Startup Capital

Categories: Banking

See: A Round Financing. See: Seed Capital. See: Seed Fund.

The initial investment dough for young companies with a dream and a vision and a suite of hope for a brighter future. The startup capital usually hopes to get a company to the point where they have their first meaningful revenues...like, a million bucks or so. It then hopes to push them to an A Round with professional venture capital investors, where injections of maybe $5-8 million in capital come in, along with the formation of a real board of directors and other elements that all coalesce, trying to make the company...meaningful.

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Finance: How Do You Get Your Startup Fun...96 Views

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Finance a la Shmoop. How do you get your startup funded? If you're leaning is in

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this direction, well then first you pray. Can't hurt right? Okay well maybe it can,[two men in church]

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shocking. Well the world of startups is really a tale of two cities or types of

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business. There's tech startups and then there are

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non tech startups. The former is lavishly funded with tremendous resources and

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huge valuations. Which means that the capital invested is almost free for the

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founders and there are literally thousands of companies around the world

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who invest in early technology startups.[Global map with business buildings] But if you're trying to fund a

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restaurant, a bar, flower-arranging chain, a bug spraying service and auto service

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business. Well then you're probably badly out of luck. If you do get financing,

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it'll be on vastly worse terms than if you would have invented a new robot operating

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system that could see in the dark, or an electronic zit zapper, or a drug that

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made you happy you knew it and you didn't even have to clap your hands. [T-Rex clapping hands]

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Since the restaurant industry for example is such a bad investment with

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some 95% plus of them going bankrupt in the first few years.

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Very few investors are willing to take any risk investing in them. As a result

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if you want to fund that kind of business, well you most likely have to

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fund it yourself by saving your pennies, waiting for old uncle Larry to kick the

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bucket and leave you money and/or mortgage whatever you can of your house [man at Chase Bank]

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at the bank. Knowing that if your restaurant goes belly-up, you rethink

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your five-year-old SUV in terms of living room, kitchen here and bathroom

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there. Well if you do have the knack for tech, well and you come up with the lawn

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Roomba which will make mowing the lawn a breeze. Then the process usually begins

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with a business plan. You'll leverage Google slides, a free presentation tool,

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where you can have one page describing your product, a page covering the size of[business slides]

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the market, ie the number of potential buyers, anyone with a backyard basically,

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along with the price you'd expect them to pay. Another page covering the costs

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of making the first one, the first hundred, the first thousand, the first

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hundred thousand units. Were presumably the marginal cost per unit

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down with scale production and finally you have a page or three showing, what it

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is you've done that's hard to do. IE you have patents protecting your idea, [board meeting presentation]

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which you've already filed and it's not some idea that people at Google, with its

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engineer army could likely read your slides as you build them and just copy

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what you've done and do it themselves. Well you figure out how much money you

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need to get a couple of years down the road. This point where you're pushing

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product out the door and well say you asked for three million dollars from[cost pie chart]

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investors who would then own maybe a third or more of the company day one.

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You're valuing then your idea, your time, your brain, your patents, all combined for

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I'll say six million dollars already then you're asking investors to pile

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three million dollars in cash on top of that six million. So that the combined

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company of your ideas and you, are now worth a total of nine million bucks.

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You'll also want to make talented hires to whom you can't afford to only pay[business woman shaking hands]

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cash. So you'll allocate a bunch of shares or

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options on shares to be granted to those new highly talented employees as well.

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Maybe those options or shares are worth another million boxes, as you add everything

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up. Such that your total company now has a notional combined value with

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everything of ten million bucks and that's when the Trojan hit the road [man driving red car]

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and you see if you actually can build this thing. Mow little Roomba mow.

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