Asheesh Advani: Startup Financing
Categorizing Your Investors
Follow this practical guide to determine the type of risks your private investors can handle, so you know just how to pitch them.
By Asheesh Advani
| May 02, 2005
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/startupfinancingcolumnistasheeshadvani/article77400.html
When raising money for your business, it makes good sense to
categorize the types of private investors you're pitching. This
will not only increase your success rate with fundraising, but it
will allow you to develop a funding strategy that's consistent
with your business model. My column this month outlines a method
for categorizing private investors to help entrepreneurs tailor
their fundraising pitch.
Who Makes Private Investments?
After you've tapped your personal savings and maxed out your
credit cards for business capital, the next step is to consider
attracting funding from outside investors. Who are these investors?
One of the most comprehensive studies on this topic is the Global Entrepreneurship Monitor, which has
surveyed more than 9,000 individuals to discover how entrepreneurs
raise money for their businesses. According to their yearly study,
the vast majority of private investments in startups comes from
close family (42 percent), relatives (10 percent) and friends (29
percent) of the entrepreneur. Only 9 percent of private investments
come from strangers, such as professional angel investors and
venture capital firms. (Additional sources include work
colleagues--6 percent--and other sources--4 percent.) Despite the
media hype about venture capital, it's still an option for very
few entrepreneurs.
Financial Risk vs. Emotional Risk
Investing is about risk. The risk that you'll lose your
money or not earn a decent return is the most obvious risk faced by
private investors. But for most entrepreneurs, raising money is
about managing emotional risk in addition to financial risk.
It's a daunting task to approach your family, friends, work
colleagues or neighbors to ask for money. (See my previous column
on how to make the "kitchen
table pitch" for detailed advice on how to raise
money.)
But you can lower your risks if you understand how your
investors' motives and investment sophistication can impact the
type of investment proposal you make to them. And it's
important to remember that if you approach multiple investors,
they'll have different motives and you'll want to tailor
your proposal to those different concerns. To begin, consider each
potential investor with regards to comfort for financial risk and
emotional risk.
In the area of financial risk and familiarity with private
investing, you need to determine the answers to these
questions:
- Is the potential investor able to lose their investment in
return for a chance for a significant upside? If so, their comfort
with financial risk is high, and you can consider them savvy.
- Does their enthusiasm for you or your idea overshadow their
investing experience? If so, their comfort with financial risk is
low, and you should consider them supportive.
In the area of emotional risk and concern about mixing money
with relationships:
- Would the investor withhold their money if they thought it
would damage a relationship? If so, their comfort level with
emotional risk is low, so consider them worried.
- Are they far enough removed that the emotional risk feels low?
If so, their comfort level with emotional risk is high, and you can
consider them distant.
Using your responses to these questions, place your investor in
the quadrant below that you think best fits their comfort
level:
Savvy & Worried
A savvy and worried investor will tolerate some financial
risk--such as a substantial investment in a risky business--as long
as the emotional risk is low. For example, your mother may have
both the means and the will to help you get your enterprise off the
ground. While she would hate to lose her money, she's really
more concerned that the loan not hurt your relationship with her or
with other family members. Your primary job for this kind of
investor is to alleviate their concern that an investment would
jeopardize their relationship with you. One way to do this is to
assure this investor that you intend to formalize the investment
like a business transaction with legally binding documentation. In
my experience with advising entrepreneurs on raising money, formal
documentation and a repayment plan are critical ingredients for
reducing the emotional risks of transactions between relatives and
friends.
Savvy & Distant
The savvy and distant investor will tolerate both financial risk
and emotional risk. For example, your neighbor is a serial
entrepreneur and dabbles in angel investing; he's known you
since you were a kid and likes your business idea. As long as you
can make a professional pitch and offer a respectable return,
he'll be comfortable with the financial risk and won't
think twice about the emotional risk. In this case, your investment
proposal should include a business plan
and professional investment terms.
Supportive & Worried
A supportive and worried investor is enthusiastic about your idea
and your ability to follow through, but is nervous about both the
financial and the emotional risks. For example, your older brother
wants to help but has kids entering college and only limited
resources to lend you. In addition, you suspect he wouldn't
make an investment if he thought it might jeopardize your
relationship. With this type of investor, first and foremost, you
need to make sure your request is within their means. Don't ask
someone who supports you for more than they can afford because the
refusal will be painful for both of you. This is also the type of
individual who might offer you the investment on a handshake.
Without hurting their feelings, explain that you want this to be a
properly documented business transaction. You may need to remind
them about the tax benefits, legal benefits and credit-building
benefits of formalizing the investment.
Supportive & Distant
A supportive and distant lender will want to avoid financial risk
but can tolerate emotional risk. For instance, a family friend of
modest means loves your idea and thinks you're a great manager.
She expects to get her money back, but the personal relationship is
distant enough that she has no strong sense of emotional risk. Take
a guess at what this investor can afford, since you may not know,
but do be ready to negotiate up or down. This type of lender will
probably also benefit from a business-like explanation of the
proposed terms of the investment agreement.
Entrepreneurs rarely devote as much systematic thought and
energy to fundraising as they do to building their products and
services (for good reason). Given that more than 90 percent of all
private investments are from people you know rather than strangers,
such as angel investors and venture capital firms, I urge you to
think strategically about categorizing private investors so your
fundraising pitches are successful.
Asheesh Advani is Entrepreneur.com's "Startup
Financing" columnist and president of CircleLending, a
loan administration company that facilitates loans among friends,
relatives and business associates. Get a copy of Circle
Lending's free Small Business Financing Guide for startups.
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