3. How Do You Finance A New Venture?
- Sine Qua Non
- Without which there is nothing!
How much money do I really need?
When must I have it?
What is the best funding I need?
What is the best source for it?
How do I go about securing it?
Crowd Funding – What is it?
3
7. www.facebook.com/LeanDisruptor
Advice to startups – Heidi Roizen DFJ
7
http://heidiroizen.tumblr.com/post/139377970205/dear-startups-heres-
how-to-stay-alive
• Stop clinging to your (or anyone else’s)
valuation
• Redefine what success looks like
• Get to cash-flow positive on the capital you
already have (AKA, survive)
• Understand whether your current investors
are going to get you there
• Stop worrying about morale
• Cut more than you think is needed
• Focus maniacally on your metrics
• Hunker down
14. Master Your Weapons
14
• Yourself
• Business Model Canvas
• Your Pitches: Elevator Pitch, 2-page
Executive Summary, Slide Presentation
• Pitching Skills
• Financial Plan – do stress test your
assumptions
– Pricing
– Market
– Customers, Partners
• Term Sheets
14
17. Pitching
PITCH KILLERS
• Don’t know your
audience
• Opening with team bios
• Slide abuse
• No hook/No power
• Monotone/lecturing with
many people
• Not prepared for Q&A
• Bullshitting (there’s no
way this can fail)
• Weak closing
KILLER PITCHES
Know your audience
Opening with The Promise
Kawasaki’s 10/20/30 rule
Driving home the need
Athletic presentation by 1
person
Prepared for Q&A
Credibility (these are the
risk, we mitigate them by..)
Killer closing
17
19. Obvious But Essential
• Your Financial Plan must clearly explain how the
macro view of the business opportunity in your
business plan translates into a micro view of how
investors can generate a return by investing in
your enterprise.
• I cannot emphasize enough how much thought
needs to go into preparing the financial model to
show that you truly understand your business
model
• Know your model, own your model!
19
20. Negotiation
20
Tip:
Three things matter when negotiating a
financing;
1. Achieving a good and fair result
2. Not killing your personal relationship getting
there
3. Understating the deal that you are striking
21. Negotiation
21
• Your biggest advantage is to have a solid Plan B –
lots of interest and competition for the deal.
• Never make an offer first – Why run the risk of
aiming too low
• Listen more than talk – especially at the
beginning of the negotiation
• Understand the market terms and whether they
apply to your situation.
• Have an open and collaborative approach with
your Investor.
24. The Investment Dance
24
$
Teaser,
Elevator
pitch
2 pager, PPT,
working
sessions with
partner, team
Terms
discussed
Your team
pitches to their
full partnership
Final DD,
legal docs
drafted
Your
GREAT
innovation
3-9 months
Invited
to office
Term sheet
issued
Invited
for
coffee
They visit
onsite, key
suppliers,
…
Receive
them
onsite
Check
received
Now the
fun part
24
33. First Steps (Pre-Seed)
• Incorporated Company
–EQUAL split of the shares; 1/3 each
between the three founders.
• Unsecured overdraft of IE£60k
• Invested £7,501 each (Total of £22,503)
• Enterprise Ireland Feasibility Grant of IEP
£15k
• Agreed that the founders will also
vest their shares over 48 months
33
34. Initial Cap Table
Founder 1 – 750,100 @ £0.01
Founder 2 – 750,100 @ £0.01
Founder 3 – 750,000 @ £0.01
Valuation = £22,503
(Transferred 50k shares to each of my
four children)
34
35. Value of Founder’s Share = IEP 22,503
Ownership = 100%
External Funding = IEP 22k
35
36. Next
Funding:
• Capitalised the Co. with IE£22k
• Bank Overdraft IE£60k
• EI (Gov) Feasibility Grant IE£15k
• First Customer – Carphone Warehouse
IE£15K
• Did not draw a salary – but accrued it.
36
38. Angel Funding (Startup Funding)
• Build Product – Mobile Commerce Server
• Ask Andy De Mari (serial entrepreneur) to
join the Board as Chairman & Mentor
• Source Angel Financing ~ IE£1 million
• Get started on the PR campaign
38
39. Angel Types
Newbie: Easily seduced by the product and the story:
Strategy: Focus on the vision. Make him an advisor. Reciprocate his
love.
Thought Leader: look for deals in key markets, leveraging certain
trends
Strategy: Teach him something new about the market--share an insight.
Captain Diligence!: Team leader, gives your plan a virtual
colonoscopy
Strategy: Have a detailed business plan. Prepare to defend key metrics.
Follower: follows the lead of key influencers in the group
Strategy: Find out who the influencers are, skip the followers
Network Angel: Leverages multiple angel groups-even his deals
have deals
Strategy: Leverage his network to build a syndicate for your company 39
40. Angel Types
Darth Vader: Cynical, thinks of a million reasons to say
NO, negative influencer
Strategy: Avoid, counteract by gaining support of thought
leaders
Ego capitalist: He’s cool, he’s hip, he’s made money as
a CEO and he’s figured out the formula--invest in what
made him $$ before.
Strategy: Wear a hoodie with his incubator’s name on it
Mercenary: Feigns interest but is really looking to sell
you his services
Strategy: Use pepper spray
40
41. Mentor Capital
What angel investing can be all about...
• Individual mentor and investor
• Helps with an angel or VC round
• Joins your team and rolls up sleeves
• Finds early €
• Helps you achieve milestones
• Introduces you to angels and VCs, when you are ready
How to find mentors:
• Network
• Ask your lawyer
• Go to angel pitch events
• Contact experts in your field who might be mentors
• Examine similar companies: who are their advisors?
41
42. Angel Funding Series A1
Series A1: 400,000 @ IE £1.00
Total No. of Shares = 2,650,300
Valuation IE £2.65 million
42
43. Angel Funding Series A2
Series A2: 724,700 @ IE £1.75
Total No. of Shares = 3,375,000
Valuation just under IE £6 million
TIP:
Mentors are great. There’s no reason not to give
someone a small success fee if they help you raise
money
43
45. Value of Founder’s Share = IEP 3.9m+
Ownership = 57.7%
External Funding = IEP 1.69m+
TIP:
Don’t be held hostage by any Investor.
Make Sure Friends and Family understand the ‘Risk’ in
the investment.
45
47. History
• General Georges Doroit is considered to be the
father of venture capital industry – founder of
INSEAD
• In 1946 he founded American Research and
Development (ARD) Corporation, whose biggest
success was Digital Equipment Corporation.
– When Digital Equipment went public in 1968 it
provided ARD with 101% IRR.
– ARD's US$70,000 investment in Digital
Corporation in 1959 had a market value of
US$37mn in 1968. 528x!!
• The first Bay Area venture-backed startup is
generally considered to be Fairchild Semiconductor,
funded in 1959 by Venrock Associates (Rockefeller)47
48. What you need to know about Venture Capital
•Venture capitalists:
– Raise pools of capital from institutional and
individual investors
– Finance new and rapidly growing companies;
– Purchase preferred equity securities and take
board positions;
– Add value to the company through active
participation;
– Take higher risks with the expectation of higher
rewards;
– Have a long-term orientation
– Make $$$ by via M&A or IPO liquidity events
48
49. N365: Close 1st Major Customer Deal
Closed first customer deal with Digifone (now
O2). Licence fee: > IE£80k + maintenance
49
50. N365: Built a Pipeline
Second Telco customer (HK-CSL)
at over 50% probability
50
51. Convertible Loan from VC
Received €1.0m as a Convertible Loan from
a VC.
Loan to convert into shares at a discount of
10%
51
52. VC Psychology: The Fear / Greed Pendulum
Greed:
• Wanting to maximize fund returns
• Wanting to build the next big thing
Fear:
• Down round if company runs out of cash before
achieving milestones
• Loss of capital (and prestige)
• Loss of Limited Partner support for next fund
52
53. VC Funding
TIPS:
• Understand the economic and control terms
• Get to know the General Partners in the VC – They
matter and make the decisions
• The term sheet is critical. What’s in it usually
determines the final deal structure. Don’t think of it
as a letter of intent. Think of it as a blue print for
future relationship with your investor.
• Liquidation preference is a critical term that is part
of most equity financing
• Move to close the deal quickly – From Term Sheet
to money in the bank - we did it in 10 days!
53
54. A Good VC Pitch – What is the opportunity?
• Tells VCs what they need to know
• Is different from your customer sales
pitch
• Is about your business, not about your
product
• Is clear about what you do
• Excites VCs about the opportunity to
build a market leader
54
55. A Good VC Pitch – Deal with the Risks
• Deal honestly with your key risks:
• Product Risk: Does the product work & meet
customer needs?
• Market Risk: Is there a large € market for this?
• Competitive Risk: Is this the best company in this
space?
• Management Risk: Is this the right management
team to execute and build this business?
• Liquidity Risk: Can VCs exit (within the timeframe
of the fund) and return € to investors?
55
56. What You Say – What the VC Hears
• We are three years ahead of the market
– OK, call me in two years when customers need
you, if you haven’t run out of money waiting for
the market to emerge.
• The big guys don’t have a clue
– Great. They won’t partner with you, either.
• Our model is conservative and only assumes
we get 1% of the market.
– Why 1%? Your model is faith-based, not fact-
based.
• We are the next Instagram.
– Please don’t skip your meds. 56
57. What You Say – What The Vc Hears
• We are Groupon for restaurants, events….
– You and 10,000 others… most of whom will fail
• We are destined to win because our product is
so compelling.
– And you’ll be outclassed by folks with better
marketing
• Exit strategy? As the next big thing, we’ll IPO
for sure.
– But 95% of exits are M&A.
• We have no competition.
– You have no market… OR...
– Really? We met two competitors last month 57
58. VC Funding Series B
• €15m
• Pre money valuation €30m
– Dropped from €38m due to dot com crash
• Price per share €6.1418
– Dropped from €7.54491
• Employee Option Pool (20%)
• 2 Investor Directors
• Legal fees capped at £25k
• Weighted average anti-dilution
• Liquidation Preference etc…
58
59. Value of Founder’s Share = IEP 13.8m+
Ownership = 30.6%
External Funding = IEP 16.69m+
TIP
Understand the economic and control terms
59
60. VC Funding Series C
• €10m
• Pre money valuation €21m
• C convertible preferred shares @ €2.801 per share
• Employee Option Pool (20%)
• 3 Investor Directors
• Keyman insurance for Raomal Perera & Denis
Hennessy
• Legal fees capped at £50k
60
61. Moving to the US
• Consider buying a US product firm to establish a
beach-head
• Choose US geography based on proximity to
customers and relevant capital
• Keep engineering in a lower-cost region outside of
US
• You don’t need to hire an American to run your
operation but your US head should have US
experience, especially sales & business
development
• Leverage existing multinational customers
/partners 61
62. Acquisition Series C-1
• €11m
• Acquired iPIN
• Entry into the US market
• Create clear market leader
• Build strength against new competitors
• Accelerate growth and profitability
62
63. Stage Pre-Money/ Post-Money Valuation Distribution of Equity Ownership
Seed Pre-money Investment Post-
money
Team Angel VC1 VC2 VC3 VC4 VC5
€0 €22,5k €22.5k 100%
Series A Pre-money Investment Post-
money
Team Angel VC1 VC2 VC3 VC4 VC5
€2.9m €0.5m €3.4m 89.7% 10.3%
€4.3m €1.6m €5.9m 71.1% 17.9% 9%
Series B Pre-money Investment Post-
money
Team Angel VC1 VC2 VC3 VC4 VC5
€30 €15m €45 49.7% 12.1% 15% 16.2% 4% 3%
Series C Pre-money Investment Post-
money
Team Angel VC1 VC2 VC3 VC4 VC5
€22.5m €10m €32.5m 29.9% 5.4% 20.3% 19.5% 2.9% 2.9% 19.1%
Network365 – Multiple Funding Rounds
63
64. The Key to Getting Funded
• Has a credible CEO /founders with relevant market
experience for this business
• Has traction & proof points (customers)
• Is strongly differentiated from the competitors
• Has a well conceived business model
– Financials are supported by business assumptions
– Company is metrics and milestone driven
– CEO/team knows what it takes to get sustainable growth
– Is capital efficient
– The economics seem to make sense
– The team lives their model
• Is solving a problem that matters and captures the
investors imagination
64
65. Elevator Pitch Vs 2 Pager
• Elevator Pitch
– 60 seconds/ 3 minutes
– Goal: pursuit
– Killer idea
- Real pain/best product
– Verbal
– Immediate & simple
– Next step: Send me
more info.
2 Pager
10 minutes
Goal: hook
Killer plan
- Real pain/best plan
(product and so much
more)
Written
Nuanced with
details
Next step: Can you
come in? 65
66. Perfect Pitch Outline
The Investment Opportunity (Elevator Pitch: the wow!)
Company Overview (Who are you?)
Our Opportunity / Business Problem (So what?)
Our Unique Solution (What, exactly, do you do?)
Underlying Technology (How do you do it?)
Business Model (How do you make money?)
Target Market (Who writes the check?)
Competitive Landscape (Whom do you win against?)
Go to Market Strategy (Unfair competitive advantage?)
Financials (Succeed: how big can you get and at what cost?)
Milestones / Uses of Capital (You’ll succeed…. by when?)
Team (On whom are the investors betting on?)
Summary: Reasons to Invest (Restate elevator pitch)
66
67. Elevator Pitch (The WOW)
What Investors Want to See
• Large Market Opportunity
• Unique, compelling
solution validated by early
customers
• Unfair market advantage
• Right team for this
opportunity
• Multiple exits yielding
venture-scale returns
Common Mistakes
What is this all about
Poor pacing
Lack of impact
Unsubstantiated claims
Smart Strategy
Get us excited!
Borrow credibility from
customers and partners
Be confident, crisp,
credible & compelling
67
68. Company Overview (Who Are You?)
What Investors Want to Know
• What do you do?
• How old is the firm? Key
milestones achieved?
• Customers & Partners?
• Your financing history?
• Who are your advisors?
• Anyone of note on your
Board?
• What is the investment
opportunity for me?
• Tell me about this round
Common Mistakes
Lack of clarity about what
you do
Put the “WOW” up front
Bermuda Triangle #1
Smart Strategy
Emphasize relevant
experience
Borrow credibility from
customers and partners
Bootstrap to first
milestone
68
69. Business Problem (Is This A Compelling Problem?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• What market?
• What customer?
• Pain?
• Market forces?
• What’s wrong with the
existing solutions?
• Is the pain serious enough
to create an opportunity
for a startup?
Common Mistakes
A nice to have but
not a must have
Techno-idealism
Smart Strategy
Customer design
partners
Customer Advisory
Board
69
70. Unique Solution
(Is This Compelling For Customers?)
What Investors Want to KNOW
• What exactly is the
product/service that
customers buy?
• Your value proposition
• Did customers help define
the product?
• Broadly applicable or a one-
off?
• Price? A “whole product”
solution?
• Do you have reference
account proof points? ROI?
Common Mistakes
No clear business
benefit or ROI
Faith-based design
A consulting business
Smart Strategy
Design partner
Customer advisory
board
External market
validation / research 70
71. Underlying Technology (Is this Hard to do?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• Does it work?
• What is the secret sauce?
• How hard is it to
productise?
• Is the product finished? Is
this the release we are
betting on?
• Are the most important
elements patent-
protected? Worldwide
patent?
Common Mistakes
Too much detail for non-
specialist investors
Too much customisation
needed to scale
Bermuda Triangle #2
Smart Strategy
Simple diagram showing
how this fits into the
customer’s environment
71
72. Business Model (How do you make money?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• Who pays you?
Customers? Partners?
Advertisers?
• What is your customer or
partner acquisition model?
• Revenue Cycle?
• Pricing model?
• Customer acquisition
cost?
Common Mistakes
Confusing a product
plan with a business
plan?
Underestimating
customer acquisition
cost
Smart Strategy
Use a peer company
model
Show a credible sales
pipeline
72
73. Target Market (Is This A Large Market?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• What is the market we are
betting on?
• How big is the market
today? Tomorrow?
• CAGR
• Underlying market forces
driving this growth?
• What is your market share
at break even?
Common Mistakes
Market is too small
Anemic growth
Lack of focus – you are
pursuing too many market
markets or niches
Uncritical reliance on
market analysts
1% fallacy
Smart Strategy
Credible, bottoms-up data
backed up with your
pipeline
73
74. Competitive Landscape (Are you meaningfully ahead?)
What Investors Want to Know
• Who are your primary
competitors?
• What do you do better than
anyone else?
• Are the differentiators you
highlight really important to
customers?
• Are these advantages
sustainable?
• Where are you vulnerable?
• What is your Gorilla
strategy?
Common Mistakes
“We have no competition”
Dis (mis)sing the
competition
Narcissism of small
differences
Focus on features more
than benefits
Smart Strategy
3rd party reviews &
customer references
Differentiate on business
attributes, not just
technology
74
75. Go–to-market Strategy (Can You Build The Business?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• Your unfair business
advantage?
• Can you sell efficiently?
• What is your world
domination strategy?
• How much sales visibility
do you have for this year
& next year? Really?
• What partners do you
need to ‘own’ the market?
Common Mistakes
“Our technology is so
much better than the
competition”
“If we build it, they will
come”
A science project, not a
business
Smart Strategy
Have a go-to-market
partner … but don’t bet
the farm on him
Show a credible sales
pipeline
75
76. Financials (How Capital Efficient Are You?)
What Investors Want to
Know
• Customer acquisition cost
• 2-3 year P&L
• Burn (monthly cash use)
• Snapshot at break-even:
– # of customers
– Revenue
– Market share
– Employees
– MRR & Churn
– Cash used/cash in bank
• Can you get to break-even
with reasonable capital?
Common Mistakes
Don’t understand what an
investor want to see
Hockey-stick growth or
anemic growth
Unrealistically low capital
needs
Build a model for investors
rather than run the company
Smart Strategy
Integrate key metrics and
financials
Backup financial slides
Have a spreadsheet model
Use peer comparisons
76
77. Metrics, Milestomes & Uses Of Capital (What Has To
Happen For A Successful Next Round?)
What Investors Want to Know
• Do you live your model? Is
management metrics-
driven?
• Milestones & metrics
– Cashflow
– Product milestones
– Team milestones
– Customers (€€ and logos)
– Partnership milestones
– Financial (break-even) metrics
– Operational metrics
– Exit metrics for this market
• Risk of running out of cash before
reaching milestones
• How will capital be used?
Common Mistakes
No real business plan
Vague metrics
High risk milestones
Viewing your model as an
exercise for the investor
rather than managing your
company
“Numbers? Go ask my
CFO”
Smart Strategy
Identify realistic peer
companies to explain and
benchmark your business 77
78. Team (This Is The Biggest Bet The Investors Make)
What Investors Want to Know
• Person, title, experience
• What have you done that is
relevant to this business?
• Have you worked together
as a team before?
• Have you made investors
€€?
• Does anyone know this
business ‘in their bones’?
• Who are you missing?
Hiring plans?
• Can investors help build out
the team?
Common Mistakes
A “jailhouse”- “time-
served” resume
Experience is irrelevant
for this business
Focus on where you
went to college
Smart Strategy
Map your team’s skills
to the skills needed to
build THIS business
78
79. The Dream Team
• Made € for investors
• Built marquee companies
• Has startup experience
• Worked together before
• Developed world class products
• Dealt well with adversity; turned around company
from under performer to high impact winner
• Managed positive M&A or IPO exits
• Has an excellent contact network in this market
• Hires well
79
81. Why is an Elevator Pitch so Important?
• I’m bootstrapping my business – I don’t
need any funds – Why do I need an
elevator pitch?
• An elevator pitch will help you figure out
what’s at the core of your business.
81
82. Six Questions you must answer with
your Elevator Pitch
Start with a HOOK
1.What is your product or service?
2.Who is your market?
3.What is your revenue model?
4.Who is behind the company?
5.Who is your competition?
6.What is your competitive advantage?
End with an Ask 82
83. Sample Elevator Pitch
Ring tones are just the tip of the ice berg. Soon,
Mobile Network Operators will have access to a very
large revenue stream as a result of creating a 3G
Network. Network365 provide a payment platform for
value added services and products that can be either
directly integrated to the Billing system of providing
several channels to receive payment for these
additional services.
IDC estimates that the market for Internet Commerce
Applications is at $1.7B and expects it to top $13B by
2003.
Network365 will charge a license fee and a usage fee
to the Operators. We will also provide a ‘managed
services’. 83
84. Sample Elevator Pitch
Our team has the experience of building scalable
software platforms and has the experience of selling
to telecos. The CEO is was the co-founder of
ISOCOR, which was listed on NASDAQ and
delivered the second highest return to the lead
investor’s fund.
Our competitors are Qpass & i-Pin two companies in
the US also building payment platforms for mobile
operators.
84
85. Sample Elevator Pitch
Our differentiator will be our ability to penetrate
the Japanese market which is the most
advanced market for value added services.
We are anticipating $2million this round to be
used for employee building, increased office
space, entry into Japanese market.
We have a compelling two page executive
summary that I would like to send you. Can I
get your address? 85
86. Take a few minutes to write down your
Elevator Pitch
• HOOK
• What is your product or service?
• Who is your market?
• What is your revenue model?
• Who is behind the company?
• Who is your competition?
• What is your competitive advantage?
• ASK
86
88. Who’s Your Investor? The Good, The Bad
Investor The Good The Bad
You • You’re the boss
• Total control
• Total ownership
• Minimal funding
• No feedback
Angel(s) • Mentoring
• Feedback
• Moderate funding
• No obligation to repay
• Limited runway
• Limited network
• Some dilution
VCs • Unlimited funding
• Long runway
• Large network
• Good governance
• Your credibility
• Conflicting agendas
• Loss of control
• Massive dilution
Bank • No equity dilution • No mentoring/feedback
• No network
• Bias on cash flow
• Obligation to repay
88
89. Investor Types by Stage
Financing Round Definition Typical Amounts Typical Investors
Pre-seed Proof of concept - - Visa, mortgage
- Friends & Family
- Small grants
Seed Prototype (alpha) €25k - €500k - Friends & Family
- Govt. Agencies
- Angels
Start-up Commercial device
(beta)
€500k - €3m - Super Angels
- Early-stage VCs
Expansion
- 1-3 rounds
typical
Strengthen team
Scale
manufacturing
Expand sales
€2m - €10m - VCs
- CVCs
Mezzanine/Bridge CFBE
Position for IPO
€5m - €30m - VCs
- Cross-over funds
Buy-out Secondary sale - - PE firms
www.thousandseeds.com 89
90. Funding – SME Tool (Ireland)
This is a great tool for Irish Entrepreneurs.
Originally produced by the Dept of Finance and
now promoted and supported by the LEOs.;
https://www.localenterprise.ie/Discover-
Business-Supports/Supporting-SMEs-Online-
Tool/
90
91. Funding: Bootstrapping
Good Books:
Seth Godin – Bootstrappers Bible
37 Signals - Getting Real & Rework
7 bootstrapper tools
1. Nothing to Loose
2. Happy with small fish
3. Presidential Input
4. Rapid R&D
5. The Underdog
6. Low Overhead
7. Time
91
92. How To Run A Company On A Shoe String
(i.e. Bootstrap)
What are the best productivity tools for
entrepreneurs: http://www.quora.com/What-are-the-
best-productivity-tools-for-entrepreneurs?srid=9JG
eg: Dropbox, Evernote, Gmail,Google Docs, LinkedIn,
Mailchimp, Mindmaps, Skype, Wunderlist, Xobni,
Expensify, AsanaFlow, Basecamp etc…
92
93. Funding: Award Programmes
• Award programmes
• Inter-trade Ireland’s Seedcorn competition
• Cartier Women’s Initiative
• Social Entrepreneurs Ireland
• Lots more …….
Exercise: Search for Award programmes
both local & global that you could avail off.
93
95. Get Investor Ready - Enterprise Ireland Pre Investment
Supports for High Potential Start-Ups (HPSUs)
• HPSU Feasibility Grant - €15k (50%)
Used to investigate the viability and potential of an
innovative/high potential start-up and the development
of an Investor Ready Business Plan. Eligible costs include;
Salaries and Overheads, Consultancy Fees, Foreign Travel
and Subsistence, EI approved Business Accelerator Fees,
Trade Fair costs and Prototype costs.
• Mentor Grant - €1,750
Used to support the cost of a Mentor Assignment.
Enterprise Ireland can match you with an experienced
business mentor to assist you in your start-up phase or
advise on specific areas of your plan.
95
96. Get Investor Ready - Enterprise Ireland Pre Investment
Supports for High Potential Start-Ups (HPSUs)
• Innovation Voucher -€ 5k
Innovation Vouchers, worth €5k, are available to assist a
company to work with a registered college or knowledge
provider to explore a business opportunity or technical
problem.
• New Frontiers Entrepreneur Development Programme -
€15k (6 months full-time)
National incubation programme that offers successful
applicants with a package of supports to help accelerate
their business development and to equip you with the
skills to successfully start and grow a company.
Applications must be made directly to your nearest
participating Institute of Technology. 96
97. Get Investor Ready - Enterprise Ireland Pre Investment
Supports for High Potential Start-Ups (HPSUs)
• Competitive Feasibility Fund - North East Region - €25k
Fund to assist a new start-up company or individual
entrepreneur to investigate the viability of a new significant
growth orientated business or proposition to be located in
the North East Region (counties Louth, Cavan and Meath).
• Competitive Feasibility Fund for Female Entrepreneurs -
€25k
Fund to assist Female Entrepreneurs to investigate the
viability of a new growth orientated business that can
succeed in global markets. The focus is on developing new
businesses that can move beyond the domestic market and
demonstrate real potential for internationalisation.
97
98. Investor Ready - Enterprise Ireland Equity Investment Supports
for High Potential Start-Ups (HPSUs)
• Competitive Start Fund for Female Entrepreneurs - €50k
€50k equity investment to support eligible, female-led, early
stage start-up companies. Learn more about the type of
companies supported and the next closing date for
applications.
• Competitive Start Fund (CSF) €50k
€50k equity investment to support eligible early stage start-up
companies. Learn more about the type of companies
supported and the next closing date for applications.
• Innovative HPSU Fund (Equity) €150k-€350k
The Innovative HPSU Fund allows Enterprise Ireland to offer
equity investment to HPSU clients, on a co-funded basis to
support the implementation of company business plans. First
time and follow-on equity investments in HPSUs are supported
under this offer.
98
100. Funding – Crowd Funding
• There are different types of crowd funding
• You pay a fee to the crowd funding platform
– Between 2% to 10%+
• Choose the site that most suits your cash
needs as well as considering other factors
• Pick a site that has the right level of
functionality for you
– Do you want a ‘all or nothing’ site?
• Understand the size of the crowd
– Registered vs. active
• Keep researching this space. Lots of new
sites coming on-stream
100
103. Funding – Crowd Funding
Social Enterprise Funding
• UK; www.rebuildingsociety.com, www.buzzbnk.org,
www.crowdmission.com
• US; www.kiva.org, www.razoo.com,
www.startsomegood.com, www.waholy.com,
www.40billion.com
Multiple Funding Platforms
• UK; www.banktothefuture.com
– A site where investors can invest for shares (equity)
and/or for debt and also do charity fundraising all on the
same platform.
103
104. Funding – Government Incentives
• Revenue’s seed capital scheme
• Enterprise Ireland
• Social Welfare
• Tax relief for new startups
• Employment & Investment Incentives
• R&D Tax Credit
• Revenue Job Assist
• Startup Incubators (eg. Ireland, Chile ….)
104
105. Funding - Options
• Accelerators (€15k-€50k)
– NDRC Launch Pad, Propeller, Ignite (Cork),
Propel (NI), New Frontiers (EI)
• Private Investors
– Angel Investors & BES Investors
• typically investing between €25k - €100k
• Seed Funds:
– AIB Seed Capital Fund & Startup Accelerator
Fund
– BOI Early Stage Equity Fund, Startup & Emerging
Sectors Equity Fund.
105
106. Funding - Options
• Regional Venture Capital Firms (RVCFs)
• Corporate Venturing
• Venture Capital Firms
• Venture Capital Trusts (VCTs)
• Stock markets
– There are a few ‘junior’ stock markets such as the
Alternative Investment Market (AIM), Plus Market
Group (OFEX)
106
107. Funding - Options
DEBT
• Small Firms Loan Guarantee Schemes
• Bank Debt:
LOANS:
• Local Investment Funds:
– There are a few LIFs around ‘some’ countries
making loans to enterprises which benefit the
community.
107
108. Funding - Options
OTHER
• Factoring / Invoice Discounting:
• Leasing:
• Hire purchase, finance lease
108
109. Angel Investment Gust Platform
• Gust.com/entrepreneurs (deal flow
platform)
• Edit Business Details
• Upload a Video Pitch
• Share Documents Secularly
• Track Investor Activity
• Tips from Investors 109
117. How to run a
successful
crowdfunding
campaign!
Modwenna Rees-Mogg
118. The background
During the last three years:
• UK alternative finance market
tripled;
• some form of equity-based
crowdfunding platform has
emerged across 27 countries; and
• 5,000 UK SMEs have used the
alternative finance market.
(*Data from The UK Alternative Finance Market
Benchmarking Report by Nesta, Cambridge
University and California University,
December 2013)