structures to get in their way, and it’s at this stage when a business has the most room to think about how to change the world and to start trying to do so. And while the risk of failure is highest in early days, that doesn’t make the business any less worth focusing on and encouraging, but it does mean that different approaches to investing in and developing it are needed from what will be appropriate once the business is further along.

I believe this failure to appreciate seed-stage businesses as a distinct and important type of enterprise has long led to inefficiencies in the market for seed capital and to entrepreneurs receiving and acting on bad advice, and I think it’s been a direct cause of vast number of businesses that could have done wonderful things never quite getting off the ground. And as much of a problem as this failure has been in the past, it’s likely to have an even greater impact in the future: as the costs of innovation rapidly come down — and its speed increases — what happens in the earliest phase in a business’s life will become an even more important determinant of whether it will realise its potential.

This blog seeks to address the deficit of thinking and understanding about seed-stage businesses. The main focus will be on issues around raising and investing capital — as I believe that money is generally both the biggest challenge and biggest opportunity of the seed-stage world — but I’ll also look at a range of topics on management, growth, external advice and support and other matters. Suggestions for subjects are more than welcome, and I hope some of these musings generate response and discussion: there’s a huge amount to be said about this space, and while I’m looking forward to sharing my contributions, I’m well aware that I’m far from having all the answers.

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