Feb 14

9 Things You Should Know About Dealing With Venture-Capital Brokers

You want to buy a new company, expand operations, acquire a business, or raise capital. Youve decided to go for venture capital funding versus a bank loan for a multitude of reasons from the risks involved to the amount you need to carry out your plan.

Do you know as much as youd like about gaining capital? Most people dont. Their expertise is in their business, not in capital funding. Here are ways to protect yourself from vultures, deals you cant afford, and the nightmares of both.

Some quick explanations:

A venture capitalist (VC) is a person, group of people, company, or group of companies with money to invest in your business.

A VC broker represents you (or possibly a VC) and arranges the parties to create a deal. This article is about working with the broker.

Since many brokers are ethical, why such a negative slant? Over two months, two of our consulting clients nearly lost their shirts dealing with brokers. One broker tried to quadruple dip on a VC deal by taking a commission, bringing in another broker (who needed a commission), taking excessive points on growth targets, and adding interest fees into a contract making the deal impossible. Had our Boston-based client signed with his current and (estimated) future numbers, his decade-old business would have perished.

Another broker wanted a client in Connecticut to sign a broker-exclusivity contract, forcing our client to pay commissions on any type of financing, regardless of whether the deal originated through the broker or not. If an SBA loan or unrelated VC came through, our client would pay $400,000 in unearned commissions.

(With each client, the broker used four or more of the nine strategies below that would be harmful to your fulfilling your capital needs.)

Every deal has its own merits and challenges. Regardless, nine general tips to consider are:

1. Don’t sign exclusivity contracts barring you from finding your own funding. A) On one hand, a broker has every right to protect his intellectual property by preventing you from bypassing him and striking a deal with one of the contacts hes introduced you to. B) On the other hand, beware of anything preventing you from gaining funding from any other source without going through the broker.

2. Avoid long-term cancellation clauses that hold you hostage for a year or more. Sixty to ninety days is reasonable. Youve got to be able to move on. A brokers objective in creating a long cancellation clause is to prevent you from securing funding with the VC theyve introduced you to while at the same time making it difficult for you to find any funding. Keep your options open and agree to 90 days giving you time to find new opportunities.

3. Prevent double dipping. A savvy broker has multiple compensation channels: initial commission, commission on additional funding you get during a 1 or 2-year term, compensation if the business is sold during specified time frame, percentage of interest on monies lent, etc. Read fine print, several deals that have passed over our desks in the past 6 months have had hidden compensation clauses that would have made any deal difficult to swallow had they had signed with the broker. (Have legal representation from an expert in VC funding.)

4. Know the type of funding you want before you start searching, and bind your broker to the specifics with a contract. Looking for a VC with an equity position who wants shares and is interested in growing the firm, or do you just want financing? Initially, the two can appear similar. In one VC deal, the company looking for funding thought they were getting an equity partner, but the VC only wanted to achieve 3.5 times their ROI in 5 years in monthly fees and interest. The final terms of the agreement: the receiver would get $2.9 million, but would pay back $6 million in 5 years. It was not the deal he expected.

5. Remember that VC funding is all negotiation–between you, the VC, and the broker. First, never let the broker think that you dont have other options. If they think youre between a rock and a hard place, youre in trouble. Second, VCs know the financing game in and out, and often they will tell you the deal is dead and not call back for weeks just to get you hungry. Sometimes the broker is in on this strategy. You must be patient. Third, even with contracts, the broker may only secure a few deals a year to make a great living. If theyve invested four months on the project, they want the deal as badly a you do. Then ask for concessions. Realize they might jump up and down and scream as part of their negotiations. Its a common strategy; look past it. In every deal, conditions change, and you must remember that commissions, fees, and terms can also change.

6. Know your brokers loyalty, and make sure its to you, not to the VC, or solely to the brokers own best interests. Think of real estate. The sellers agents loyalty rests with the seller: the buyers agents with the buyer. Work only with people you trust.

7. Be careful of brokers in disguise. Some mask themselves as venture capitalists and yet have no money. Whats the problem? You think youre working with an investor whose income is contingent upon the growth and success of the deal/business; in fact, youre working with a commissioned salesperson who hasnt invested a cent in the venture and only stands to gain as long as he links two parties. The only way you may ever know is when the deal is being written up and you catch the fine-print line for commission to XYZ firm.

8. Use a VCs leverage if the broker is unreasonable. One of our clients worked with a broker whose stubbornness kept on getting in the way of the deal. Everyone was giving in a little to make the package work. Our client told the VC he couldnt afford the deal, because the broker was not participating in the concessions. The VC (with greater financial leverage) wanted the deal enough that he negotiated a compromise with the broker, and everyone was happy.

9. Lastly, brokers, like you, are looking out for their own pockets. To combat this, try to put more emphasis on bonuses based on the long-term viability of the funding and the growth of the business rather than solely on the introduction. Incentives encourage brokers to build the most potentially successful deals.

Most brokers are ethical. They dont want to take you to the cleaners. Their future successes rest on their reputations for making good deals. But just in case you get a vulture, you now have ways to find out early and prevent yourself from getting in a jam. And as you probably know, always consult with your attorney when entering into a relationship with a broker or investor.

Acquiring capital to fund future projects is exciting and daunting. Although common sense will guide you to avoid pitfalls and seize opportunities, you wont know everything about this area. Therefore, gaining outside help from experts in this area is wise no matter how many times youve done it. After all, youre strongest doing what you do best: leading and managing your organization.

David and Lorrie Goldsmith

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Jan 21

The Chinese Principle taught in the first part of this article is really powerful, it helps you to identify the real causes of your problems, to deal with these problems, and finally to eradicate them, or reduce them…

How can you live like that? How can you live according to the wishes of your creditors? You must choose to do what you want whenever you want to. I don’t know for you, but for me, If I want to leave Dubai right now(not in 3 months, 6 or 1 year), but tomorrow or next week, I can do it because I am debt free. I owe nothing, and nobody can prevent me to take the plane.

People don’t realize, but they live like prisoners. Life is Freedom, no what your bank or creditors want you to do! You need to know yourself, and find how you can control your emotion to achieve what you want in your life with the power of positive thinking.

You need to radically increase your income.

What you need is not to get out of debt, to be debt free, or any debt consolidation service. Your real need is to earn more money. You already know that, but nobody told you to take action and how to do it.

You may think how can I do that as I am already in debt, and I don’t have a capital to start any kind of business.

My answer to this is that today, there is a shortcut to be successful, and you already know it. This shortcut is Internet. Now, with the power of Internet, you can be an entrepreneur, work from your home, without risking a lot of money.
You can even start from scratch, as I did and use the power of Internet to Market your products for example.

If you already have a website, do you know that you can be an affiliate (sell other people products), and get commissions without taking care of customer service, shipping, billing… All you need is to register in a good affiliate program, market your product, and watch the money coming in your account.

What is the difference between you and those successful entrepreneurs? The only difference is that they tried. You will never be successful if you don’t do something to be successful.

You can be successful… only if you want. You must know that success have nothing to do with luck or heredity, it is something you got to acquire through learning and efforts. It will not come by itself, you got to take it.

Debt isn’t the real problem, the source of the problem is that you need more money.

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