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Chapter 5
Venture Capital or Bust
January
1,
1997 Dow 6813.10 NASDAQ 1379.85
For a $1 million
investment, Columbia
Capital wanted to own
51% of our company.
That’s what the term
sheet—a three to five
page document that
formally outlines the
basic terms of an
investment or
acquisition—stated.
We
were flattered that
Columbia Capital thought
highly enough of Net2000
to invest in us. And we
were extremely impressed
by the team at Columbia.
But this valuation was
absurd. We had just been
offered $15 million from
LCI International to buy
us and now Columbia
Capital wanted to put in
$1 million for over half
of our company. Not only
were they offering us
little capital but they
wanted control of our
company too.
Columbia Capital’s
strategy has since
changed, but at the time
they had a controlling
interest approach to
investing. This enabled
them to take control of
the operations,
including the management
team. If we had decided
to move forward with
their offer, Columbia
Capital would have had
the ultimate say in how
our business would run.
Personally, I wanted to
do the deal with them.
My argument to my
partners was that
Columbia Capital had
achieved many successes
with their portfolio
companies, and that they
had a particular knack
for making money in the
telecommunications
space. They would also
be significant mentors
to us. But my partners
thought otherwise. They
refused to give up
ownership of the
business, regardless of
the positive spin I gave
it. Instead they wanted
to aggressively pursue
competitive offers from
other VCs and raise
enough venture capital
to transform Net2000
from a sales agent into
a full-fledged operating
telephone company, or
CLEC.
I
was thinking long-term,
though. I realized that
if we took the risk and
transitioned out of the
Bell agent program to
become a CLEC, we would
have been able to turn
to Columbia Capital for
more money in the
future. As the business
grew, Columbia would
provide us with a safety
net. Instead of butting
heads, however, my
partners and I had to
sit down to re-evaluate
our goals for the
company. This was where
our partner retreats
proved useful because we
had independently
written down our
personal and company
goals for one, three,
and five years down the
road, and then were able
to compare notes.
Lesson 21: Assess
Your Long-term Goals
When Raising Venture
Capital
There are pros and cons
to any investment
opportunity. The pros
are many: venture
capital investors open
doors, they are
invaluable advisors and
mentors, and they
provide important seed
or growth capital. They
also set aside
additional cash for
follow-on investments in
the future as your
business grows, or if
you face obstacles along
the way that require
more funding, as many
companies do.
The
cons, on the other hand,
are different. Needless
to say an important
consideration is the
dilution of the company
or the ownership stake
you’ll give to the VCs.
“The general pattern of
financing involves a
number of rounds of fund
raising. As each stage
proceeds, the founders
and the management team
end up with a smaller
equity stake in their
company. This is how the
dilution game plays out
(Venture Capital: The
Definitive Guide for
Entrepreneurs,
Investors, and
Practitioners, John
Wiley & Sons, 2001).”1
You
must weigh the
risk/reward against the
dilution. Ultimately the
confidence in your
business plan and
financial forecast plays
a significant role in
the amount of dilution
you’re willing to
sacrifice. In other
words, if all goes well,
you can own a smaller
percentage of a larger
company. For example,
the general principle in
accepting venture money
implies that your
aggressive business plan
will be successfully
executed and will make
your overall equity
value greater, even
though your ownership
stake is less on a
percentage basis.
In
deciding your company’s
future, a valuable
strategy is to think
long-term. What are your
long-term goals for the
company; what do you
ultimately want to walk
away with? Weigh your
long-term goals against
the pros and cons. This
is where it is vital to
have your goals for one,
three, and five years
written down to review
with your team.
At
the end of January 1997
we had our final meeting
with Columbia Capital,
which unexpectedly left
us with a bad taste. We
had to make a
presentation to all
eight partners,
including Mark Warner.
We hadn’t yet spent much
time with Mark, as he
had already made his
foray into politics; we
had worked with the
younger partners like
Phil Herget and Jim
Fleming. Initially Mark
intimidated us. But once
we sat with him for more
than five minutes, we
realized that he was a
consummate gentleman.
Unfortunately we didn’t
get the same reception
from a couple of his
other partners.
When
we considerately told
the group we weren’t
interested in the deal,
a couple of arrogant
founding partners balked
at our decision. They
exhibited a bitter
impatience and
superiority that was
completely different
than anything we were
accustomed to in dealing
with Columbia. So we
walked away from that
final meeting slightly
deterred from raising
venture capital.
LCI International, who
had offered to buy us
for $15 million last
year, ultimately decided
to hire us as
consultants. They needed
assistance in packaging
their local services
offerings and in
training their sales
force on how to sell
local services. Their
main focus was
long-distance, but they
had established a small
local services group in
response to the Telecom
Act.
Anne
Bingaman, the newly
hired President of their
local services division,
was our go-to person.
Prior to her LCI
position, Anne had been
appointed by President
Clinton to head the
Department of Justice,
Antitrust Division; her
husband, Jeff, is a U.S.
Senator from New Mexico.
Her expertise is in law,
but she switched gears
to spearhead the local
services division. Anne
is an incredibly bright,
assertive, and well
respected attorney. She
was characteristically
direct and tough, and
very likeable as a
person. She would later
become an investor in
Net2000 and serve on our
Board of Advisors.
Cory
and I first went to New
York, and then out to
Costa Mesa and San
Francisco to train LCI’s
sales force on local
services. We only
provided two days of
sales training in each
location, which wasn’t
much time. This only
reinforced our belief
that Net2000 could
effectively become a
CLEC because we were
more experienced and
knowledgeable in local
services than many of
the other aspiring CLECs—LCI’s
staff received two days
of training, while we
nearly had 10 years of
on the job experience.
While in Costa Mesa, I
dropped in to see Eric
Geis. I had recently met
Eric when we purchased
software from his firm
Quintessential, a
provider of
telecommunications
pricing and optimization
software. Bruce and I
had established great
rapport with Eric. He
was a polished
professional and wore
glasses that exaggerated
his dark eyes and gray
wavy hair. Standing tall
and thin, Eric had an
‘executive’ look. And
his credentials were
impressive. He was a
middle aged gentleman
and had worked for over
two decades in
telecommunications at
large and small
companies. Most notably,
he had founded a company
and led it to an IPO.
Now he was CEO of
Quintessential
Solutions, Inc., a small
private software
company.
The
time had come when we
decided to form our
Board of Directors.
Having outside board
representation is a key
ingredient in ensuring
your company receives
the highest degree of
unbiased and honest
direction. “Corporate
boards should have a
majority of outside
directors because a
higher proportion of
outsiders can strengthen
a board’s independence,
provide greater breadth
of knowledge and
experiences, and enhance
the effective
functioning of the
board,” wrote Jia Wang
in the Journal of
Business Ethics.
Additionally, these
outside directors can
“better monitor and
control the
opportunistic behavior
of the incumbent
management,” and thus
maximize shareholder
value.2 So I
asked Eric if he would
be the first to join our
Board. With a long track
record of
entrepreneurial
successes, Eric was the
model board member, able
to offer us his wisdom
in the telecom world
with a balanced and
objective perspective.
Like many of our senior
advisors, Eric had great
contacts to assist in
broadening our Rolodex
for the strategic moves
we planned to make.
Although we continued to
be profitable, our
overhead costs were
increasing daily. We
continued to bring in
more employees, we were
forming our board of
directors, and there
were whispers about
expanding Net2000 into
other regions. We needed
more cash.
The
talks about opening new
locations came to
fruition when we decided
to open sales offices in
Richmond, Virginia
Beach, Long Island and
New York City. The
overhead to expand into
new markets wasn’t too
costly, but we decided
to seek immediate relief
nonetheless. We
negotiated an Accounts
Receivable (A/R) Line of
Credit from Riggs Bank
for $750,000. And we
would also start avidly
looking for venture
capital so we could
continue growing the
company (we had decided
against the Columbia
Capital offer).
An
A/R Line of Credit was
ideal for a fast growing
company like Net2000.
The line of credit
required little
collateral, minimal
paperwork and could be
in place fairly quickly.
It was a form of lending
that utilized our unpaid
invoices as collateral,
transforming accounts
receivables into cash.
There were talks in the
media that Bell Atlantic
and NYNEX had
consummated the merger
of their two
mega-companies. The
proposed merger was
announced on April 22,
1996, and a year later
was becoming a reality.
The merged corporation
would retain the name
Bell Atlantic (later
changed to Verizon).
“The combined Bell
Atlantic will be the
U.S.’s second largest
telecommunications
company behind AT&T, and
will have combined
assets of more than $50
billion. The company
will also be the largest
of regional Bell
operating companies (RBOCs),”
reported Newsbytes.3
I had tremendous respect
for Bell Atlantic
Chairman and CEO Ray
Smith, and after seeing
his extraordinary
attempt to merge with
TCI Cable come unraveled
several years earlier,
he had pulled off a
juggernaut with the
NYNEX merger. Clearly,
Ray’s attempt to merge
entertainment, content,
and telephony via the
TCI deal was truly
visionary; and more than
a decade ahead of its
time, as that promise is
now coming to fruition.
Wanting a piece of the
action, we looked into
becoming a NYNEX sales
agent. NYNEX’s agent
program was
significantly more
lucrative than Bell
Atlantic’s. They paid
out three times as much
commission for the same
products and services.
In fact, their number
one sales agent—CTC
Communications—was a
public company based on
being a sales agent
alone. This was a
monumental step at the
time. Thus, we pushed
hard to become the first
company to operate as a
sales agent for both
Bell Atlantic and NYNEX.
Barbara Berger, a sales
representative for a
highly successful NYNEX
agent, wanted to move
her family from Long
Island to Richmond, VA.
We were introduced to
Barbara through one of
our other employees,
Lisa McGowan, who was
also a former sales
representative at the
same NYNEX sales agent.
Barbara was the ideal
person to open our
Richmond office. Both
Lisa and Barbara were
instrumental in
educating us on the
advantages, nuances, and
differences inherent in
the NYNEX agent program.
After Barbara went
through sales training
at our corporate
headquarters, we had her
open the Richmond office
in February 1997. Cory
and I had gone with her
to find office space.
She was in Richmond by
herself for a few months
while we worked on
getting more employees
to join her. My partners
and I would go down once
a month to help Barbara
with sales calls.
Expansion to New York
City, Virginia Beach and
Long Island would be our
next move into new
markets. So we started
to focus on potential
employees and office
space for those
locations too.
Clyde Heintzelman became
our second board member,
joining Net2000’s
expanding team in April
1997. We knew Clyde from
Bell, where he had been
a senior executive for
over 25 years and was
the VP of Sales for our
region before becoming
President of the Yellow
Pages division. In his
late 50s, Clyde was like
a father figure to us.
We looked up to him and
had ultimate respect for
his experience and
wisdom.
At
this point in his
career, Clyde had made
the difficult transition
from large company
executive to successful
small company
entrepreneur as
President and COO of
DIGEX Incorporated, an
Internet Service
Provider (ISP).
Following a successful
IPO, DIGEX was soon sold
to Intermedia
Communications, Inc., a
national data services
telecom which later was
acquired by WorldCom.
Clyde had outstanding
credibility in the
industry. He was a
battle-tested veteran.
His strengths were many
and he enhanced our
board with his mastery
of running companies
both large and small.
Lesson 22: Establish
Your Board of Directors
Early, Before Seed or
Venture Capital is
Raised
Conventional wisdom
would have a company
establish a board of
directors simultaneously
with, or shortly after,
closing its first round
of venture capital. The
best time to begin
building your board,
however, is long before
the company attracts
investors. By adding a
couple of high quality
outside directors early
in your company’s
history, your business
will benefit in several
ways. First,
establishing a highly
competent, credible
board of directors will
assist during the
capital raising process.
It’s important to
attract board members
who have successfully
managed and grown
companies, and who have
been through the IPO
process and a successful
exit. Venture
capitalists will be
impressed with
management for having
done this.
Secondly, senior
management will develop
experience in running
board meetings before
the VCs come into the
picture. And rather than
VCs choosing the board
members, management will
have picked the board
members they feel are
best for the company’s
guidance.
For
the initial two
directors, I recommend
those with operational
experience as opposed to
a purely financial
background. As Howard
Ross, founder of LLR
Equity Partners, says in
Venture Capital: The
Definitive Guide For
Entrepreneurs,
Investors, And
Practitioners (John
Wiley & Sons, 2001),
“You want board members
in the early stage who
1) have a multitude of
experiences with growth
companies; and 2) have
some real operating
experience, particularly
in the areas where you
may be weak.”4
Now
aggressively searching
for term sheets from
VCs, we anticipated
raising roughly $1.5
million. We had about 50
venture capital firms we
were targeting. This was
a long and arduous
process. Sometimes we
were well received and
sometimes we were
shunned. Like many
things in business, and
sales in particular,
it’s a numbers game—you
must turn over a lot of
rocks to find success.
One
critical aspect of the
venture capital raising
process was the quality
of our business plan.
Clyde and Eric made this
clear to us, and we saw
the impact it had on our
capital raising
potential as well.
Lesson 23: Be Certain
that Your Business Plan
is Effective and
Realistic Before Going
to Venture Capitalists
Venture capitalists are
more conservative than
in previous years. If
you are ready to raise
venture capital, make
sure that you have
worked fastidiously on
your business plan and
investor presentation.
You only have one chance
to make a good
impression; it is
absolutely critical to
maximize this first
opportunity. If you
approach the VC
community prematurely or
with a half-baked plan,
odds are you won’t make
a sale. In their book
Every Business Needs an
Angel (Crown
Business, 2001), John
May and Cal Simmons
suggest reeling in
potential investors with
a strong hook in your
executive summary.
“Start your summary with
the special feature of
your venture that’s
going to make it a
winner—you’ve got
fabulous growth
prospects, you’ve
already landed a big
customer, you have a new
invention that everyone
is going to want. Find
something about your
company that makes it
shine, and push that
feature out in front.”5
Once
you’ve grabbed a
potential investor’s
interest with your
executive summary, they
are fundamentally
interested in three main
areas of your business
plan—the management
team, your financial
projections, and the
industry sector your
product or service falls
under (most VCs focus on
specific industries). As
I stressed in Chapter 2,
venture capitalists will
invest first and
foremost in the
management team. Gordon
B. Hoffstein, former
Chairman and CEO of PCs
Compleat Inc. (sold to
CompUSA6),
confirms, “An ‘A Team’
with a ‘B Product’ is
more likely to get
financing than a ‘B
Team’ with an ‘A
Product.’”7
If your management team
needs to be replaced
with high-level
executives who have the
appropriate industry
background, then put
your egos aside and
augment your management
team.
A
“hockey stick”, or
overly rapid revenue
growth, is something you
want to avoid when
outlining your financial
projections. This type
of miscalculation occurs
when the revenue curve
starts off slow and
ramps up too quickly.
Rapid growth like that
is generally not
realistic and will
immediately discredit
your plan with venture
investors. In most
cases, it’s impossible
to go from zero revenue
to $200 million in
revenue in 3–4 years.
Your financial model
needs to be based on
achievable milestones
and defensible
assumptions that can be
spelled out. Historical
evidence of comparable
companies is a good
resource to use in
devising your financial
projections. “If the
assumptions are missing
or don’t make sense,
your plan will lose
credibility and you
won’t get funding. When
it comes to financial
statements, especially
those that attempt to
predict the future, you
can never explain
yourself too well.”8
Your
sales and distribution
strategy (direct,
indirect, or a
combination of both) and
prior sales success are
also critical components
to attracting investors.
It is beneficial to have
paying customers who can
be referenced to
validate your business
model. Even beta
customers will prove
useful in attracting
venture capital.
Customers demonstrate a
need for your product or
service.
In
the spring of 1997 we
used a lot of our
pre-existing capital
(profits that were
reinvested and our line
of credit) expanding our
offices and hiring new
employees, thinking we
would close our first
round of funding, or
Series A round, in May.
By now our offices
spanned Virginia Beach,
Richmond, and New York.
The more offices we
established, the more
employees we hired, and
inevitably, the greater
costs we incurred. Yet
there was still no sign
of our first round of
venture capital when May
approached.
Then
July came and we had not
yet closed any venture
investment. I remember
the day in Annapolis, MD
vividly when we held our
first board meeting to
discuss our options. We
had to cut costs
somewhere, but we didn’t
know where. It tormented
me and the rest of my
partners. As we sat
around the table,
waiting for the rest of
the board members to
arrive, it was silent. I
could feel despair in
the air. We had built
Net2000 up from nothing,
doubled our revenues
each year, and it had
all come to
this—avoiding awkward
stares from my partners
and wanting to go back
to a time when we
weren’t in a cash
crunch. All this because
we banked on receiving
venture capital sooner
than actually occurred.
Moreover, we had just
taken a huge risk by
aggressively recruiting
and hiring three highly
talented individuals,
each of whom had
accepted considerable
pay cuts to join
Net2000. Christine
Gistaro had been the
leading sales person in
the entire U.S. for
Cable & Wireless for
much of the past decade;
Mike Hamm had played a
significant role in the
information systems
department at Cable &
Wireless for its back
office systems and
billing platform
upgrades; and Chris
Bennett was an
incredibly bright
individual who had an
MBA from Wharton, a
Georgetown law degree,
and had worked most
recently at MCI rolling
out its local services
offering with MCI Metro.
All three of these
individuals were
expected to play a
crucial role in leading
our charge to becoming a
CLEC. We offered each of
them significant stock
options and equity in
Net2000 as an incentive
to join us.
The
board concluded we would
have to cut some staff.
My stomach knotted with
guilt. I had only
recently hired these
people, selling them on
a promising future with
great benefits, and now
I would have to let them
down.
I
knew it was the best way
to cut costs, however,
and I had to face the
reality of our
predicament. Owning my
own business came with
freedom and rewards, but
there was also a taxing
downside that ranged
from firing hopeful
employees to losing
night after night of
sleep. So I faced the
inevitable and set out
to terminate a group of
employees for the first
time ever.
The
flaw in our financial
planning had to do with
our lack of experience
in obtaining venture
funding. We were not
aware of the substantial
lag time between
receiving term sheets
and actually closing the
venture round. We
incorrectly assumed that
once we received a term
sheet, the venture round
would close soon
thereafter. So when we
received term sheets
from several venture
capital firms in July,
we thought we would have
our capital in no time.
Instead there was (and
usually is) a two month
or longer due diligence
period, continued
negotiations, and the
closing process. Fraught
with lawyers and
accountants on both
sides, the process is
not an efficient one.
We
were wedged in between
our present and our
future. Our present
circumstances were grim.
We were operating on
remnants from our bank
credit line and looking
at our employees with
fear because we might
not be able to pay them
the following week. Our
future, however,
represented great
promise and a road to
becoming our own CLEC.
The juxtaposition gave
us strength to keep
pushing forward. But by
August we were in a dire
financial position.
This
time the founders
decided to liquidate our
401K plans. We did a
phased 60-day
liquidation. It was our
last chance to keep the
company at its present
size while dreadfully
waiting for our funding
to close. Since Net2000
was an established,
successful and proven
company, we justified
exhausting our savings.
We had been named the
number one Bell Atlantic
agent for the third
consecutive year. It was
worth risking our life’s
savings for a company we
confidently knew was
months away from taking
giant leaps forward. As
Bill Gates states in his
book Business @ the
Speed of Thought:
Succeeding in the
Digital Economy
(Warner Books, 2000),
“You have to bet the
company over and over.”9
Lesson 24: Be
Aggressive and Bet or
Reinvent the Company
In
growing a business,
you’ll inevitably face
many hurdles. Changes in
your financial
stability, in the
economy, or in
regulatory rulings may
hinder progress. Or
changes in the
competitive landscape
through mergers and
acquisitions and new
product launches or
innovations may put
intense pressure on your
company. This sea change
can quickly relegate a
company to second-class
status and begin a
downward spiral toward
obsolescence. It is
important to ensure that
your focus, product,
and/or service remain
relevant—at the cutting
or leading edge.
Therefore, avoiding
status quo and taking
calculated risks is
essential to maintaining
your competitive
position in the
marketplace. Sometimes
this occurs in response
to your competitors, as
a preemptive strike or a
proactive move.
For
our first round of
funding, we had
approached over 50
venture firms. It was
advantageous to get
multiple firms
interested and have the
flexibility to choose
from the most attractive
term sheets. As a
result, we chose several
venture firms to go with
in the end.
One
of the venture firms
that we were interested
in was operating under
its first fund, which
was only $25 million.
Given the capital
intensive nature of
becoming our own CLEC,
this fund wasn’t large
enough to sustain our
future capital needs.
Blue Water Capital
recognized this and, as
a new fund, offered to
bring in another VC that
they knew well. This VC
was Société Générale (SG),
one of the largest banks
in France, who had an
office in New York that
oversaw its U.S. venture
investments. SG’s fund
exceeded $300 million,
and they offered that
perfect cushion we
needed to move forward
with Blue Water Capital.
We were drawn to Blue
Water Capital’s
management team because
they had complementary
sales and marketing
ideas, and were
entrepreneurial and far
less arrogant than many
of the VCs we had met.
The
third venture firm we
selected was
Mid-Atlantic Ventures (MAVF),
based in Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania. With an
office in Northern
Virginia, Mid-Atlantic
Ventures was investing
from its second fund,
which was relatively
small—$40 million. The
local partner from MAVF,
Marc Benson, was a
former CEO himself. Marc
had gray hair, deep set,
piercing dark eyes and
rarely smiled. He was
intimidating initially,
but once we got to know
him, we realized that he
was a great guy. Marc’s
operating background and
MAVF’s strong history of
investing success made
us want to get involved
with them. Additionally,
Mid-Atlantic’s founder
and lead partner, Fred
Beste, had been in the
venture game far longer
than most and we thought
of him as a guru.
Lesson 25: The
Mechanics of Venture
Funds
A
Venture Fund generally
forms when professionals
with strong financial
backgrounds come
together and decide to
create a fund to invest
in a specific sector
they perceive to
represent a strong
growth opportunity.
These folks commonly
have MBA’s from Top 10
business schools and
Wall Street experience
at large investment
banks. Some venture
capitalists have been
very successful
entrepreneurs and have
invested their own money
in the fund, thereby
bringing a wealth of
business operations
experience and savvy to
the table. The vast
majority of venture
capitalists, however,
have not served in
executive or
entrepreneurial roles,
and identifying those
who have is an added
bonus.
Typically, venture fund
managers raise $50
million or more from
institutional
investors—state and
corporate pension funds,
university endowment
funds, and large
insurance companies, as
well as wealthy
individuals—to form the
venture fund. Private
equity funds operate in
an almost identical
manner to venture funds,
but focus on later stage
companies and/or
buyouts, and often raise
several hundred million
to a couple of billion
in each fund. The
institutional investors
are known as “limited
partners” or “LPs” in
the venture or private
equity fund. The venture
fund creators and
day-to-day managers are
“general partners” or
“GPs”.
Venture fund managers,
GPs, or venture
capitalists are
compensated as follows:
1. Annual management
fee—this fee is
generally 2% of the
fund. For example, a
$100 million fund would
pay $2 million annually.
These monies are used
for the partner and
staff salaries, office
and other overhead costs
for the venture firm.
2. Carried Interest—VCs
get a 20% carried
interest in the fund.
This means that after
the fund is invested and
the portfolio of
investments is
liquidated—through IPOs,
mergers or
recapitalizations—the
venture fund managers
get 20% of the profits,
assuming that the
limited partners realize
at least a “hurdle” rate
of return, which is
usually 8%. If, for
instance, a $100 million
fund grows to $200
million over seven
years—a 10% annualized
return—the venture fund
managers split 20% of
the $100 million profit,
or $20 million.
It’s important to note,
however, that a
compensation arrangement
has several nuances. For
example, the 2%
management fee may count
against the 20% carried
interest. So if a $100
million fund doubled in
seven years, generating
a profit of $100
million, the venture
capitalists would get
$20 million of the
profit, less $14 million
in management fees that
were already received
(seven years x $2
million per year = $14
million). Thus the
carried interest would
only yield a net profit
of $6 million. This is
precisely why VCs are
motivated to invest the
fund sooner rather than
later, so the deduction
of the annual management
fees from the carried
interest impacts the
general partners less on
the net compensation
amount to them at the
end of the fund.
As
2005 is upon us, we’re
facing a situation where
institutional investors
have committed
approximately $90
billion of capital to
“alternative
investments” or venture
funds. Yet venture
investment activity
slowed in 2001, 2002,
and most of 2003. Fund
managers became more
cautious after being
burned from the market
collapse and turned
their attention to
rescuing many of their
troubled portfolio
companies. Now, as the
economy rebounds,
venture fund managers
are facing increased
pressure to invest their
funds or put the money
to work to prevent
further erosion in
future returns to the
general partners of the
fund.
The
three venture firms that
Net2000 selected were
Blue Water Capital,
Société Générale, and
Mid-Atlantic Ventures.
Getting all three firms
to work together in a
syndication was ideal.
In total, they offered
to give us $3.5 million
for 30% of the
company—$1.5 million
from Blue Water and $1
million from Société
Générale and
Mid-Atlantic,
respectively. The
percentage of the
company that venture
firms take is calculated
as follows: they
negotiate a pre-money
valuation (I’ll explain
how they come up with
this number in the next
chapter). A pre-money
valuation is how much
the venture firms
determine your company
is worth before putting
their money in. Then
they factor in how much
money they will put into
your company. Take the
pre-money valuation,
plus how much money they
will invest, and you get
the post-money
valuation. Divide how
much they will invest by
the post-money
valuation, and you get
the percentage of the
company the venture
firms will take. For
example, our pre-money
valuation was $8 million
and the venture firms
decided to put in $3.5
million. Thus, our
post-money valuation was
$11.5 million. The VC’s
$3.5M divided by $11.5M
is approximately 30%.
Pre-money valuation +
investment total =
Post-money valuation
Post-money valuation /
investment total =
percentage of company
the VCs will own after
an investment
Lesson 26: It’s
Beneficial to Get
Capital from Multiple
Venture Firms by
Syndicating the Deal
Bringing in multiple
venture firms for your
first round (or any
round) of funding is
prudent. If you’re
looking to raise $5
million, for example,
you can spread that
investment among two or
three venture firms and
have a better chance of
obtaining the full sum.
It also creates three
pocket books to turn to
instead of just one.
Three different paths of
funding sources allow
you more flexibility if
something goes awry,
such as a downward turn
in the economy or if one
of your VCs becomes
disenchanted with your
company, the team, or
business plan. With
three or more VCs you
expand your options,
create flexibility, and
have a wider safety net
for future funding.
Moreover, this also
broadens your network of
contacts. In today’s
market, many VCs are
actually looking to
syndicate deals as a
means of performing
greater due diligence
and mitigating risk,
thereby further
validating their
investment decision.
On
the flipside, if one of
your VCs doesn’t
contribute a significant
portion of the $5
million, then they don’t
have a lot of skin in
the game and could more
readily walk away.
The
stress built up from
months of negotiations
had finally been
alleviated. And as a
bonus, we were getting
more money than we had
asked for without giving
up too much of our
company. Compared to
Columbia Capital’s $1
million offer not too
long ago, we felt
relieved and motivated.
We were also anxious to
receive the money and
begin carving the path
to becoming a CLEC.
My
partners and I started
drafting a detailed plan
of how our capital
infusion would be
deployed. To begin, the
money would have to go
to back office billing
system expenses,
operating expenses,
forming our legal
entities, and hiring
additional personnel.
October 1997 had finally
arrived. This was the
month that our first
round of funding would
close. We didn’t have an
exact date that the cash
would be available, but
the day was imminent.
Having started
interviewing potential
high-level executives
back in May, I went
ahead and hired our
first non-founder
executive in light of
the approaching funding
and in anticipation of
our transition to an
operating telephone
company.
After much debate and
amid severe
consternation among my
co-founders, Mark Mendes
was hired as our chief
operating officer (COO).
This sparked significant
tension between my
partners and I because
Mark was stepping in to
help me lead the
company. For the first
time, we had to make
some serious decisions
and honest assessments
about our own managerial
shortcomings and bring
in more experienced
leadership. The fact
that all four of us were
founders of the company
did not necessarily mean
all four of us were the
right fit to lead the
company going forward.
Mark
had just been COO of a
public long-distance
carrier, US WATS, Inc.,
and had the industry
background, technical
aptitude, and managerial
skills that we believed
we needed to take
Net2000 to the next
level. His operational
expertise in running a
larger public telecom
company, coupled with
his local telecom
experience, was vital to
augmenting Net2000’s
growing size and
reputation. Mark was the
same age as me. His
Portuguese descent
showed in his coffee
toned skin, dark hair
and features. He was
just under 6 feet tall,
had a mustache, and was
portly. He was always on
a “diet,” “in training,”
or “getting on a
program.” Although he
was articulate and
bright, he could be
arrogant, and rubbed
people the wrong way at
times. Beneath his
serious, stern exterior,
Mark was a sensitive,
nice guy, but that was
often lost in the
day-to-day hustle of
business.
Brian Robinson, our
first sales hire,
volunteered to open our
New York office in
October. New York opened
the same way our other
three offices got off
the ground—one employee
was sent to the location
and worked out of that
office alone until we
could get enough
momentum to bring in
additional hires. The
office was a shared
tenant space directly
across the street from
Madison Square Garden.
On Seventh Avenue
between 31st and 33rd
Streets in the heart of
Manhattan, Madison
Square Garden houses
venues for professional
sports (New York Knicks,
New York Rangers),
concerts, conventions,
and other events. Since
1970, The Garden has
served as the nucleus of
entertainment, and that
put Brian in the middle
of all the action.
On
October 31st, we were
rewarded with officially
closing our first round
of funding. The sigh of
relief that we let out
felt like the pressure
that is released when a
10-foot wave comes
crashing down. The
immense stress and
financial burden that
had been weighing on our
shoulders had finally
been removed. Armed with
capital now, our
day-to-day activities
would be different
moving forward. We
immediately began
preparations to become a
CLEC. This wasn’t going
to happen overnight, so
for the next year, we
would operate in a dual
mode as both a Bell and
Nynex agent, while
implementing the back
office billing and
regulatory framework
necessary to become a
fledgling CLEC.
Simultaneous with
closing our first round
of venture funding, we
sold our consulting
unit. We had negotiated
for several months with
Jim Duggan and Dunn
Scott, two veteran
information technology
leaders who were now
heading Vista
Information Technology.
Jim and Dunn were backed
with $100 million from
the venerable Chicago
private equity fund GTCR
to build an IT services
company through a series
of acquisitions—a “roll
up.” They were attracted
to our customer
acquisition abilities
and wanted to form a
tight partnership with
us—the acquisition of
our consulting division
was the first step
toward this goal. By
selling this division,
as well as N2N
previously, my
co-founders and I were
able to put some cash in
our pockets. We had an
agreement with our new
venture investors,
before accepting their
term sheet, that we
would keep the proceeds
from the sale of this
division. This also gave
us additional merger and
acquisition (M&A)
experience, and now we
had the sale of two
Net2000 subsidiaries
under our belt.
In
December, after
interviewing him for
over seven months, we
hired a talented finance
executive to become our
first chief financial
officer (CFO). Bill
Washecka of Ernst &
Young had introduced Don
Clarke to us in May. We
had been reluctant to
hire him before raising
any venture capital, but
we liked him a lot.
Fortunately, he was
still available after
closing our venture
round. Don had a wealth
of experience as a
financial leader in the
telecommunications
space. He had been
President and CFO of
Plexsys International
Corp., a provider of
wireless infrastructure
equipment, prior to
joining Net2000. With
thick, blonde hair, Don
spoke flatly and
seriously. In addition
to his Plexsys
experience, Don had
worked at Price
Waterhouse and had
served for five years
under the late John
Sidgmore at CSC
Intelicom as CFO.
Sidgmore had become well
known in the industry as
CEO of UUNet by the time
we hired Don. “There was
no one who could speak
with more authority
about the Internet than
Sidgmore and his geeky
sidekick Michael O’Dell.
After all, they were the
first ones to arrive at
the commercial Internet,
and they were building
the biggest and the most
cutting-edge network in
the world!” exclaims Om
Malik in his book
Broadbandits.10
Lesson 27: Leave Your
Ego at the Door and
Build a Strong
Management Team
One
of the most difficult
crossroads in a
company’s life cycle is
when the founders have
to relinquish control in
the best interest of the
company. It’s a
difficult challenge to
cast your ego aside when
you’ve built a company
from the ground up. It’s
your baby and you want
to control its
development every step
of the way.
The
reality is that in most
cases there comes a time
when seasoned executives
with the know-how to run
companies need to be
added to the team.
Founders are often the
last people to accept or
acknowledge this—after
all, they had the drive,
determination, and the
fortitude to start and
grow a successful
business. But these
high-level positions,
such as COO and CFO,
most often require
expertise not present
among the founder group.
Put your personal
interests aside and
think about what is best
for the company.
Assemble a team of
professionals who
possess the suitable
credentials to keep your
company growing.
Hoffstein acknowledges
the importance of a
strong management team
as it applies to meeting
with venture capitalists
also. He says, “You need
to articulate
specifically why the
team you’ve assembled
can succeed. If your
team doesn’t have the
relevant experience, you
have to go find people
who do.”11
With
Mark and Don on the
team, the hierarchy in
management unavoidably
changed. Mark, Don, and
I were now running the
company and had the
final say in how the
company would proceed.
Peter, Bruce, and Cory
all took on various
high-level positions.
Peter was the Vice
President of Internet
Services, Bruce was the
Vice President of
Consulting and
Information Systems, and
Cory was the Vice
President of Local
Services and Strategic
Alliances. The change in
management introduced a
high degree of politics
between the founders,
Don, Mark, and I, and
some things were never
the same going
forward.
In
addition to management
changes, our board of
directors also took on a
new personality. Blue
Water—our lead Series A
investor—took a seat on
the board. Lead
investors generally
require a board seat and
this was written into
our term sheet. Reid
Miles, who was the
Managing Director at
Blue Water, filled that
role. Justin
Hall-Tipping from
Société Générale and
Marc Benson from
Mid-Atlantic had
observer rights, so they
could attend board
meetings but could not
vote. The venture firms
also mandated in the
term sheet that we keep
only two of our founders
on the board, which only
added to the tension
that was mounting from
having added Don and
Mark to the management
team. At the end of the
year, Peter, Reid, Eric,
Clyde, and I were the
official members of our
board.
The
year 1997 provided my
founders and I keen
insight into the inner
workings of a rapidly
growing company. We not
only discovered what we
would have done
differently, but we also
learrned plenty about
each other—both positive
and negative. And with
the ups and downs, the
anxious waiting, and the
strength to keep going,
we made out with $4
million in revenue and
another profitable year.
Published
with permission from
Charlie Thomas,
Chief Executive Officer
of NISCO Solutions.
Prior to founding Claris
Advisors in 2002, Thomas
served as founder,
Chairman and CEO of
Net2000 Communications,
which he led through
rapid growth as the
company evolved from a
small, private sales
agent in 1993, to a
publicly-traded
competitive broadband
services provider.
Thomas has over 17 years
of industry experience.
He also served in sales
and marketing positions
with IBM and Bell
Atlantic. In 1995 he
also co-founded, grew
and sold N2N
Communications (an
Internet provider),
which later became part
of Verio, and also sold
Net2000’s Professional
Services Division to
GTCR-backed Vista
Information Technology.
“Entrepreneur: A CEO’s
Lessons in American
Capitalism” is available
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