Your Butt on the Line
Hate to burst your balloon, but you'll have to risk your money to raise money.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/selffinancing/article29542.html
Brian Jersey had it all. A rising young executive, Jersey was
the director of marketing for Prodigy Internet in White Plains, New
York. There he had his own secretary and oversaw a $40 million
budget, two ad agencies and a staff of seven. And he had the kind
of salary and bonus package that came with the job—circa
1995, that is, before Internet option mania took hold of the
country.
Call it the inexplicable entrepreneurial spirit, but Jersey, now
39, chucked it—job security and all—in 1996 to start
1-800 BIRTHDAY, a reminder service that would also sell gifts.
Jersey felt that 1-800 BIRTHDAY had the same potential as
1-800-FLOWERS, except in a niche that had yet to be exploited.
Jersey says he was confident he could make a go of the venture.
So confident, in fact, that he took a 50 percent pay cut (to
$84,000)—funded by his initial investors—to get the
business off the ground. "It was a dicey move," he says.
"My son was just two months old when I started the business, I
was still paying off graduate-school loans. Despite my enthusiasm,
I just knew that the $300,000 I'd raised from the initial
investors would never be enough to get the business to the finish
line."
Jersey's first effort was substantial enough,
however, to get investors to take 1-800 BIRTHDAY's business
model seriously and throw in another $1.1 million in 1997.
But that wasn't quite enough, and without plenty of capital
for marketing, the company ran low on funds, and things started
looking grim. Nonetheless, Jersey personally guaranteed a $100,000
loan, ran up $50,000 of expenses on his personal credit card and
began deferring his $84,000 salary. In short, Jersey put himself in
a position where he had a lot to lose—and the only way out
was to succeed.
Should his risk-taking strategy be considered ill-advised and
dangerous? Not from the perspective of raising additional equity
capital to fund the business, says Michael Reisert, president of
the J. Michael Reisert Group Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.
According to Reisert, who has been helping companies raise money
for more than 30 years, "Where most entrepreneurs fail to
raise capital is not putting themselves at a sufficient level of
risk to entice investors to do the same." Remember, when a
business fails, the equity investors usually take a hit on the full
100 percent of what they put in. With the service-oriented
businesses of today, there are usually very few hard assets to
liquidate. And what is left over from asset sales usually pays
lenders, often at just cents on the dollar.
Reisert adds that when you consider most businesses are funded
by angel investors, and not professional venture capitalists, the
aversion to risk is even higher. "A venture capitalist is
losing someone else's money," he says. "But angel
investors are different. They're self-made. They often grew
their own businesses the hard way. They have a real appreciation
for positive cash flow. When you add it all up, they hate to
lose money."
The ways entrepreneurs can put themselves at risk may seem
fairly obvious, but Reisert says many entrepreneurs still think all
they need to bring to the table is the idea and that outside
investors should ante up for the "privilege" of
investing. In truth, however, the entrepreneur must finance that
idea with whatever funds he or she has available—whether he
or she has $5,000 or $500,000. By doing so and taking on some risk,
the entrepreneur makes the venture viable for outside investors.
Here are some reliable, albeit hair-raising, techniques:
- Liquidate savings. If you've got it, give it up.
There's just no way an investor is going to put in tons of
capital that's totally at risk while all or part of your nest
egg sits safely in CDs and blue-chip stocks.
- Take out a home-equity loan. Investors love this one
because they know that nothing makes an entrepreneur work harder or
smarter than the prospect of the bank repossessing his or her
home.
- Get a bank loan. If you can actually get a bank to lend
you money, you'll be demonstrating the kind of chutzpah
investors like. Why? Because any bank loan will require a personal
guarantee, or the guarantees of friends or family members, which
tells investors that somebody else is at risk as well.
- Sell a vacation home. Is there a risk in selling a
vacation home? Not really. However, it can still mean a lot to
investors because it shows you've given up part of your
lifestyle for the business. More important, the only way to get
back to that lifestyle is to succeed.
- Take out a margin loan against your stock holdings. If
you have, say, $100,000 in blue-chip stocks at a brokerage house,
the firm will give you a loan of up to $50,000 almost
instantaneously—assuming you have applied for, and received,
so-called "margin privileges." Margin loans are
relatively cheap, usually prime plus one to three points, and
perhaps the easiest loans in the world to secure. They're also
probably the most dangerous. Here's why: If the value of the
blue-chip stocks collateralizing the loan falls from, say, $100,000
to $75,000, the brokerage firm will ask you for cash to make sure
the "coverage ratio" of the collateral remains at 2-to-1.
In this example, it would ask for $25,000 in cash. If you don't
deliver the cash in short order, the brokerage firm will sell what
stocks you have left and pay off the loan. The sale of the stocks
could trigger enormous capital-gains taxes, with the whole scenario
causing untold financial problems. Once again, it's this act of
risk exposure that not only funds businesses but is critical for
attracting the other investors that will be needed down the
road.
- Quit your job. Nothing demonstrates personal commitment
like leaving the safety of the corporate nest.
Back at 1-800 BIRTHDAY, Jersey hung on. By the latter part of
1998, he didn't have much to work with-but then, he had lots to
lose, so somehow Jersey kept the business afloat. Then, near the
end of the year, he was introduced to executives of The Fingerhut
Companies, one of the largest database marketers of gifts and
housewares in the United States. "Finally, somebody got
it," says Jersey. In 1999, Fingerhut took a 20 percent stake
in 1-800 BIRTHDAY, a move that was instrumental in Jersey righting
the company—and helping take the company to the Internet in
the form of iBIRTHDAY.com. Today, Jersey feels there were three
reasons he was successful in raising money from Fingerhut.
"First," he says, "1-800 BIRTHDAY is a great
idea." No surprise there; what else is the founder of the
business going to say? "Second," notes Jersey, "it
had a management team that the investors could believe in."
Ditto. And finally, he says, "I believe one of the reasons
Fingerhut invested was because [1-800 BIRTHDAY] was led by an
incredibly motivated person with a lot at stake, who needed to
succeed in order to avoid making a serious dent in his career, ego,
home life and pocketbook."
It's important to keep in mind that taking risks does not
mean committing senseless acts in the name of ambition. Jersey, who
might be considered perhaps a cautious risk-taker, went out on a
limb in measured doses. Specifically, during 1998, when the company
was running out of money and venture capitalists weren't
showing even a whiff of interest, Jersey himself didn't go in
any deeper either. "Sure, I could have taken out a home-equity
loan, but it would have been crazy because I couldn't have
gotten the business to the finish line with the proceeds from the
loan. So why risk everything if you can't succeed?"
Jersey's initial investors were thinking the same thing, and
Jersey empathizes: "I'd only be willing to take risks if
others were taking risks alongside me."
When it comes to raising money, risk-aversion/risk-assumption
behavior can turn into a Mexican standoff—everybody waiting
for someone else to make the first move. But ultimately, because
the investors can wait forever or look at other deals, it's the
entrepreneurs who'll have to move first, and get whatever skin
they can into the game.
Next Step
Add up your personal assets minus liabilities. Decide which of
these you are willing to put at risk, and determine how far these
funds might take your business. Estimate the total cash needed to
fund the business. The difference is how much capital must be
raised. The formula shows how much personal risk must be
assumed.
David R. Evanson's newest book about raising capital is
called Where to Go When the Bank Says No: Alternatives for
Financing Your Business (Bloomberg Press). Call (800) 233-4830
for ordering information. Art Beroff, a principal of Beroff
Associates in Howard Beach, New York, helps companies raise capital
and go public, and is a member of the National Advisory Committee
for the SBA.
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