• Weekend Reading

  • Weekend Reading

  • Built to Exit

    Image by konstriktionIs a company that is built to exit the same as a company that is built to flip? Not in my opinion. Understanding how to build a company that is attractive to a potential acquirer can help entrepreneurs understand how to build product suites, acquire customers and pick technologies.

    Possible Exits

    Entrepreneur.com list five (5) possible exit strategies:

    1. The Modified Nike Maneuver: Just Take It (basically preferred shares that pay a huge dividend)
    2. The Liquidation
    3. Selling to a Friendly Buyer
    4. The Acquisition
    5. The IPO

    For me, #3 and #4 are almost identical. And #2 is not something you should aim for just staring out. Liquidation is something that happens at the end of your business. Whether it is something that happens in bankruptcy or other it is not a useful model when you are trying to grow a business. So if you merge #3 & #4 it leaves you 3 realistic exit strategies. This is not rocket science.

    • Operate profitably
    • Get acquired
    • Go public

    We know what the IPO market for tech companies looks like. That leaves companies with 2 choices. Build a profitable business or get acquired.

    When I talk to startups everyone seems to think that acquisitions are a dime a dozen. That even based in Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Waterloo that they are prime acquisition targets for Microsoft, Google, Oracle, Cisco and other Valley companies. Which surprises me! Sure all of these companies have done Canadian acquisitions, they are the exception and they are done for very specific reasons.

    Why acquire a startup?

    Benjamin Kuo talks about the takeaways looking at the acquisition deals done by Google, Microsoft and Yahoo. The other companies that have done a lot of acquisitions include Oracle and Cisco. Summarizing the 2007 Microsoft acquisitions including Multimap (mapping), Global Care Solutions (healthcare), Palarno (enterprise chat), AdECN (advertising network), aQuantive (public traded – advertising tech), TellMe Networks (mobile voice solutions), and Medstory (health search), he concludes:

    Key takeaways from this, at least if you want to be acquired by Microsoft: you really need to expect to be in business for at least seven to 10 years; you need a lot of traction and a product that people have been using for awhile; enterprise software is hot, consumer web services are not; and you need to have a fit to their strategic plans.

    Companies get bought for a variety of reason:

    • technology;
    • customers;
    • people/talent;
    • the scale for monetization offered by a corporate giant.

    It starts to make a very short list for entrepreneurs about what’s important regardless of the type of exit you’re looking for. You need to have technology, customers, the right talent and a path to monetization. Companies are looking for technologies that solve problems with shared customers and that round out their offerings (then there is a the whole question about do we build it or buy it). They are looking for great teams of engineers, sales people, designers, i.e., the talent. And often large public companies bring a scale and access to market and manufacturing that are just not available to startups without huge amounts of cash. 

    Does this all sound familiar? It’s pretty similar to investment criteria. There’s nothing wrong with building defensible technology that solves a problem for customers with a team of rockstars on a common technology platform.

  • Weekend Reading

  • Extreme University

    extremevpExtreme Venture Partners is hosting a summer program for start-ups called Extreme University. It’s reminiscent of the Trilogy University, which should come as no surprise given Farhan Thawar is ex-Trilogy Software (TU98 to be exact). The Extreme University program is a rapid start 12 week program that aims to bring the rigor and mentoring and connections for start-ups. The program is based in Toronto, but given Extreme’s strong ties to Silicon Valley, New York, and around the globe you can imagine that these companies will gain access to their network.

    Applications are due by June 12, 2009. The program runs June 22 to September 4, 2009. And will conclude with a Demo event on September 12, 2009.

    What: A summer technology start-up program that focuses on industry networking, technology mentoring and above all delivering a product to potential follow-on funders after only 12 weeks.

    Who: We are looking for four smart and fast moving teams to participate. Typically all members of the two-three person team will be deep technically, but at least one of the founders should have a technical background.

    How: After you apply and are accepted you will:

    • Get $5,000 (US) per founder in exchange for a 10% ownership stake in your company
    • Move your team to our shared ExtremeU office space at Yonge & King (downtown Toronto)
    • Have weekly mentoring sessions by industry experts in technology, funding, legal, PR, marketing and HR
    • Meet a who’s who of experts at our weekly socials and have an opportunity to practice your pitch and demo your in-progress prototype
    • Have access to local shared resources to accelerate product development (mentors, servers)

    When: Applications are due by Friday June 12th, 2009. The program starts Monday June 22nd, 2009 to Friday September 4th, 2009 at the ExtremeU offices in Toronto at Yonge and King. The final demo day will be Tuesday September 15th, 2009 at Demo camp.

    It’s a great opportunity for entrepreneurs and founders to come to Toronto. Work with a group of people at Extreme Venture Partners, gain exposure to a local, national and international network to help you build and grow a new company and product.

    Apply Now!

  • Big Hairy Audacious Goals for Startups

    Reid Hoffman talks about LinkedIn’s startup story on CNN. It’s a very interesting story about a successful entrepreneur becomes a serial entrepreneur by focusing on both a vision and a set of success metrics.

    We had this initial challenge of, "How do you get a million people?" The first challenge was getting enough people so that functions like searching for people or sharing information had enough people in it to be valuable. The year 2003 was all about tuning and viral growth.

    I’m a huge believer in getting a million people, getting them engaged, and then building a business model on top of that.

    Why does a million people matter? Is this a good metric for other startups? How will know if you are successful? This requires having both a set of measures and a set of goals.

    AARRR! Be Bold. Be Humble.

    What should you be measuring? The good news is that others have done a lot of the heavy lifting. Dave McClure has a great presentation on Startup Metrics for Pirates. The

    Dave has a quick 5 point plan for understanding how to frame a startup, the business model and the performance of both the marketing and product development efforts.

    • Passion for problem/solution + Hypothesis of Customer Lifecycle
    • 1 page Business Model: Prioritized List of (Users + Conversions + Priorities)
    • Critical, Few, Actionable Metrics + Dashboard of Measured User Behaviour
    • 1 page Marketing Plan: (Channels + Campaigns) * (Volume, Cost, Conversion %)
    • Velocity of (Product Execution + Cycle Time of Testing) * Iteration

    This shouldn’t feel like rock science. It’s a way to frame the problems that all startups should be used to answering. What problem do you solve? What is life cycle of your customers? Who are your customers and how are you acquiring them? How do you reach your customers? How do you know if your development process is healthy? How will you know if you’ve been successful? It’s not rocket science.

    BHAGs

    Startup Metrics provide the baseline set of things a startup should be measuring. You should be building the data collection into your application, and he suggests you should “delegate each metric to someone to own”. This is the what, but it’s missing the Big Hairy Audacious Goal. The metrics are the starting point for measurement, and not they are not the target for an organization. 

    What is your “million users” goal?

  • Weekend Reading

    • Gigpark partners with Metro, Canada’s #1 free national daily newspaper, powering local service recommendations – http://bit.ly/pMUE5 #
    • FreshBooks on the cover of Entrepreneur Magazine – http://bit.ly/Fe7rh #
    • Emptying the tank… My Aquarium FB App gets wound down and acquired by SpeedDate for the installs – http://bit.ly/w3EWl #
    • RT @markrmcqueen: Israel’s Vertex Venture Capital has 3 current Canadian startup investments. #
  • GigPark partners with Metro Canada

    gigpark-win-an-eee-pc_1243GigPark has partnered with Metro, Canada’s #1 free daily newspaper, to power local service recommendations. This is exciting news for Gigpark, getting their incredibly compelling service in front of over 1 million Metro readers.

    I have used GigPark quite a bit over the last year to find all sorts of businesses: cross country ski rentals, a barbershop, a mechanic. All have been great recommendations that I can trust because they are from my friends.

    I’ve also recommended over a dozen businesses on GigPark and have received a number of personal thank you notes as a result, business owners really love the new customers GigPark drives. This partnership with Metro will offer business owners an even bigger stage, increasing the value proposition for participating, upgrading, and advertising across the integrated network.

    GigPark has social recommendations nailed. So it is a great deal for Metro, being able to easily drop in the GigPark engine and turn readers into community members and business owners into advertisers. “Integrating GigPark’s unique social tool into the Metro experience makes perfect sense. With this partnership, we’re continuing to redefine the role of traditional newspapers,” said Jodi Brown, Marketing and Interactive Director of Metro Canada.

    This partnership covers both online and print. To accompany the online component, Metro print editions in Toronto, Vancouver, Ottawa, Edmonton, Calgary and Halifax will feature the most recommended businesses in that city on a weekly basis.

    GigPark launches are always fun cause there is a giveaway involved: join the Metro community by July 31 for great recommendations you can trust and a chance to win a 10″ Eee PC.

  • Startup Funding Survey Results

    Thanks to all that have taken the time to participate in the funding survey. Results of the survey can be viewed by clicking here for powerpoint or by clicking here for pdf.

    I’ll have more in future posts on addressing some of the results of the survey and some of the findings that have emerged/questions that people have on the funding process.