It started out as a straightforward consulting project for
Mahendra Vora and research partner Sundar Kadayam. They were
analyzing software trends and perusing market research studies to
assess the size of various software markets. But after spending 40
hours looking for information that should have taken 10 minutes to
access, the pair concluded that more advanced tools were needed to
search the Internet and databases of public information. Within
months, they launched Intelliseek Inc., providing software to capture, track
and analyze information for use in strategic planning, market
research, product development and brand marketing.
Vora, 39, was no stranger to start-ups. By the time he
co-founded Intelliseek in 1997, he already had three business
launches under his belt. He sold all three to Fortune 500 firms,
providing capital for Intelliseek. His initial investment of a few
million dollars supported operations the first couple of years and
through two major product launches.
By 1999, the Cincinnati company was laying the groundwork for
its first round of venture capital. Vora had had two years to
contemplate his dream investor. Foremost, size did matter: The
venture capitalist should have the wherewithal for ongoing
financing, but not be so large that it shunned all but elaborate
business models.
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Finding an investor with a broad network of investing partners
also was important to the $10 million company. "If you become
wildly successful and plan to raise $50 million someday, then [the
investor] should have access to the big investors. The network is
also important because it can [introduce] you to customers,"
says Vora, whose clients include CBS, Ford Motor Co. and Nokia.
Finally, Vora was looking for operational experience. "A
lot of VCs are phenomenal in advising you about what to do, but
they've never done it themselves," he observes.
Vora ultimately found his venture match in Cincinnati-based
River Cities Capital
Funds, a Small Business Investment Company. While River Cities
was not large, it was well-connected and managed by industry
veterans with extensive professional experience.
Starting
Small
Licensed and regulated by the SBA, SBICs are generally organized
and operated like any other venture capital fund. But unlike
traditional funds, SBICs use their own capital, plus funds borrowed
from the federal government, to provide equity capital and
long-term loans to small companies. On the whole, SBICs tend to be
more risk-tolerant than banks or traditional venture
capitalists.
The program provides financing not typically offered by banks
and equity financing in the $250,000 to $5 million range. While the
average SBIC investment was $1.3 million in 2001, non-SBIC
investments averaged $12 million, according to the National Association of
Small Business Investment Companies (NASBIC). Another advantage
is the SBIC's management team. Investors have extensive
experience to supplement the skills of your own team.
Intelliseek's SBIC backer removed barriers to reaching
larger, mainstream investors. Led by River Cities Capital Funds,
the initial $6 million investment included capital from the venture
arm of Nokia; later investors included Ford Motor Co. and General
Atlantic Partners LLC. "Once you get a VC like River Cities,
it is much easier to get access to bigger VCs," says Vora.
"They can go to VCs and say 'One of our companies is doing
so well, we're going to put in more money, and you guys should
come in.'"
An SBIC's management and directors must have a broad range
of experience. SBICs also are subject to annual financial reporting
and compliance exams. Rigorous regulatory requirements provide a
measure of security to VCs participating in joint transactions.
The SBIC program hasn't changed significantly since the
introduction of the Participating Securities program in 1994, which
aroused interest in early-stage equity investments by allowing
SBICs to defer immediate principal and interest payments and give
the SBA a share of eventual profits. Recent developments have made
the program even more mainstream. For instance, SBICs can now own
controlling shares in companies. And until recently, borrowers
weren't allowed to repay the principal on an SBIC loan in fewer
than five years. "It meant that for small businesses that
needed shorter-term financing, the SBA wasn't a good fit,"
says NASBIC president Lee Mercer. Now companies can repay in 12
months.
Down but Not
Out
SBICs invested roughly $2.8 billion in about 2,100 companies in the
12-month period ending September 30, 2002, down from $4.6 billion
invested in 2,254 companies in the same period one year earlier.
Like mainstream investors, they have had to adjust to deteriorating
economic conditions. "Valuations have come down on deals, and
due diligence periods have increased," says Patrick Hamner,
vice president of Capital Southwest Corp., a Dallas-based SBIC.
"People are being far more discriminating in how they invest
their capital.
"The bar has been raised even more for small businesses
trying to get capital," he continues. "As opposed to the
overall venture industry, which has had a very marked decline in
financing activity, SBICs are down but still active."
Nor has quality been an overriding concern, even as SBICs engage
in riskier deals than their mainstream counterparts. "Part of
what has happened with the bursting of the bubble is that the ideas
being proposed are based on more substantive models," says
Edwin Robinson, managing director of River Cities Capital Funds.
"A lot of the excess is being wrung out of the
system."
While the venture shakeup has impacted conventional investors
more profoundly, it also has changed the way some SBICs operate.
"During the bubble years, there was probably more of an
inclination to overfund," says NASBIC's Mercer. "I
don't mean in the sense that money might not be justified, but
to make the unconditional investment. I suspect that what
you're seeing now is a lot more investing on a milestone
basis." For instance, a company that requires $3 million over
three years is likely to receive $1 million upfront, getting the
rest after meeting revenue and growth targets.
Fewer venture dollars, coupled with the banking industry's
reticence to lend to small businesses, has contributed to an
overall capital shortage, adds Mercer. "Banks that had been
out doing subordinated debt financing had gotten out a little bit
further on the risk curve than they probably normally do," he
says. "The banks' own proclivity and the regulators kind
of forced a pullback, so there has been a tremendous pullback in
bank credit available even for small businesses that have had
longtime banking relationships."
The SBIC program, meanwhile, is attracting mainstream investors
having difficulty raising capital for venture-backed investments.
The increased interest bodes well for the small firms that SBICs
target: companies with a net worth of less than $18 million and
average after-tax earnings of less than $6 million for the past two
years.
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| While some SBICs
specialize in fields in which their management has extensive
knowledge, most consider a wide range of investment opportunities.
Contact the SBA at (800)827-5722 or www.sba.gov for more
information and to obtain a list of SBICs in your area. |
Crystal Detamore-Rodman is a Charlottesville, Virginia,
writer who covers the small-business financial market.