Venture Capital Unlocked (Stanford) / Venture Capital 2.0Dave McClure
slides for my "Venture Capital 2.0" opening talk at Stanford School Continuing Studies, VC101 class "Venture Capital Unlocked" #VCunlocked #500startups
VC Fundraising Deck Template: Carta x Kauffman FellowsNihar Neelakanti
Carta and Kauffman Fellows present a venture capital fundraising deck template highlighting the various components a GP should include as part of their fundraising story to attract limited partners.
Venture Capital Unlocked (Stanford) / Venture Capital 2.0Dave McClure
slides for my "Venture Capital 2.0" opening talk at Stanford School Continuing Studies, VC101 class "Venture Capital Unlocked" #VCunlocked #500startups
VC Fundraising Deck Template: Carta x Kauffman FellowsNihar Neelakanti
Carta and Kauffman Fellows present a venture capital fundraising deck template highlighting the various components a GP should include as part of their fundraising story to attract limited partners.
Know how venture capitalists value your deal....understand how they are compensated...see what creates value and how investors assess your "risk factors."
A great slide show presentation that provides solid answers to many of these essential questions Check out mikeklein2010.wordpress.com
"Introduction to 500 Startups" presentation will provide you a comprehensive overview of various activities that we do to promote startup ecosystem globally, discover best early stage companies and help them grow.
How to define and position your VC brand to attract funding and dealflow.
* note: more recent updated version below:
https://www.slideshare.net/dmc500hats/branding-strategies-for-better-dealflow-and-fundraising-aka-the-helpful-vc
Irish Technology Capital-European Technology Venture Fund - John Hartnett - S...Burton Lee
Presentation by John Hartnett, Irish Technology Capital, about the new venture Fund that he is raising in Ireland and Silicon Valley, aimed at the Irish and European hitech startups marketplace. Stanford Engineering, January 4 2010. Program Director and Course Instructor Dr. Burton Lee. Homepage: http://me421.stanford.edu
Venture Capital 101 presentation on the basics of VC such as what venture capital is, and how it works. I delivered this presentation to a student group called InSITE that I belong to (mix of Columbia and NYU MBA and Law students). Enjoy!
-Brian Rothenberg
www.brianrothenberg.com
A downloadable template created by VCs for founders looking to raise seed capital. Download here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/pxnyscz93dzjbv8/Nextview_startup_pitch_deck_template.pptx?dl=0
How to make an investor pitch deck that really worksDeck Rooster
In sales, a well established principle is, before one starts pitching to a customer, one should listen to what the customer has to say. That is because if you listen carefully he will lay out his needs in front of you, letting you present your solution in a way that fits into his needs perfectly.
The principle should be equally useful while pitching to an investor while raising funds. I can’t see a reason why it won’t be. But no one seems to be suggesting “you should listen more and talk less during an investor pitch”. Probably it is assumed that we already know what investors look for in a business. Is it a rockstar team; or may be a huge market size or is it traction or a break-through technology? Or may be different investors look for different combination of those things.
Actually all of those are means towards an end. They help investors figure out something more specific and quantitative that all investors look for in a startup before investing. But what is it?
A 10x return on their investment. That is it.
That number may vary from an early stage investor to a growth stage one, but you get the point, right? Not everyone says it out loud, because it makes them look money hungry, but that is what an investor business is all about.
But, now with that knowledge, how do you tweak your pitch and your pitch deck to make an investor feel that you are offering him an investment opportunity that could deliver a 10x return? And more importantly, can your business even deliver 10x return?
The above presentation by Deck Rooster answers those questions and offers a structure (not a template) for an investor pitch deck for startups. Check it out.
Basic concepts of marketing and branding for venture capital. Emphasis on competitive differentiation (aka "How are you different/better than other VCs in your category?"). Specific focus on defining areas of "value add" that aren't BS.
A thorough review of what makes a great ecosystem for entrepreneurs. It's not enough to have a great idea or a great team, as an entrepreneur you need a supporting environment that will help you succeed. In this presentation you can find the main ingredients that create a good ecosystem for startups along with a review of main European startup ecosystems.
Know how venture capitalists value your deal....understand how they are compensated...see what creates value and how investors assess your "risk factors."
A great slide show presentation that provides solid answers to many of these essential questions Check out mikeklein2010.wordpress.com
"Introduction to 500 Startups" presentation will provide you a comprehensive overview of various activities that we do to promote startup ecosystem globally, discover best early stage companies and help them grow.
How to define and position your VC brand to attract funding and dealflow.
* note: more recent updated version below:
https://www.slideshare.net/dmc500hats/branding-strategies-for-better-dealflow-and-fundraising-aka-the-helpful-vc
Irish Technology Capital-European Technology Venture Fund - John Hartnett - S...Burton Lee
Presentation by John Hartnett, Irish Technology Capital, about the new venture Fund that he is raising in Ireland and Silicon Valley, aimed at the Irish and European hitech startups marketplace. Stanford Engineering, January 4 2010. Program Director and Course Instructor Dr. Burton Lee. Homepage: http://me421.stanford.edu
Venture Capital 101 presentation on the basics of VC such as what venture capital is, and how it works. I delivered this presentation to a student group called InSITE that I belong to (mix of Columbia and NYU MBA and Law students). Enjoy!
-Brian Rothenberg
www.brianrothenberg.com
A downloadable template created by VCs for founders looking to raise seed capital. Download here: https://www.dropbox.com/s/pxnyscz93dzjbv8/Nextview_startup_pitch_deck_template.pptx?dl=0
How to make an investor pitch deck that really worksDeck Rooster
In sales, a well established principle is, before one starts pitching to a customer, one should listen to what the customer has to say. That is because if you listen carefully he will lay out his needs in front of you, letting you present your solution in a way that fits into his needs perfectly.
The principle should be equally useful while pitching to an investor while raising funds. I can’t see a reason why it won’t be. But no one seems to be suggesting “you should listen more and talk less during an investor pitch”. Probably it is assumed that we already know what investors look for in a business. Is it a rockstar team; or may be a huge market size or is it traction or a break-through technology? Or may be different investors look for different combination of those things.
Actually all of those are means towards an end. They help investors figure out something more specific and quantitative that all investors look for in a startup before investing. But what is it?
A 10x return on their investment. That is it.
That number may vary from an early stage investor to a growth stage one, but you get the point, right? Not everyone says it out loud, because it makes them look money hungry, but that is what an investor business is all about.
But, now with that knowledge, how do you tweak your pitch and your pitch deck to make an investor feel that you are offering him an investment opportunity that could deliver a 10x return? And more importantly, can your business even deliver 10x return?
The above presentation by Deck Rooster answers those questions and offers a structure (not a template) for an investor pitch deck for startups. Check it out.
Basic concepts of marketing and branding for venture capital. Emphasis on competitive differentiation (aka "How are you different/better than other VCs in your category?"). Specific focus on defining areas of "value add" that aren't BS.
A thorough review of what makes a great ecosystem for entrepreneurs. It's not enough to have a great idea or a great team, as an entrepreneur you need a supporting environment that will help you succeed. In this presentation you can find the main ingredients that create a good ecosystem for startups along with a review of main European startup ecosystems.
Mapping de l'écosystème entrepreneurial en Tunisie by MAZAMMAZAM
Cartographie des acteurs entrepreneuriaux en Tunisie. L'écosystème entrepreneurial tunisien pre et post-2011. Analyse et recommandations quant à la scène entrepreneuriale actuelle en Tunisie.
The industry is evolving very quickly. New tech-driven products are flourishing; new marketplace banking models are being implemented; and GAFAs and banks are increasing their collaborations with Fintech firms.
India Startup Ecosystem Report 2016: Trends and OutlookNamagiri Anand
The Indian Startup Ecosystem is the third largest in the world, with around 10,000 startups, of which >120 are biotech, and 4500 tech-focused, with others focused on traditional sectors. Every year, 800 new startups are established. Bengaluru, Delhi-NCR, Pune are the major startup hubs. There is also a clear tech focus: Bengaluru is biotech-focused, while Pune is chemistry-focused, and Delhi-NCR is tech-heavy.
US$4.1Bn was raised in startup funding in 2016, which is 40% down from 2015. Uninvested capital available with India-focused VCs is US$3.1Bn. >200 startups closed shop in 2016.
E-Commerce, Digital Payments, and SAAS are the major focus for VCs in 2016, as compared to E-Commerce and Hyperlocal in 2015. E-Commerce sobered-up in 2016, with lesser hype and lesser VC interest. Instead, VCs started showing more interest for niche segments, such as B2B ecommerce marketplaces.
Majority of the startups have a “me-too” approach.
Only few attempting grand challenges. Limited focus on functionality or products per se.Unicorns struggled to raise capital in 2016.
Investor interest in startups solving India-specific challenges negligible. India ecosystem saw the entry of a slew of new investors. Many fund managers struck on their own.
India VC market maturing.
Co-working spaces, incubators, and even, accelerators - mushrooming. Government fostering incubation culture through Atal Innovation Labs and Atal Tinkering Labs, that supplements the many startup policy initiatives of the Government.
There will be some more decrease in VC funding in 2017.
In 2017, Fintech will disrupt many industries. In 2017, startups focused on fintech and enterprise segments will flourish. Expect some more promising startups to be acquired by global majors in 2017. A.I. will become the “Big Data” type- hype in 2017.
Alibaba’s entry will disrupt the ecommerce market once again.
In 2017, IKEA’s entry will disrupt the furtniture startup segment. In 2017,
Agtech Startups will grow. Startup Focus will move to Tier III and IV cities! In 2017,
Bitcoin Startups will spike.
However, wait and watch for new regulations!
Philippe Gelis, CEO & Co-Founder of Kantox, talking about the next 10 years in Fintech; A new co-petitive eco-system starts emerging within the financial sector
How to VC: Creating a VC fund portfolio modelDave McClure
This article aims to help VCs figure out how to size a venture capital fund, how many companies to include in your portfolio, and when and how to do follow-on investments. Most VCs aim to make a 3X (net) return on initial fund capital, at a ~20% net IRR. Note however, likely less than 10% of most VC funds achieve that goal.
Dinosaurs vs Unicorns aka "Bubble My Ass, All Dinosaurs Gonna Die" (London, J...Dave McClure
my talk on corporate innovation (or the lack thereof), the death of many dinosaurs, the survival of a smart few Raptors, and how to avoid getting trampled by Unicorns.
11. [ This Talk ]
• Changes in Building Technology Startups
• Changes in Venture Capital Investing
• Building Startup Ecosystems
• Global Entrepreneurship
12. Industry Changes
• Financial Market Crises (2000, 2008)
• Startup Efficiency, Lean Startup Movement, Reduced Capital Costs
• Growing Market, Global Distribution Platforms, “Growth Hacking”
• Improved Monetization, Payments Infrastructure
• Developing Startup Ecosystems, Global M&A
!
• Micro VC: Seed Funds (ex: First Round Capital)
• Incubators & Accelerators (ex: Y Combinator, 500 Startups)
• Funding Platforms (ex: Angel List, Kickstarter)
• Global Market of Angel Investors, Accelerators, Seed Funds
!
more info: http://PreMoney.co
17. 500 Strategy: Lots of Little Bets*
1) make lots of little
bets on pre-traction,
early-stage startups
3) wait 3-10 years for returns:
-10-20% small exits @1-5X ($5-25M+)
-5-10% larger exits @5-20X ($25-250M+)
-1-2% unicorns @20-50X+ ($250M-1B+)
*See Peter Sims book: “Little Bets”
2) over the next 2 years,
double-down on top 20%
18. The Lean Investor
Make lots of little bets:
• Start with many small “experiments”
• Filter out failures + small wins
• Double-down on stuff that looks like it’s working
!
• Incubation: $0-100K (“Build & Validate Product”)
• Seed: $100K-$1M (“Test & Grow Marketing Channels””)
• Venture: $1M-$10M (“Maximize Growth & Revenue”)
19. Investment Stage #1:
Product Validation + Customer Usage
• Structure
– 1-3 founders
– $0-$100K investment
– Incubator environment: multiple peers, mentors/advisors
!
• Test Functional Prototype / “Minimum Viable Product” (MVP):
– Prototype->Alpha, ~3-6 months
– Develop Minimal Critical Feature Set => Get to “It Works! Someone Uses It.”
– Improve Design & Usability, Setup Conversion Metrics
– Test Small-Scale Customer Adoption (10-1000 users)
!
• Demonstrate Concept, Reduce Product Risk, Test Functional Use
• Develop Metrics & Filter for Possible Future Investment
20. Investment Stage #2:
Market Validation + Revenue Testing
• Structure
– 2-10 person team
– $100K-$1M investment
– Syndicate of Angel Investors / Small VC Funds
!
• Improve Product, Expand Customers, Test Revenue:
– Alpha->Beta, ~6-12 months
– Scale Customer Adoption => “Many People Use It, & They Pay.”
– Test Marketing Campaigns, Customer Acquisition Channels + Cost
– Test Revenue Generation, Find Profitable Customer Segments
!
• Prove Solution/Benefit, Assess Market Size
• Test Channel Cost, Revenue Opportunity
• Determine Org Structure, Key Hires
21. Investment Stage #3:
Revenue Validation + Growth
• Structure
– 5-25 person team
– $1M-$10M investment
– Seed & Venture Investors
!
• Make Money (or Go Big), Get to Sustainability:
– Beta->Production, 12-24 months
– Revenue / Growth => “We Can Make (a lot of) Money!”
– Mktg Plan => Predictable Channels / Campaigns + Budget
– Scalability & Infrastructure, Customer Service & Operations
– Connect with Distribution Partners, Expand Growth
!
• Prove/Expand Market, Operationalize Business
• Future Milestones: Profitable/Sustainable, Exit Options
22. Building a Portfolio Budget &
Allocation Strategy
• How long will it take companies to exit? (3-7 yrs)
• How much money do you have to lose? (<5-10% net worth)
• (How much time do you have to spend/waste? sure about that?)
!
• Simple allocation for $1M investment budget over 5 years
• 50% 1st checks + 50% 2nd checks
• 20 x 1st checks @ $25K each, 1 / qtr ($500K)
• 5 x 2nd checks @ $100K each, 1 / year ($500K)
1 2 3 54 6 7 8 109 11 12 13 1514 16 17 18 2019
1 5432
23. The Flat, The Elbow, The Wall
• Invest @ “The Flat”
when prices are low
• Double-down if/when
you detect “The Elbow”
(if valuation isn’t crazy)
!
• Don’t invest @ “The
Wall” unless capital is
infinite — if valuation
starts running away, you
usually can’t buy any
meaningful ownership
relative to existing. Time
Good Stuff
Happening Startup W
Startup L
Startup K
“The Flat”
“The Elbow”
“The Wall”
1
2
3
3
24. [ This Talk ]
• Changes in Building Technology Startups
• Changes in Venture Capital Investing
• Building Startup Ecosystems
• Global Entrepreneurship
25. Investor Ecosystem
!
!Angels &
Incubators
($0-10M)
!
“Micro-VC” Funds
($10-100M)
“Big” VC Funds
($100-500M)
“Mega” VC Funds
(>$500M)
Incubation
0-$100K
Seed
$100K-$1M
Series A/B
$2-10M
Series B/C
$10-50M
Bootstrap, KickStarter,
AngelList, Crowdfunding
stage where
500 writes
first checks
stage where 500
doubles-down
(maybe)
28. Local vs Global?
• Emerging / Developing Markets
• Global Languages: English, Chinese, Spanish, Arabic
• Critical Factors: Education, Mentorship, Capital
• Capital Availability: Incubation, Seed, Series A
• Positive Macro: SmartPhones, Tablets, Payments,
Logistics, Growing Middle Class, Distribution Platforms
• Wealthy Global Users, Shoppers, Travelers
29. How Big is Seed Stage Startup Market?
500 VCs invest in 10,000 startups/yr @ $500K/startup = $5B/yr
How many people are entrepreneurs? How many startups get started every year?
• ~1% of Humanity is “Entrepreneurial” (def’n: “can create a $10M rev/yr business”)
• 1% x 7B ppl = 70M entrepreneurs, each of which starts 1-5 businesses lifetime (70 yrs)
• hypothesis: talented entrepreneurs can create 1-5M new “startup” businesses every year
!
NOW: let’s say we *ONLY* do the top 1% => the best 10,000 startups in the top 200 metros
!
How many metros? How many investors / metro? How many startups / metro?
• 1 [micro] VC can fund 10-20 startups/yr * $50K-$500K = ~$1-10M/yr annual budget
• global metros of 1-10M+ ppl can generate 100-1,000 startups / year
• 1-5 VCs in top 200 metros = 500 VCs x 20 startups/yr = 10,000 startups/yr
• hypothesis: 500 VCs invest $500K each -> 20 startups/yr = $5B/yr -> 10,000 startups
!
… so forget about 500 Startups, and start thinking about 500 VCs.
15