Get Funding Without Giving up Your Company
Do investors want an enormous piece of the pie? Find out how to negotiate them down.
By David Newton
| November 25, 2002
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/financingcolumnistdavidnewton/article57356.html
How many times have you contemplated the $100,000 from outside
investors who want a 40 percent equity stake in your business?
Simple math shows that if $100,000 is 40 percent of the firm's
value, then the firm must be worth $250,000. The situation is made
worse if no one has a clear rationale for why the firm is worth
$250,000. So if the deal negotiations simply pick a random
percentage, the business gets valued due to that percentage and the
dollars invested. But that does not define the underlying reasons
for the company value, and that is a major problem for
entrepreneurs to avoid.
The key to this issue has two distinct parts, both of which come
under a basic rule. First, take the time and spend the money to
have a formal business
valuation provided by an independent third party. Too often,
business owners either don't bother to set a definitive value
on the company or they work with a value that was loosely generated
using a simple rule of thumb. Worse yet is when they pursue either
of these two plans, the party providing the funds ends up in the
driver's seat in setting the value for the company, which
establishes the percentage ownership stake for the investment made.
For example, if an owner sits down with a potential investor and
does not have a value set forth in advance of that meeting, the
investor gains the upper hand and is in a position to offer a value
to begin the discussions. Not having a solid value prepared also
makes the owner appear relatively unsophisticated in understanding
the basic issues of business dealings. Think of it: What kind of
confidence does an investor have in an entrepreneur who doesn't
even know the value of her company? So the first priority should be
to open the dialogue based on a starting value provided by the firm
owner.
In the other case, some owners come into the investment
discussions with a value that is merely based on a simple formula
such as "three times annual sales," "four times net
assets" or "six times earnings." But those multiples
are not the basis for the firm's value. Instead, they are
typically reported as the quick summary after obtaining a detailed
valuation. For example, once a formal, comprehensive valuation is
completed, it turns out that the value is a certain multiple of the
firm's sales, assets or earnings, so that gets quoted when
people say, "We're doing the deal at four times
sales." But starting with a simple multiple does not provide
the broad review of cash flows, industry analysis and business
risks needed to establish a firm value.
Entrepreneurs must also make a strong effort to accumulate a
solid file of supporting evidence about the company's tangible
risk exposure and positioning. When the issue of the firm's
value (and the percentage stake the investment represents) becomes
the heart of the discussions with the funding source, the
entrepreneur is in a much more advantageous situation when he has
several files packed with tangible and credible data to support the
valuation. Reports from trade publications about the market,
articles from magazines about the competition and state of product
technologies, or government studies about the labor and capital
issues affecting the industry are all examples of such third party
evidence. Other items could include a listing of all competitors
and suppliers, some recent figures on sales of comparable firms,
market values for similar publicly traded companies or a university
research study about local business trends and impacts. The key
focus here is that the entrepreneur needs to be the one educating
the investors about the risks and company position, rather than
having the investors come to the table with all the pertinent data
to show the owner why the firm should have a certain valuation.
Finally, don't neglect this basic rule: Negotiate
everything. Just because an investor quotes "35 percent"
as the targeted equity stake doesn't mean that's the final
figure. A well-prepared entrepreneur who has a formal independent
valuation and a few folders worth of third party supporting
documentation about the company's risks and market status is in
a great position to offer the starting figure for what stake the
potential investment represents. If the investors try to start the
discussions with their own figure, it is very reasonable to expect
that the firm owner will counter that offer and provide a solid
basis for that lower percentage. If entrepreneurs go into the deal
unprepared, then there is no one to blame for getting stuck at a
high percentage equity stake. So negotiate
everything until the funding deal reflects a sound model and
good supporting evidence for the value.
David Newton is a professor of entrepreneurial finance and
head of the entrepreneurship program, which he founded in 1990, at
Westmont College in Santa Barbara, California. The author of four
books on both entrepreneurship and finance investments, David was
formerly a contributing editor on growth capital for Industry
Week Growing Companies magazine and has contributed to such
publications as Entrepreneur, Your Money,
Success, Red Herring, Business Week, Inc.
and Solutions. He's also consulted to nearly 100
emerging, fast-growth entrepreneurial ventures since 1984.
The opinions expressed in this column are those
of the author, not of Entrepreneur.com. All answers are intended to
be general in nature, without regard to specific geographical areas
or circumstances, and should only be relied upon after consulting
an appropriate expert, such as an attorney or
accountant.
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