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Thursday, January 23, 2014

When to raise outside capital & what kind of dilution is ok.

Have been talking to quite a few entrepreneurs lately and i realize that many have very mixed views (rightly so) about raising capital from (semi)/ professional investors. Some also never seem to have thought about dilution and seem to have an almost ambivalent attitude about ownership.

So i thought i will pen down my thoughts on these issues both as an entrepreneur who tried to raise money before and as an investor in startups. DISCLAIMER : REGIONAL CONTEXT ONLY.

There is actually only 1 good reason why a tech startup raises money.

Company needs the cash to grow in SG or to expand into overseas markets which current organic cash flow projections cannot meet. Growing can be by organic or acquisition route. Usually your 5 or 3 or 2 year P&L projection shows great revenue growth but you need to spend money to get there and you are negative cashflow for a good period. Then you need funding to tide all that negative cashflow and then some. The extra is buffer.

So if you find that you are in the lucky situation where you are already profitable and cashflow positive. And you actually do not have a burning vision that you cannot execute due to lack of money, then perhaps you should not be fund raising. Even though usually, this is when VCs and investors and brokers will bug you the most to raise. They will tell you stuff like money in the bank is king, having a buffer is always good, you never know, how much network and strategic help they can give etc etc.

They are not wrong. But you need to weigh that against the distraction of fund raising, the distraction of dealing with investors, the value of network and also whether you actually need the money. I have known of at least 2 big internet companies who raised 800K and 1+M each and they actually almost did not touch the money at all until exit!

To be fair, I am not including the strategic help which a good investor can offer and that is valuable. This cannot be underestimated and i think if you find an investor who really helps and cares, then the story is different.  For these cases, i have seen people do convertible notes so that valuation is higher later or just raise less money. You still get the help and network but dilute less.

How about dilution? How much is too much or too little for our tech space today?

It really depends on each entrepreneurs goal. But by and large, most entrepreneurs are highly competitive people who benchmark a lot. I think they also want to win and there are many measures of winning. It can be to control the biggest company by revenue or profit or user traffic etc. It can also be a combination of those factors.

1) My first non-contentious observation in SG is that it will be best to bootstrap and skip the angel round. Lets say we have a 2-3 founder team. They run through  100K to build their prototype and a further 50K to market the prototype and raise money. At this stage they still own 100% of the company.

So they raise the Seed round to hire a few pax, market more, build out software more. Lets say they raise 500K at 1.5M premoney. So now, the founders own 75% of the company. With this 500K, they build out SG and after another 1 year want to expand overseas and drive to SG profitability. Now in SG, it is usually a 1.5 to 2.5M raise. So lets say 2M raised at premoney 8M, now founders are down to 60%.

Wait, there is now employee option pool which varies from 5-10% usually paid jointly or out of founder pool. So lets say founders down to 55%.

This is where we depart from USA since our ASEAN market is a lot smaller. With this 2M raised, the tech company needs to grow into exit event.   An exit event can be an IPO or a trade sale. There are some fewer cases of raising Series B to expand even further but most of the SG stories exit already - Hungrygowhere, Tencube, Brandtology, Groupon, Dealguru, sgcarmart, Travelmob, Asian food channel all exited after raising 1-2+M. The only ones i know who raise Series B or equivalent is Propguru and Reebonz. Maybe readers can add.

So back to the optimal stake. At 55% left for founders and average sale value of lets say 20M, that is 11M only for say 3 founders. Or about 3.66M each. Now imagine if this company raised a initial bootstrap round that took out 15%, they are left with 2.7M each for about 6 years work if divided evenly.

2) The 2nd observation i have is a lot more contentious. I have seen many teams where the 2-3 founders share the stake equally. While this feels right at the startup phase, it actually does not make sense. A company will require a CEO and driver. That person performs a role that is more stressful and more impactful than other founder roles. And in startup, pay cannot be used to compensate. So i would argue and indeed prefer configurations where the key leader has a much higher stake and plays a stronger role. So in the case of the 3 founders, maybe 50%, 30%, 20% or even 60/20/20. Of course, the founders should put in capital commensurate to their shareholding and i am all for equal or near equal pay among the 3 to show the solidarity.

On the flip side, i would not advocate any key founder having less than 10% equity from the start. Too little to feel any pain and to be aligned well. And after all the dilution, the person will be left with 5%. Too little for talent for our region. They will end up looking around and asking for near market rate salaries to compensate.

As an investor, one thing good about CEO owning the bulk is that we know even if the shit hits the fan, there is one clear person with the most to lose. And that is good alignment.