Author: boldventure22

How does an early-stage investor value a startup?

The following is a great piece by Carlos Eduardo Espinal, co-manager at Seedcamp.com, about startup valuation methods that I did not want to keep from you. Enjoy the exciting read.

 

– One of the most frequently asked questions at any startup event or investor panel, is “how do investors value a startup?”. The unfortunate answer to the question is: it depends.

Startup valuation, as frustrating as this may be for anyone looking for a definitive answer, is, in fact, a relative science, and not an exact one.

For those of you that want to cut to the summary of this post (which is somewhat self-evident when you read it) here it is:

The biggest determinant of your startup’s value are the market forces of the industry & sector in which it plays, which include the balance (or imbalance) between demand and supply of money, the recency and size of recent exits, the willingness for an investor to pay a premium to get into a deal, and the level of desperation of the entrepreneur looking for money.

Whilst this statement may capture the bulk of how most early stage startups are valued, I appreciate that it lacks the specificity the reader would like to hear, and thus I will try and explore the details of valuation methods in the remainder of this post with the hopes of shedding some light on how you can try and value your startup.

As any newly minted MBA will tell you, there are many valuation tools & methods out there. They range in purpose for anything from the smallest of firms, all the way to large public companies, and they vary in the amount of assumptions you need to make about a company’s future relative to its past performance in order to get a ‘meaningful’ value for the company. For example, older and public companies are ‘easier’ to value, because there is historical data about them to ‘extrapolate’ their performance into the future. So knowing which ones are the best to use and for what circumstances (and their pitfalls) is just as important as knowing how to use them in the first place.

Some of the valuation methods you may have have heard about include:

While going into the details of how these methods work is outside of the scope of this post, I’ve added some links that hopefully explain what they are. Rather, let’s start tackling the issue of valuation by investigating what an investor is looking for when valuing a company, and then see which methods provide the best proxy for current value when they make their choices.

A startup company’s value, as I mentioned earlier, is largely dictated by the market forces in the industry in which it operates. Specifically, the current value is dictated by the market forces in play TODAY and TODAY’S perception of what the future will bring.

Effectively this means, on the downside, that if your company is operating in a space where the market for your industry is depressed and the outlook for the future isn’t any good either (regardless of what you are doing), then clearly what an investor is willing to pay for the company’s equity is going to be substantially reduced in spite of whatever successes the company is currently having (or will have) UNLESS the investor is either privy to information about a potential market shift in the future, or is just willing to take the risk that the company will be able to shift the market. I will explore the latter point on what can influence you attaining a better (or worse) valuation in greater detail later. Obviously if your company is in a hot market, the inverse will be the case.

Therefore, when an early stage investor is trying to determine whether to make an investment in a company (and as a result what the appropriate valuation should be), what he basically does is gauge what the likely exit size will be for a company of your type and within the industry in which it plays, and then judges how much equity his fund should have in the company to reach his return on investment goal, relative to the amount of money he put into the company throughout the company’s lifetime.

This may sound quite hard to do, when you don’t know how long it will take the company to exit, how many rounds of cash it will need, and how much equity the founders will let you have in order to meet your goals. However, through the variety of deals that investors hear about and see in seed, series A and onwards, they have a mental picture of what constitutes and ‘average’ size round, and ‘average’ price, and the ‘average’ amount of money your company will do relative to other in the space in which it plays. Effectively, VCs, in addition to having a pulse of what is going on in the market, have financial models which, like any other financial analyst trying to predict the future within the context of a portfolio, have margins of error but also assumptions of what will likely happen to any company they are considering for investment. Based on these assumptions, investors will decide how much equity they effectively need now, knowing that they may have to invest along the way (if they can) so that when your company reaches its point of most likely going to an exit, they will hit their return on investment goal. If they can’t make the numbers work for an investment either relative to what a founder is asking for, or relative to what the markets are telling them via their assumptions, then an investor will either pass, or wait around to see what happens (if they can).

So, the next logical question is, how does an investor size the ‘likely’ maximum value (at exit) of my company in order to do their calculations?

Well, there are several methods, but mainly “instinctual” ones and quantitative ones. The instinctual ones are used more in the early-stage type of deals and as the maturity of the company grows, along with its financial information, quantitative methods are increasingly used. Instinctual ones are not entirely devoid of quantitative analysis, however, it is just that this “method” of valuation is driven mostly by an investor’s sector experience about what the average type of deal is priced at both at entry (when they invest) and at exit. The quantitative methods are not that different, but incorporate more figures (some from the valuation methods outlined) to extrapolate a series of potential exit scenarios for your company. For these types of calculations, the market and transaction comparables method is the favored approach. As I mentioned, it isn’t the intent of this post to show how to do these, but, in summary, comparables tell an investor how other companies in the market are being valued on some basis (be it as a multiple of Revenues or EBITDA, for example, but can be other things like user base, etc) which in turn can be applied to your company as a proxy for your value today. If you want to see what a professionally prepared comps table looks like (totally unrelated sector, but same idea), go here.

Going back to the valuation toolset for one moment… most of the tools on the list I’ve mentioned include a market influence factor , meaning they have a part of the calculation that is determined by how the market(s) are doing, be it the market/industry your company operates in, or the larger S&P 500 stock index (as a proxy of a large pool of companies). This makes it hard, for example to use tools (such as the DCF) that try and use the past performance of a startup (particularly when there is hardly a track record that is highly reliable as an indicator of future performance) as a means by which to extrapolate future performance. This is why comparables, particularly transaction comparables are favored for early stage startups as they are better indicators of what the market is willing to pay for the startups ‘most like’ the one an investor is considering.

But by knowing (within some degree of instinctual or calculated certainty) what the likely exit value of my company will be in the future, how does an investor then decide what my value should be now?

Again, knowing what the exit price will be, or having an idea of what it will be, means that an investor can calculate what their returns will be on any valuation relative to the amount of money they put in, or alternatively what their percentage will be in an exit (money they put in, divided by the post-money valuation of your company = their percentage).  Before we proceed, just a quick glossary:

Pre-Money = the value of your company now
Post-Money = the value of your company after the investor put the money in
Cash on Cash Multiple = the multiple of money returned to an investor on exit divided by the amount they put in throughout the lifetime of the company

So, if an investor knows how much % they own after they put their money in, and they can guess the exit value of your company, they can divide the latter from the former and get a cash-on-cash multiple of what their investment will give them (some investors use IRR values as well of course, but most investors tend to think in terms of cash-on-cash returns because of the nature of how VC funds work). Assume a 10x multiple for cash-on-cash returns is what every investor wants from an early stage venture deal, but of course reality is more complex as different levels of risk (investors are happy with lower returns on lower risk and later stage deals, for example) will have different returns on expectations, but let’s use 10x as an example however, because it is easy, and because I have ten fingers. However, this is still incomplete, because investors know that it is a rare case where they put money in and there is no requirement for a follow-on investment. As such, investors need to incorporate assumptions about how much more money your company will require, and thus how much dilution they will (as well as you) take provided they do (or don’t ) follow their money up to a point (not every investor can follow-on in every round until the very end, as many times they reach a maximum amount of money invested in one company as is allowed by the structure of their fund).

Now, armed with assumptions about the value of your company at exit, how much money it may require along the way, and what the founding team (and their current investors) may be willing to accept in terms of dilution, they will determine a ‘range’ of acceptable valuations that will allow them, to some extent, to meet their returns expectations (or not, in which case they will pass on the investment for ‘economics’ reasons). This method is what I call the ‘top-down’ approach…

Naturally, if there is a ‘top-down’, there must be a ‘bottom-up’ approach, which although is based on the ‘top-down’ assumptions, basically just takes the average entry valuation for companies of a certain type and stage an investor typically sees and values a company relative to that entry average. The reason why I say this is based on the ‘top-down’ is because that entry average used by the bottom-up approach, if you back-track the calculations, is based on a figure that will likely give investors a meaningful return on an exit for the industry in question. Additionally, you wouldn’t, for example, use the bottom-up average from one industry for another as the results would end up being different. This bottom-up approach could yield an investor saying the following to you when offering you a termsheet:

“a company of your stage will probably require x millions to grow for the next 18 months, and therefore based on your current stage, you are worth (money to be raised divided by % ownership the investor wants – money to be raised) the following pre-money”.

One topic that I’m also skipping as part of this discussion, largely because it is a post of its own, is “how much money should I raise?”. I will only say that you will likely have a discussion with your potential investor on this amount when you discuss your business plan or financial model, and if you both agree on it, it will be part of the determinant of your valuation. Clearly a business where an investor agrees that 10m is needed and is willing to put it down right now, is one that has been de-risked to some point and thus will have a valuation that reflects that.

So being that we’ve now established how much the market and industry in which you company plays in can dictate the ultimate value of your company, lets look at what other factors can contribute to an investor asking for a discount in value or an investor being willing to pay a premium over the average entry price for your company’s stage and sector. In summary:

An investor is willing to pay more for your company if:

  • It is in a hot sector:investors that come late into a sector may also be willing to pay more as one sees in public stock markets of later entrants into a hot stock.
  • If your management team is shit hot: serial entrepreneurs can command a better valuation. A good team gives investors faith that you can execute.
  • You have a functioning product (more for early stage companies)
  • You have traction: nothing shows value like customers telling the investor you have value.

An investor is less likely to pay a premium over the average for your company (or may even pass on the investment) if:

  • It is in a sector that has shown poor performance.
  • It is in a sector that is highly commoditized, with little margins to be made.
  • It is in a sector that has a large set of competitors and with little differentiation between them (picking a winner is hard in this case).
  • Your management team has no track record and/or may be missing key people for you to execute the plan (and you have no one lined up). Take a look at a post on ‘do I need a technical founder?‘.
  • Your product is not working and/or you have no customer validation.
  • You are going to shortly run out of cash

In conclusion, market forces right now greatly affect the value of your company. These market forces are both what similar deals are being priced at (bottom-up) and the amounts of recent exits (top-down) which can affect the value of a company in your specific sector. The best thing you can do to arm yourself with a feeling of what values are in the market before you speak to an investor is by speaking to other startups like yours (effectively making your own mental comparables table) that have raised money and see if they’ll share with you what they were valued and how much they raised when they were at your stage. Also, read the tech news as sometimes they’ll print information which can help you back track into the values. However, all is not lost. As I mentioned, there are factors you can influence to increase the value of your startup, and nothing increases your company’s value more than showing an investor that people out there want your product and are even willing to pay for it.

 

Other pieces on the subject

http://fundersandfounders.com/how-startup-valuation-works/

http://www.quora.com/How-do-VC-firms-value-a-start-up

Google follows Facebook by acquiring the auspicious drone startup Titan

ImageGoogle has acquired Titan Aerospace, the drone startup that makes high-flying robots which was previously scoped by Facebook as a potential acquisition target, the WSJ reports. The details of the purchase weren’t disclosed, but the deal comes after Facebook disclosed its own purchase of a Titan Aerospace competitor in U.K.-based Ascenta for its globe-spanning Internet plans earlier this year in March.

Both Ascenta and Titan Aerospace are in the business of high altitude drones, which cruise nearer the edge of the earth’s atmosphere and provide tech that could be integral to covering the globe in cheap, omnipresent Internet connectivity to help bring remote areas online. According to the WSJ, Google will be using Titan Aerospace’s expertise and tech to contribute to Project Loon, the balloon-based remote Internet delivery project it’s currently working on along these lines.

That’s not all the Titan drones can help Google with, however. The company’s robots also take high-quality images in real-time that could help with Maps initiatives, as well as helping monitor environmental damage like oil spills and deforestation and contribute to things like “disaster relief”, a Google spokesperson tells WSJ. The main goal, however, is likely spreading the potential reach of Google and its network, which is Facebook’s aim, too. When you saturate your market and you’re among the world’s most wealthy companies, you don’t go into maintenance mode; you build new ones.

As for why an exit to Google looked appealing to the New Mexico-based company Titan, whose drones are capable of flying at a reported altitude of 65,000 feet for up to three years, one has to take into consideration that there was also a lot of risk involved that would’ve made it difficult to find sustained investment while remaining independent. Google enables the founders to do just that: continue their research, testing and design work as part of the Google family and not having to worry about raising money from other VC’s anymore.

Titan Aerospace also represents just the latest in a string of robotics acquisitions Google has been making lately, which include Boston Dynamics and seven other companies purchased to help fuel its experimental robotics program. There’s no question Google is eager to stay ahead of competition like Facebook. And thanks to Loon ambitions, the reasoning behind the Titan buy might just be the most transparent yet.

Don’t know what to do with your degree and haven’t found you dream job yet? Karista, a career- and job-portal for recent and soon-to-be Graduates will be making its start in May 2014. The project is led by the founders of meinpraktikum.de and Ausbildung.de. “The portal is supposed to solve the essential problem for students: figuring out what to do and which jobs to apply for, with their degree” says Joschka Felten, CEO of Karista. A job-navigator will help students to find relevant jobs that match their degree. So far, so good. But what’s the new approach that differentiates Karista from other job search pages? “Besides providing the students with the suitable profession based on their degree, we also list currently open positions in that particular area of interest” promises Felten. That would indeed be a new approach that has not been seen before…

Patient tablets in hospitals will revolutionize the way we access our personal health data

New York-Presbyterian Hospital’s (NYP) bedside tablet project replaces traditional nurse call buzzers with tablets that patients can also use to access personal health data. The hospital has operated a MyNYP.org website based on Microsoft HealthVault since 2009, but it’s been a personal health records portal for patients to use from home.

Now the portal is also an in-patient bedside communications tool. Patients are often barraged by information, and the tablets let them browse information about their condition through the portal. The Windows 8 tablets, combined with two custom built Windows 8 apps, enable patients to seamlessly communicate with their care-team and quickly access their health information. When patients use the tablets to call for help, they can be more specific, helping nurses cut down on the clamor associated with the old system. Image

Often, hospitalized patients can be overwhelmed by the volume of information doctors and nurses share with them, but concepts like the NYP tablets hold that information for review at any time and allow patients to track their condition over time by following trends in their vital signs and other measures

More hospitals are slowly introducing similar concepts as they receive almost entirely positive feedback from patients. The vital question to answer will be the cost effectiveness of such tablets and how much hospitals would need to spend in order to introduce such systems. In the pilot test, NYP deployed tablets to two surgical nursing units with 69 beds, providing each bed with a tablet. It has proven cost-effective, taking advantage of existing network infrastructure. NYP says it’s spending $500,000 on software development, whereas it estimated the cost of additional lines to the nurse call system at $40 million.

It is not for nothing that, when Steve Jobs was once asked in what sector he sees the next big revolution his answer was the combination of Health Care and Technology.The goal is to do for medical devices what Steve Jobs did for phones. NYP has taken a step in the right direction.

“The best training I ever got for running a company was being president of my fraternity. Leadership skills come from doing, not reading.

I had to deal with everything from litigation, to fundraising, to collecting dues, to accepting and kicking out members, to planning social events.

Doing that at age 19 was the best training I ever had.”

-Marc Suster, 2x entrepreneur turned VC and General Parner at Upfront Ventures

 

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/11-quotes-about-entrepreneurship-from-venture-capitalist-mark-suster?op=1#ixzz2yIgCSEk5

Check out Mark Suster’s blog as well. Worthwhile reading!

Uber, Blacklane and Co. run into headwind from taxi lobbyists

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Taxis and limousines – what could have been expected to be an explosive blend seems to have plenty potential for conflict. Most recently, a taxi driver association in Berlin proceeds against chauffeur service Blacklane.

As more and more limousine and chauffeur-services have popped up in recent years, the taxi industry is alarmed and ready to put up a fight with (relatively) new, innovative start ups like Blacklane, Uber and MyDriver that are trying to steal market share away from them. The transportation market, especially in Germany, is highly regulated. The Passenger Transportation Act (“Personenbeförderungsgesetz”) regulates the environment for public transportation and sets out the rules. In order to protect the taxi industry, limousine services are for example not permitted to offer spontaneous rides to passengers in Germany. Thanks to numerous Online-Apps though, limousines can be directed to the next waiting customer via our smartphones, bypassing the just-mentioned. More and more, limousine and chauffeur-services are levering out the privileges that were held for decades by the taxi industry.

In the most recent case, the taxi association of Berlin-Brandenburg had complained about the fact that the new Blacklane Smarts only have one door, as taxis and rental cars need two doors on their right side due to safety reasons. Blacklane counters accordingly with a special permission of the Berlin State Office for Public Order of affairs, stating that “Smarts do not have a rear bench seat and because of that, all passengers can enter and exit the vehicle safely.”

Another recent dispute between Uber, Chauffeur Privè and several taxi drivers in Paris far exceeded the category lobbying. The striking and furious taxi driver, as reported by the Rheinische Post, are said to have thrown paint buckets at cars of the two companies, slashed their tires, broken windows and injured at least one passenger.

After all, the poor attempts of the taxi industry to hamper the irruption of new competitors into the transportation market won’t be successful. The revolution of the transportation market, with more and more concepts penetrating the market, has already advanced too far. Instead, the taxi industry should take on the fight and be encouraged to defend their market share. The taxi companies need to work on their service and quality in order to keep passengers. As of today, the taxi industry has a turnover that is three times the turnover of the limousine industry – but that could change.

Especially in big cities where the number of people owning a car is declining, the people rely on alternative mobility options: car-sharing for example but also limousine and chauffeur services are growing in demand. The innovative offers reflect the spirit of the time, while the coolness factor of a taxi ride is virtually zero. In addition to that, many business travelers have gotten used to the limousine service in the US and are looking for the same in cities like Berlin. Cabbies – look out! Here comes the future.

Picture: Blacklane

LinkedIn co-founder Konstantin Guericke becomes partner at Earlybird

Germany-based VC Earlybird strengthens its ties to the US start-up market as Konstantin Guericke, series entrepreneur and co-founder of LinkedIn, formally joins the company full-time. Having been a venture partner and adviser for the past two years, Guericke will now act as a development and support partner for portfolio companies. Working from Silicon Valley, he will try to bridge the gap between the US and Europe. Most German VC firms lack a significant presence in the US up to this point,  so why not give a Germany firm a credible Silicon Valley presence to negotiate joint investments and help portfolio companies make an impact stateside.

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The move comes as Earlybird announces a package of services for its portfolio companies, which include productivity app Wunderlist, photo-sharing app EyeEm and ride-sharing platform Carpooling.com.

Earlybird aims to increase productivity and connectivity among its portfolio companies  by organizing curated portfolio meet-ups, master classes and networking events, plus online access to special service provider deals, reference materials and the ability for firms to exchange information about best practice. A consolidated human resources database for the entire portfolio will follow in the future.

Having grown up in Germany, Guericke is now responsible for reinforcing the presence of Earlybird’s portfolio companies where the big VC money lies: California and especially Silicon Valley. His fluency in German should not hamper this undertaking.