ENTREPRENEURSHIP
Course Code :8503      Unit # 06
                                1
             OBJECTIVES
 - 6 # Financial Entrepreneurial Ventures
Worldwide
Microfinance and Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurs and Informal Investors
Venture Capital
Factor Effecting Availability of Financing
Bootstrapping New Ventures Valuation
Financing New Venture
Informal Investors
Business Angels
Venture Capitalists
Harvesting Investment
Initial Public Offering
Selling the Company
2A Strategic Acquisition
- Financial Entrepreneurial Ventures
    Worldwide:
Entrepreneurial ventures  contend with the
 challenge of raising capital for their development
 and growth.
Financing for Entrepreneurs and covers
 specifically, important aspects of financing
 entrepreneurial ventures.
Entrepreneurial finance principles particularly in
 relation to the raising of capital exercises
Different financing scenarios according to the
3
 venture’s life cycle stage
  Forecasting financial requirements in a period of growth 
 Management of the cash conversion cycle and bootstrap
  financing techniques 
 The participants in the financial markets (particularly
  sources of debt and equity capital) and their interests;
  these include angel investors, venture capital firms, banks
  and other financial intermediaries. 
 The building of venture value through robust business
  models and responsible management 
 The considerations regarding harvest
  scenarios in particular, selling the business
        or going for an Initial Public Offering 
 Managing ventures experiencing
    financial distress 
4
- Microfinance and Entrepreneurship
 As microfinance gains increasing attention and
 application as a financing mechanism for
 entrepreneurs at the base of the economic pyramid
 Microfinance brings a range of financial services,
 including microcredit loans, savings, and
 insurance, within the reach of millions of poor
 households not served by traditional banks.
 The effectiveness of such
  microenterprise loans on
 increasing entrepreneurs'
 incomes and innovation.
5
- Larger loans increase income, but less innovative
 business practice might threaten such income. 
 - Economist recommend that microenterprise loans
 associated with proper business skills, information,
 and technologies be provided by MFIs with careful
 screening and monitoring to ensure the effective
 utilization of loan capital.
- Microfinance in Bangladesh has inherited a long
 history of innovative financial inclusion. 
- Financial Inclusion calls for individuals and
 businesses to have access to and effectively use a
 range of financial services that are provided at a
6
 reasonable price and in a responsible manner.
-Entrepreneurs and Informal Investors:
- Informal investors have proved to be
highly valuable for the growth of the firms
in which they have invested.
- It is important to understand what
motivates potential informal investors to
make their initial investment as well as
how already active investors develop their
entrepreneurial careers.
- Self-funding by entrepreneurs, along
with funding from informal investors, is
the lifeblood of an entrepreneurial society.
7
- Venture Capital:
- Venture Capital is “equity support to fund a new concepts
that involve a higher risk and at the same time, have a high
growth and profit.”“Venture Capital is broadly implies an
investment of long term, equity finance in high risk projects with
high rewards possibilities.”
An investment in a startup business that is perceived to have e
xcellent growth prospects but does not have access to capital
markets. Type of financing sought by early-
stage companies seeking to grow rapidly.
A venture capitalist invests his money in
   terms of equity. He does not look for any
  dividend or other benefits, but when the
  project commercially succeeds, then he
        can enjoy the capital gain which is his
8
        main benefit.
-Process of venture capital
9
-Factor Effecting Availability of Financing:
 Business financing is more complex than
  personal or other secured loans, with added
  evaluations used for business financing.
 Still, as experienced lenders note, all good
  loans are based on the same factors.
 Understanding these factors brings more than
  knowledge; it can bring you business success.
 While every company is different, the basic
  factors involved in business financing are
  constant and enduring.
 10
-Factor Effecting Availability of Financing:
Ability to Repay: The most constant factor in business
 financing, the ability to repay is paramount.
Historical Record of Repayment: A company's recorded
 history of timely repayment is a critical factor in business
 financing.
Business History of Cash Flow: While highly profitable
 companies are always impressive, consistent cash flow is
 an even more important factor in commercial lending.
Start-up Company Financing Factors: If you are just
 starting your business, additional considerations come into
 play.
Repayment Terms: Consider how long the financing
 arrangement is structured to last.
 11
-Bootstrapping New Ventures Valuation
 -Bootstrapping is a means of financing a small firm
    through highly creative acquisition and use of
    resources without raising equity from traditional
    sources or borrowing money from a bank.
 -"bootstrapping" means starting a new business without
    start-up capital.
 -Bootstrapping is the most likely source of initial
    equity for more than 90% of technology based firms.
 -Bootstrapping       offers   many      advantages    for
    entrepreneurs and is probably the best method to get an
    entrepreneurial firm operating and well positioned to
    seek equity capital from outside investors at a later
 12
    time.
-Financing New Venture
 Venture capital (VC) is a type of private equity, a form of financing
  that is provided by firms or funds to small, early-stage, emerging
  firms that are deemed to have high growth potential, or which have
  demonstrated high growth.
 Many business ventures today are looking to attract external
  financing, with an emphasis on business angel investment.
 Inside this text, the author incorporates the views of business angels,
  venture capitalists, entrepreneurs, and legal advisors; and draws upon
  the latest academic thinking on financing new ventures, providing
  comparisons between business angel and venture capital investing to
  further inform the reader.
 The concepts, principles, and guidelines presented can help you and
  any entrepreneur, business support agency, business student, and
  others interested in raising external investment and in developing an
  “investable” business.
  13
-Informal Investors
 Informal investing has been referred to using a multitude of
  different terms. Angel investor, venture capitalist, shark, informal
  investor – these terms all refer to the same general concept.
 This type of investor works in the area of financing startups, or
  fledgling businesses that are still in the process of creation.
 This investor will enter the scene and step up to provide the
  precious funding so terribly needed in order for this new startup to
  get off the ground.
 This can be done purely out of good will or the belief in a product
  or a concept that it enforces.
 Most of the time though, there is an underlying business deal that
  provides incentives for these investors to step up to the task.
 These can and often do include the rights to predetermined portions
  of future profits, ownership, or other assets.
14
-Informal Investors
 Through some sort of incentive, investors are drawn to the great
  risk associated with investing in an unproven startup.
 Informal investing is all about calculated reward and a gift of life
  for an emerging business or idea.
 It also involves substantial risk however, which is the reason
  behind the incentives often seen attached to these financial
  generosities.
 This is the world of the informal investor as well as a few of the
  places we can see these particular investors at work.
  Virtually anyone can act as an informal investor here, providing
  various amounts of funding to whatever projects suit their
  interests. In return, project owners offer some sort of financial or
  goods-based incentives at completion time.
15
-Business Angels
 Investor angels, or business angels, are people who invest
   their money in the initial phase of startups, in exchange for a
   participation in capital.
 They also usually carry out the role of a mentor and offer their
   consent and experience to entrepreneurs.
 Angel investors are often wealthy individuals who have
   entrepreneurial experience themselves or specific industry
   experience that is shared with the company being invested in.
 They offer various forms of
 finance including shares or
other securities that represent
an ownership interest in a
company including equity, debt and variations of the two.
  16
-Venture Capitalists
 A venture capitalist is an investor who either provides
  capital to startup ventures or supports small companies
  that wish to expand but do not have access to equities
  markets.
 Venture capitalists are willing to invest in such companies
  because they can earn a massive return on their
  investments if these companies are a success.
 Venture capitalists also experience major losses when
  their picks fail, but these investors are typically wealthy
  enough that they can afford to take the risks associated
  with funding young, unproven companies that appear to
  have a great idea and a great management team.
17
-Harvesting Investment
 A harvest strategy involves a reduction or a termination of
   investments in a product, product line, or line of business so
   that the entities involved can reap the maximum profits.
 A harvest strategy is typically employed toward the end of a
   product's life cycle when it is determined that further
   investment will no longer boost product revenue.
 employing a harvest strategy will allow companies to harvest
   the maximum benefits or profits before the item reaches its
   decline stage.
 Companies often use the proceeds from the ending item to
   fund the development and distribution of new products.
 Funds also may go toward promoting
existing products with high growth potential.
 18
-Initial Public Offering(IPO’s)
 An initial public offering, or IPO, is the very first sale of
   stock issued by a company to the public.
 Prior to an IPO the company is considered private, with a
   relatively small number of shareholders made up primarily
   of early investors (such as the founders, their families and
   friends) and professional investors (such as venture
   capitalists or angel investors).
 The public, on the other hand,
consists of everybody
else any individual or institutional
investor who wasn’t involved in the
early days of the company and
who is interested in buying shares of
the company.
 19
-A Strategic Acquisition :
 With the most common acquisition strategy, a company
   buys another company with cash, stock or a combination of
   the two.
 Regardless of the structure, an acquisition is meant to
   create synergy that makes the value of the resulting
   company greater than the sum of its original parts.
 Through the strategic acquisition of another company, the
   purchasing company can achieve economies of scale,
   efficiencies and enhanced market visibility.
 The acquisition can also increase the
company’s client base, add new markets
and help increase shareholder value,
   among a variety of other benefits.
 20
- Steps for a successful acquisitions:
 Improve the target company’s performance.
 Consolidate to remove excess capacity from industry.
 Accelerate market access for the target’s (or buyer’s)
  products
 Get skills or technologies faster or at lower cost than
  they can be built
 Exploit a business’s industry-specific scalability
 Pick winners early and help them develop their
  businesses
 Consolidate to improve competitive
     behavior
 Enter into a transformational
21
      merger and Buy cheap.
   All the best for a
SUCCESSFUL / BRIGHT
      FUTURE