Nov 27

Venture Capital – What Happens After The Due Diligence Process

If the venture capitalists are interested in your company after completing their due diligence, they will offer a binding term sheet. It will reflect the draft term sheet that has already been agreed to but this one will be a legal contractual agreement. Then the real negotiations start.

There are different types of financing to consider: debt, equity, and mezzanine.

Debt financing is the most objective and is therefore the easiest to negotiate. If you have the assets to support the debt and the income to support the interest payments, the negotiation period will be very short.

Equity financing negotiating is more complicated and revolves around agreeing on valuation and percentage ownership. Discussions usually requires several days.

Mezzanine financing involves a mix of equity, debt, convertible debentures and preferred shares. Negotiating the technical aspects of each so that an agreement can be reached between the investor and your company can be time consuming.

Another dictating factor is the number and variety of financing offers that you receive. It is the intermediarys role to help you bring more than one offer to the table and assist you in evaluating and negotiating which one is best suited to your companys needs based on their previous experience.

Venture capital term sheets are time limited. You have to quickly make up your mind if you want to accept or reject the offer. The short time period is in place to prevent you from using one term sheet to solicit new offers from other venture capitalists.

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Jan 28

Consulting Services For Private Equity Or Venture Capital Acquisitions And Investments

Begin by finding a company that provides due diligence services to potential investors in the multichannel retail arena to investigate the feasibility of, or provide support for, mergers, acquisitions, and/or investment opportunities. My firm, F. Curtis Barry & Company, has been working in this market for many years. Our perspective is one of operational consultants for multichannel retail businesses companies that operate some combination of direct-to-customer sales (catalog and e-commerce), retail (brick-and-mortar), and/or wholesale channels.

Investment decisions should be based on the best information available. A mistake in the initial evaluation process can be costly in the long run, even fatal, to successful investment. Most investment activity is based on the belief that improvements can be made to a business that will warrant the expenses incurred. An operational assessment evaluates a businesss potential, pinpoints ways to reduce current operating costs, identifies inherent risks, and estimates the costs that would be required to make improvements.

The financial aspects of a potential investment rightly receive the most emphasis. However, many other areas, if not addressed, can have a negative effect on the overall financial picture. F. Curtis Barry & Company applies its multichannel business expertise to focus on that part of the due diligence process relating to the operations of the target enterprise. In the context of the multichannel retail industry, the term operations refers all activities related to fulfilling customers orders and meeting their expectations. This includes merchandising, marketing, information technology, warehouse operations, and call (contact) center functions.

We conduct an operational assessment as part of due diligence to evaluate investment potential, determine the necessary costs to make improvements, and identify any inherent risks. As required, F. Curtis Barry & Company also provides operational evaluation of completed investments to support the improvement process.

Pre-acquisition Due Diligence: A Checklist

F. Curtis Barry & Company helps potential investors conduct multichannel acquisition due diligence evaluations of the operational areas related to warehouses and contact centers and their related facilities, systems, staffing and processes. The following are considered:

1. Determine Cost Per Order and Measures of Productivity

In order to evaluate the effectiveness of the operation under study, we develop a calculation of the cost per order. The cost per order is a good benchmark to determine how productive an operation really is. It can include direct and indirect labor, facility costs, and packaging materials for the warehouse, with the addition of other specific costs for the contact center. Comparing the companys cost per order to that of others in the industry or to past internal trending costs gives a good picture of which direction the business is headed and also how it stacks up against the competition.

Because factors such as wage rates and productivity levels affect costs, they must also be considered in an assessment. In order to reduce potential bias and misinformation caused by varying wage rates when comparing cost-per-order benchmarks, we also suggest that true measures of productivity using some unit of measurable work and the corresponding man hours involved be included. True productivity measures of warehouse and contact centers can give a good picture of how the operation really compares to others and whether there is any room for improvement.

We always recommend external benchmarking as a starting point for comparing operations, but the real key is to research true internal productivity measures comparing actual activity over a time period against some level of standard of performance expectation. This internal measure is as important as the external one, in that it points out trends as well as opportunities for further study based on changes in performance or failures to meet expectations.

2. Evaluate the Facilities

A second area for evaluation is physical facilities. Analyzing how efficiently a facility is used and determining its true operating capacity help in evaluating potential improvements and the businesss ability to meet the demands of growth. Both the contact center and the warehouse should be evaluated in terms of how well the space is utilized and how effective the overall layout appears. A review of the flow of materials through the warehouse can tell a lot about efficiencies and future opportunities for change. The level of automation employed and its appropriateness to the business is another indicator of performance.

The operational assessment should also consider how many facilities are needed and what functions they should perform. The way work is being completed at existing facilities and comparisons of the processes and practices used to industry best practices may identify areas for potential improvement that can yield major savings.

3. Identify Future Growth Needs

Can the target company meet future growth demands? Due diligence can discover pressures that will be placed on facilities, staffing, systems, etc., so investors can make sure no major problems will arise through supporting future growth.

4. Assess Customer Service Capabilities

Most Pre-acquisition evaluations should also include customer service levels. A good hard look at service level standards and actual performance against these standards is a critical piece of an overall assessment of how well a company is performing. Metrics such as order turnaround time, call abandonment rates, e-mail response times, and returns processing order accuracy are all measures of how well a multichannel business is actually doing.

5. Review Business Systems & Software

In order to rate the operating level of a potential investment, F. Curtis Barry & Company explores the infrastructure system support available to the business being considered. A review of the software and the corresponding functionality provided is a good measure of the ability of the business to support current needs, and more importantly, its ability to support future changes. A system that is inflexible or does not meet current operating needs is a warning flag that indicates significant investment in time and money might be required to match business needs and implement the assumptions of productivity improvements and cost reductions. The rapidly changing nature of the multichannel world, especially the e-commerce channel, makes flexibility mandatory. Make sure you are investing in a platform and software for order, inventory and warehouse management systems that can meet tomorrows needs.

6. Evaluate Inventory Details

The largest single asset of multichannel businesses is inventory. Accordingly, we review basic inventory measures such as turns and ageing in order to gauge how well inventory is being managed. We suggest a review of the top 10% and bottom 10% of SKU sales to measure how effective the forecasting process is. We also review any liquidation practices along with a measure of cost recovery.

7. Meet with the Staff

The final process in evaluating a business is a relatively soft one, but still critical: The staff should be interviewed to gauge the work culture. Unless the business is going to be closed or moved, it is unlikely that the current culture will be easily changed. Talking with employees at all levels of the operation, allows us to determine what degree, if any, of difficulty an investor might encounter when implementing required changes. Dont underestimate the importance of the human factor in the evaluation process and in determining the value or potential of an organization.

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