d
          Boot strappe
Building Businesses
           ^
@ksrikrishna

http://ksrikrishna.com/
Selling stuff
                     people are
                    prepared to
                      pay for


Building
Usually involves
people and laying
a foundation
Should you stay?
●   In my fourth startup (2nd as founder)
    ●   busy making mistakes every day
●   Sunk/shutdown at least one business
    ●   with over 1.5M investment while at Sasken
●   Worked as #2 guy in at least two startups
    ●   before quitting in frustration
●   Built a $50M business within a 600M company
    ●   the product marketing manager
●   Build one business with $20K cap., $0.5M angel
    ●   Sold the business at $9M
Product is but   Your product
                       is
                      only
                  a piece of it
People   Your people
            are a
         bigger part
             of it
The Journey (3/3)      the process
                        & journey
                      are the most
                        important
                         part of it




Flickr joiseyshowaa
Basic Business Cycle
●   <assumption>

     ●   [Customers are out there]
          –   [They have an unfulfilled need]
                   ●   [Your product &| service addresses it]
                        –   [They are prepared to pay for it]
                [You can access them/they can reach you]
                   ●


          –   [What they pay you is more than what it costs you]
     ●   [You make a profit]
●   </assumption>

●   [Repeat cycle]
Reality Check (1/2)
●   What's the ratio of
    ●   engineers:sales:others?
●   What's the R&D expenses
    ●   as % of sales?
Reality Check (2/2)
●   What does their P&L look like?
    ●   Revenue
         –   Cost of Goods
    ●   Gross Margin
         –   Operational Costs
         –   R&D expenses
         –   Marketing expenses
         –   Admin (SGA) expenses
    ●   EBDITA (PBIT)
Startup Reality
●   Average US startup took nearly 8 years (yep eight)
    ●   to get to $50M revenue
         –   Microsoft took 8 years & Oracle took 10
               ●   We took four years to get to our 1st million dollar year
India Funding Reality
●   Angels
    ●   ex-entrepreneurs, HNI, non-blood relatives
         –   Usually betting on the person (you)
         –   Finite money and finite help to step up or scale
●   Family & (soon to be ex-)Friends
    ●   Where much of the action is to get rolling
●   Bootstrapped
    ●   Customer foots the bills
India Funding Reality
●   VC are businesses too (duh!)
    ●   Ideally (un)reasonable risks for unreasonable returns
●   Eco-system is far from ready
    ●   We should quit all this Silicon Valley of India talk
●   Entrepreneurs are far from ready
    ●   We have the spirit (motivation) but the flesh (skills) is weak
●   Most of us are unfundable
    ●   Doesn't mean we won't get funded!
Your Motivations
●   Why are you doing this?
    ●   What constitutes success?
    ●   Is that what your partners think?
●   How long are you prepared to go at it?
    ●   Why or why not?
Our story – the beginning
●   Want to build a tech product company
    ●   Out of India – maybe in DSP area? EDA? wireless?
●   Pitched 13 different concepts to customers
    ●   Over a six month period
    ●   Mostly B2B concepts – ranged from
         –   deeply tech (chip design, DSP software) to
         –   enterprise apps (sales automation)
    ●   All but one founder held day jobs
         –   Got first 15K service contract, hired one programmer & bought computer
    ●   Operated out of founder's apartment
         –   Lost one founder in year 1 (culture)
Year 1-4
●   Finally picked Bluetooth over Wireless (this was '99)
    ●   Because latter required 10K payment for group membership
●   First 3 clients (350K, 250K, 200K) landed with Powerpoint
         –   Leveraged relationships and hustled like crazy
●   Screwed around nearly 2 years to deliver product(s)
         –   Lost first 3 customers :-) and brought in more (Japanese) customers
●   Tech market imploded in 2000
    ●   Bluetooth declared (nearly) dead at least twice 2002/3
●   Broke even in year 4 and realized we are a business
Year 1-4 Behind the scenes
●   Brought on chairman who knew banks
    ●   Arranged for 250K line of (packing) credit
    ●   Borrowed 350K between angels & family – interest bearing
●   Hired (& fired) sales guys in NA & Japan
    ●   Put our own guys in NA & Japan
●   Shut down VLSI initiative & outplaced people
    ●   Shutdown 1 (profitable) service client
●   Made the transition from software to system company
●   Employee 18-34 turned out to be wrong fit
Year 5 - Focus
●   Focused on stereo music over Bluetooth
●   Transitioned Japan service business to 3rd party
●   OEM focus in North America & Europe
    ●   Silicon vendor partnerships/licenses for royalty rev stream
    ●   Reference design as a means to sell software
    ●   Major account strategy
●   What is our growth strategy?
Year 6 & 7
●   Competitors get snapped up in marketplace
●   We develop Plan B to enter retail stereo headsets
    ●   Hippo LifeStyles Pvt Ltd. Singapore
●   Customer express anxiety about us being acquired
    ●   But unwilling to acquire us themselves
●   We hire an investment banker from the Valley
    ●   They run a good process with 4 final bidders for Impulsesoft
●   We opt to get acquired by SiRF as we deem best fit
    ●   We were partly wrong – for cultural reasons
My $0.02 here

●   Focus on building revenue (model)
    ●   Paying customers are always good
    ●   Refine, tweak and re-do as needed
    ●   Customers & revenue will keep you honest
    ●   You'll have better funding options, hopefully
Takeaways
●   Product is only part of your business
●   People are the major component of your business
●   Better enjoy the journey
    ●   Belt up it's a roller coaster

Building bootstrapped businesses_srikrishna_2010_mar_unpluggd

  • 1.
    d Boot strappe Building Businesses ^ @ksrikrishna http://ksrikrishna.com/
  • 2.
    Selling stuff people are prepared to pay for Building Usually involves people and laying a foundation
  • 3.
    Should you stay? ● In my fourth startup (2nd as founder) ● busy making mistakes every day ● Sunk/shutdown at least one business ● with over 1.5M investment while at Sasken ● Worked as #2 guy in at least two startups ● before quitting in frustration ● Built a $50M business within a 600M company ● the product marketing manager ● Build one business with $20K cap., $0.5M angel ● Sold the business at $9M
  • 4.
    Product is but Your product is only a piece of it
  • 5.
    People Your people are a bigger part of it
  • 6.
    The Journey (3/3) the process & journey are the most important part of it Flickr joiseyshowaa
  • 7.
    Basic Business Cycle ● <assumption> ● [Customers are out there] – [They have an unfulfilled need] ● [Your product &| service addresses it] – [They are prepared to pay for it] [You can access them/they can reach you] ● – [What they pay you is more than what it costs you] ● [You make a profit] ● </assumption> ● [Repeat cycle]
  • 8.
    Reality Check (1/2) ● What's the ratio of ● engineers:sales:others? ● What's the R&D expenses ● as % of sales?
  • 9.
    Reality Check (2/2) ● What does their P&L look like? ● Revenue – Cost of Goods ● Gross Margin – Operational Costs – R&D expenses – Marketing expenses – Admin (SGA) expenses ● EBDITA (PBIT)
  • 10.
    Startup Reality ● Average US startup took nearly 8 years (yep eight) ● to get to $50M revenue – Microsoft took 8 years & Oracle took 10 ● We took four years to get to our 1st million dollar year
  • 11.
    India Funding Reality ● Angels ● ex-entrepreneurs, HNI, non-blood relatives – Usually betting on the person (you) – Finite money and finite help to step up or scale ● Family & (soon to be ex-)Friends ● Where much of the action is to get rolling ● Bootstrapped ● Customer foots the bills
  • 12.
    India Funding Reality ● VC are businesses too (duh!) ● Ideally (un)reasonable risks for unreasonable returns ● Eco-system is far from ready ● We should quit all this Silicon Valley of India talk ● Entrepreneurs are far from ready ● We have the spirit (motivation) but the flesh (skills) is weak ● Most of us are unfundable ● Doesn't mean we won't get funded!
  • 13.
    Your Motivations ● Why are you doing this? ● What constitutes success? ● Is that what your partners think? ● How long are you prepared to go at it? ● Why or why not?
  • 14.
    Our story –the beginning ● Want to build a tech product company ● Out of India – maybe in DSP area? EDA? wireless? ● Pitched 13 different concepts to customers ● Over a six month period ● Mostly B2B concepts – ranged from – deeply tech (chip design, DSP software) to – enterprise apps (sales automation) ● All but one founder held day jobs – Got first 15K service contract, hired one programmer & bought computer ● Operated out of founder's apartment – Lost one founder in year 1 (culture)
  • 15.
    Year 1-4 ● Finally picked Bluetooth over Wireless (this was '99) ● Because latter required 10K payment for group membership ● First 3 clients (350K, 250K, 200K) landed with Powerpoint – Leveraged relationships and hustled like crazy ● Screwed around nearly 2 years to deliver product(s) – Lost first 3 customers :-) and brought in more (Japanese) customers ● Tech market imploded in 2000 ● Bluetooth declared (nearly) dead at least twice 2002/3 ● Broke even in year 4 and realized we are a business
  • 16.
    Year 1-4 Behindthe scenes ● Brought on chairman who knew banks ● Arranged for 250K line of (packing) credit ● Borrowed 350K between angels & family – interest bearing ● Hired (& fired) sales guys in NA & Japan ● Put our own guys in NA & Japan ● Shut down VLSI initiative & outplaced people ● Shutdown 1 (profitable) service client ● Made the transition from software to system company ● Employee 18-34 turned out to be wrong fit
  • 17.
    Year 5 -Focus ● Focused on stereo music over Bluetooth ● Transitioned Japan service business to 3rd party ● OEM focus in North America & Europe ● Silicon vendor partnerships/licenses for royalty rev stream ● Reference design as a means to sell software ● Major account strategy ● What is our growth strategy?
  • 18.
    Year 6 &7 ● Competitors get snapped up in marketplace ● We develop Plan B to enter retail stereo headsets ● Hippo LifeStyles Pvt Ltd. Singapore ● Customer express anxiety about us being acquired ● But unwilling to acquire us themselves ● We hire an investment banker from the Valley ● They run a good process with 4 final bidders for Impulsesoft ● We opt to get acquired by SiRF as we deem best fit ● We were partly wrong – for cultural reasons
  • 19.
    My $0.02 here ● Focus on building revenue (model) ● Paying customers are always good ● Refine, tweak and re-do as needed ● Customers & revenue will keep you honest ● You'll have better funding options, hopefully
  • 20.
    Takeaways ● Product is only part of your business ● People are the major component of your business ● Better enjoy the journey ● Belt up it's a roller coaster