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Acknowledgments
Al Link and Don Siegel provided significant support that helped direct the 2013 Conference of the Technology Transfer Society and this related special issue to its successful completion. We would like to thank the reviewers without whom this special issue would not have been possible. J. Azagro-Caro, F. Bertoni, J. Block, M. G. Colombo, D. J. Cumming, D. Consoli, A. Fayolle, C. Fisch, M. Huelsbeck, M. Guerrero, P. Landoni, A. Khurshed, M. Meoli, T. Minola provided valuable assistance as discussants and reviewers of the papers.
Nov 12, 2013 - State of Entrepreneurial Finance: VCs, Angels, Super Angels, and the. Creative Other. InfoDev Mobile Startup Camp. Entrepreneurial Finance, Sixth Edition was written to help a broad range of U.S. Business owners understand the financial aspects of entrepreneurship. Unlike traditional corporate finance books, this text explains the financial topics most important to running a profitable small business suchasinventory control, time value of money, working.
ENTREPRENEURIAL FINANCE Strategy, Valuation, and Deal Structure
Janet Kiholm Smith Richard L. Smith Richard T. Bliss
Stanford Economics and Finance An Imprint of Stanford University Press Stanford, California
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations xvii Abbreviations xxiii Preface xxvii Acknowledgments xxxix About the Authors xli
PART 1 Getting Started Chapter 1 Introduction
3
1.1
Entrepreneurship and the Entrepreneur
1.2
The Finance Paradigm
1.3
The Rocket Analogy
1.4
The Stages of New Venture Development
1.5
Measuring Progress with Milestones
1.6
Financial Performance and Stages of New Venture Development 19
1.7
The Sequence of New Venture Financing
1.8
The New Venture Business Plan
1.9
Organization of the Book
1.10 Summary
3
12 14 15 17
21
24
29
31 vii
viii
Contents
Review Questions Notes
32
33
References and Additional Reading
34
Chapter 2 New Venture Financing: Considerations and Choices 2.1
Sources of New Venture Financing
2.2
What's Different about Financing Social Ventures?
2.3
Considerations When Choosing Financing: The Organizational Form 57
2.4
Regulatory Considerations
2.5
The Deal
2.6
International Differences in Financing Options
2.7
Summary
55
60
71
73 74
75
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 3 Venture Capital
37
64
Review Questions Notes
37
77
79
3.1
Development of the Venture Capital Market
80
3.2
The Organization of Venture Capital Firms
89
3.3
How Venture Capitalists Add Value
3.4
Investment Selection and Venture Capitalist Compensation 106
3.5
Venture Capital Contracts with Portfolio Companies
3.6
Venture Capital Contracts with Investors
3.7
The Role of Reputation in the Venture Capital Market
3.8
Reputation, Returns, and Market Volatility
3.9
Summary
115
Review Questions Notes
99
116
117
References and Additional Reading
119
107
109
114
113
Contents
ix
PART 2 Financial Aspects of Strategic Planning Chapter 4 New Venture Strategy and Real Options 4.1
125
Product-Market, Financial, and Organizational Strategy
126
'V.-
4.2
The Interdependence of Strategic Choices: An Example
4.3
What Makes a Plan or Decision Strategic?
4.4
Financial Strategy
4.5
Deciding on the Objective
4.6
Strategic Planning for New Ventures
4.7
Recognizing Real Options
4.8
Strategic Planning and Decision Trees
4.9
Rival Reactions and Game Trees
130
131 132 134
137 141
151
4.10 Strategic Flexibility versus Strategic Commitment 4.11 Strategic Planning and the Business Plan 4.12 Summary
128
155
156
157
Review Questions
157
Notes 158 References and Additional Reading
160
Chapter 5 Developing Business Strategy Using Simulation
162
5.1
Use of Simulation in Business Planning: An Example
5.2
Who Relies on Simulation?
5.3
Simulation in New Venture Finance
5.4
Simulation: An Illustration
5.5
Simulating the Value of an Option
5.6
Describing Risk
5.7
Using Simulation to Evaluate a Strategy
5.8
Comparing Strategic Choices
5.9
Summary
166
167 171
173
198
Review Questions
165
198
187
176
163
Contents
Notes
199
References and Additional Reading
200
PART 3 Financial Forecasting and Assessing Financial Needs Chapter 6 Methods of Financial Forecasting: Revenue
205
6.1
Principles of Financial Forecasting
6.2
Forecasting Revenue
6.3
Estimating Uncertainty
6.4
Building a New Venture Revenue Forecast: An Illustration
6.5
Introducing Uncertainty to the Forecast: Continuing the Illustration 228
6.6
Calibrating the Development Timing Assumption: An Example 236
6.7
Summary
207 222 225
239
Review Questions Notes
206
240
241
References and Additional Reading
242
Chapter 7 Methods of Financial Forecasting: Integrated Financial Modeling
243
7.1
An Overview of Financial Statements
7.2
The Cash Conversion Cycle
7.3
Working Capital, Growth, and Financial Needs
7.4
Developing Assumptions for the Financial Model
7.5
Building a Financial Model of the Venture
7.6
Adding Uncertainty to the Model
7.7
NewCompany: Building an Integrated Financial Model
7.8
Summary
s
248
294
295
References and Additional Reading
251 256
266
277
293
Review Questions Notes
244
296
281
Contents
Chapter 8 Assessing Financial Needs
297
8.1
Sustainable Growth as a Starting Point
8.2
Assessing Financial Needs When the Desired Growth Rate Exceeds the Sustainable Growth Rate 304
8.3
Planning for Product-Market Uncertainty
8.4
Cash Flow Breakeven Analysis
8.5
Assessing Financial Needs with Scenario Analysis .
8.6
Assessing Financial Needs with Simulation
319
8.7
How Much Money Does the Venture Need?
324
8.8
Assessing Financial Needs with Staged Investment
8.9
Summary
299
306
310 315
331
334
Review Questions Notes
xi
335
336
References and Additional Reading
336
PART 4 Valuation Chapter 9 Foundations of New Venture Valuation
341
9.1
Perspectives on the Valuation of New Ventures
9.2
Myths about New Venture Valuation
9.3
An Overview of Valuation Methods
9.4
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
9.5
The Relative Value Method
9.6
Valuation by the Venture Capital Method
9.7
Valuation by the First Chicago Method
9.8
Reconciliation with the Pricing of Options
9.9
Required Rates of Return for Investing in New Ventures
343 347 352
363
9.10 Matching Cash Flows and Discount Rates 9.11 Summary
378
Review Questions
379
342
367 369 370
374
372
xii
Contents
Notes
380
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 10 Valuation in Practice
382
386
10.1 Criteria for Selecting a New Venture Valuation Model 10.2 Implementing the Continuing Value Concept
388
10.3 Implementing DCF Valuation Methods
396
10.4 New Venture Valuation: An Illustration
412
10.5 The Cost of Capital for Non-US Investors 10.6 Summary
427
428
Review Questions Notes
429
429
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 11 The Entrepreneur's Perspective on Value
430
432
11.1 Opportunity Cost and Choosing Entrepreneurship 11.2 The Entrepreneur as an Underdiversified Investor 11.3 Valuing Partial-Commitment Investments 11.4 Implementation: Partial Commitment 11.5 Shortcuts and Extensions
457
11.6 Benefits of Diversification
464
430 452
11.7 A Sanity Check: The Art and Science of Investment Decisions 466 11.8 Summary
469
Review Questions Notes
386
470
471
References and Additional Reading
472
434 437
Contents
PART 5 Information, Incentives, and Financial Contracting Chapter 12 Deal Structure: Addressing Information and Incentive Problems 477 478 > '
12.1
Some Preliminaries
12.2
Proportional Sharing of Risk and Return
479
12.3
Asymmetric Sharing of Risk and Return
481
12.4
Contract Choices That Allocate Expected Returns
12.5
Contract Choices That Alter Venture Returns
12.6
Implementation and Negotiation
12.7
A Recap of Contracting with Asymmetric Attitudes toward Risk 493
12.8
Information Problems, Incentive Problems, and Financial Contracting 494
12.9
A Taxonomy of Information and Incentive Problems
12.10 Essentials of Contract Design 12.11 Organizational Choice 12.12 Summary
489
490
495
508
516
520
Review Questions Notes
483
522
522
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 13 Value Creation and Contract Design
525
529
13.1
Staged Investment: The Venture Capital Method
13.2
Staged Investment: CAPM Valuation with Discrete Scenarios 536
13.3
Valuation-Based Contracting Model
13.4
Negotiating to Increase Value, Signal Beliefs, and Align Interests 549
13.5
Using Simulation to Design Financial Contracts
13.6
Information, Incentives, and Contract Choice
13.7
Summary
567
530
545
550 560
xiii
xiv
Contents
Review Questions Notes
568
568
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 14 Choice of Financing
569
571
14.1
Financing Alternatives
14.2
The Objective and Basic Principles of the Financing Decision 573
14.3
An Overview of the Financing Decision Process
14.4
First Step: Assess the Current Stage and Condition of the Venture 577
14.5
Second Step: Assess the Nature of the Venture's Financial Needs 584
14.6
Financing Choices and Organizational Structure
14.7
How Financial Distress Affects Financing Choices
14.8
How Reputations and Relationships Affect Financing Choices 594
14.9
Avoiding Missteps and Dealing with Market Downturns
14.10 Summary
599
Review Questions Notes
571
600
601
References and Additional Reading
605
PART 6 Harvesting and Beyond Chapter 15 Harvesting
611
15.1
Going Public
612
15.2
Acquisition
15.3
Management Buyout
15.4
Employee Stock Ownership Plans
15.5
Roll-Up IPO
625
638
633 634
575
589 591
596
Contents
15.6
The Harvesting Decision
15.7
Venture Capital Harvesting and the 'Internet Bubble'
15.8
Summary
640
, 643
648
Review Questions Notes
xv
649 -..-.
650
References and Additional Reading
654
Chapter 16 The Future of Entrepreneurial Finance: A Global Perspective 658 16.1
Completing the Circle
16.2
Breaking New Ground
16.3
Public Policy and Entrepreneurial Activity: An International Comparison 669
16.4
The Future of Entrepreneurial Finance Notes
659 664
689
References and Additional Reading Index
695
683
691
Janet Kiholm Smith Richard L. Smith Richard T. Bliss
Stanford Economics and Finance An Imprint of Stanford University Press Stanford, California
CONTENTS
List of Illustrations xvii Abbreviations xxiii Preface xxvii Acknowledgments xxxix About the Authors xli
PART 1 Getting Started Chapter 1 Introduction
3
1.1
Entrepreneurship and the Entrepreneur
1.2
The Finance Paradigm
1.3
The Rocket Analogy
1.4
The Stages of New Venture Development
1.5
Measuring Progress with Milestones
1.6
Financial Performance and Stages of New Venture Development 19
1.7
The Sequence of New Venture Financing
1.8
The New Venture Business Plan
1.9
Organization of the Book
1.10 Summary
3
12 14 15 17
21
24
29
31 vii
viii
Contents
Review Questions Notes
32
33
References and Additional Reading
34
Chapter 2 New Venture Financing: Considerations and Choices 2.1
Sources of New Venture Financing
2.2
What's Different about Financing Social Ventures?
2.3
Considerations When Choosing Financing: The Organizational Form 57
2.4
Regulatory Considerations
2.5
The Deal
2.6
International Differences in Financing Options
2.7
Summary
55
60
71
73 74
75
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 3 Venture Capital
37
64
Review Questions Notes
37
77
79
3.1
Development of the Venture Capital Market
80
3.2
The Organization of Venture Capital Firms
89
3.3
How Venture Capitalists Add Value
3.4
Investment Selection and Venture Capitalist Compensation 106
3.5
Venture Capital Contracts with Portfolio Companies
3.6
Venture Capital Contracts with Investors
3.7
The Role of Reputation in the Venture Capital Market
3.8
Reputation, Returns, and Market Volatility
3.9
Summary
115
Review Questions Notes
99
116
117
References and Additional Reading
119
107
109
114
113
Contents
ix
PART 2 Financial Aspects of Strategic Planning Chapter 4 New Venture Strategy and Real Options 4.1
125
Product-Market, Financial, and Organizational Strategy
126
'V.-
4.2
The Interdependence of Strategic Choices: An Example
4.3
What Makes a Plan or Decision Strategic?
4.4
Financial Strategy
4.5
Deciding on the Objective
4.6
Strategic Planning for New Ventures
4.7
Recognizing Real Options
4.8
Strategic Planning and Decision Trees
4.9
Rival Reactions and Game Trees
130
131 132 134
137 141
151
4.10 Strategic Flexibility versus Strategic Commitment 4.11 Strategic Planning and the Business Plan 4.12 Summary
128
155
156
157
Review Questions
157
Notes 158 References and Additional Reading
160
Chapter 5 Developing Business Strategy Using Simulation
162
5.1
Use of Simulation in Business Planning: An Example
5.2
Who Relies on Simulation?
5.3
Simulation in New Venture Finance
5.4
Simulation: An Illustration
5.5
Simulating the Value of an Option
5.6
Describing Risk
5.7
Using Simulation to Evaluate a Strategy
5.8
Comparing Strategic Choices
5.9
Summary
166
167 171
173
198
Review Questions
165
198
187
176
163
Contents
Notes
199
References and Additional Reading
200
PART 3 Financial Forecasting and Assessing Financial Needs Chapter 6 Methods of Financial Forecasting: Revenue
205
6.1
Principles of Financial Forecasting
6.2
Forecasting Revenue
6.3
Estimating Uncertainty
6.4
Building a New Venture Revenue Forecast: An Illustration
6.5
Introducing Uncertainty to the Forecast: Continuing the Illustration 228
6.6
Calibrating the Development Timing Assumption: An Example 236
6.7
Summary
207 222 225
239
Review Questions Notes
206
240
241
References and Additional Reading
242
Chapter 7 Methods of Financial Forecasting: Integrated Financial Modeling
243
7.1
An Overview of Financial Statements
7.2
The Cash Conversion Cycle
7.3
Working Capital, Growth, and Financial Needs
7.4
Developing Assumptions for the Financial Model
7.5
Building a Financial Model of the Venture
7.6
Adding Uncertainty to the Model
7.7
NewCompany: Building an Integrated Financial Model
7.8
Summary
s
248
294
295
References and Additional Reading
251 256
266
277
293
Review Questions Notes
244
296
281
Contents
Chapter 8 Assessing Financial Needs
297
8.1
Sustainable Growth as a Starting Point
8.2
Assessing Financial Needs When the Desired Growth Rate Exceeds the Sustainable Growth Rate 304
8.3
Planning for Product-Market Uncertainty
8.4
Cash Flow Breakeven Analysis
8.5
Assessing Financial Needs with Scenario Analysis .
8.6
Assessing Financial Needs with Simulation
319
8.7
How Much Money Does the Venture Need?
324
8.8
Assessing Financial Needs with Staged Investment
8.9
Summary
299
306
310 315
331
334
Review Questions Notes
xi
335
336
References and Additional Reading
336
PART 4 Valuation Chapter 9 Foundations of New Venture Valuation
341
9.1
Perspectives on the Valuation of New Ventures
9.2
Myths about New Venture Valuation
9.3
An Overview of Valuation Methods
9.4
Discounted Cash Flow Valuation
9.5
The Relative Value Method
9.6
Valuation by the Venture Capital Method
9.7
Valuation by the First Chicago Method
9.8
Reconciliation with the Pricing of Options
9.9
Required Rates of Return for Investing in New Ventures
343 347 352
363
9.10 Matching Cash Flows and Discount Rates 9.11 Summary
378
Review Questions
379
342
367 369 370
374
372
xii
Contents
Notes
380
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 10 Valuation in Practice
382
386
10.1 Criteria for Selecting a New Venture Valuation Model 10.2 Implementing the Continuing Value Concept
388
10.3 Implementing DCF Valuation Methods
396
10.4 New Venture Valuation: An Illustration
412
10.5 The Cost of Capital for Non-US Investors 10.6 Summary
427
428
Review Questions Notes
429
429
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 11 The Entrepreneur's Perspective on Value
430
432
11.1 Opportunity Cost and Choosing Entrepreneurship 11.2 The Entrepreneur as an Underdiversified Investor 11.3 Valuing Partial-Commitment Investments 11.4 Implementation: Partial Commitment 11.5 Shortcuts and Extensions
457
11.6 Benefits of Diversification
464
430 452
11.7 A Sanity Check: The Art and Science of Investment Decisions 466 11.8 Summary
469
Review Questions Notes
386
470
471
References and Additional Reading
472
434 437
Contents
PART 5 Information, Incentives, and Financial Contracting Chapter 12 Deal Structure: Addressing Information and Incentive Problems 477 478 > '
12.1
Some Preliminaries
12.2
Proportional Sharing of Risk and Return
479
12.3
Asymmetric Sharing of Risk and Return
481
12.4
Contract Choices That Allocate Expected Returns
12.5
Contract Choices That Alter Venture Returns
12.6
Implementation and Negotiation
12.7
A Recap of Contracting with Asymmetric Attitudes toward Risk 493
12.8
Information Problems, Incentive Problems, and Financial Contracting 494
12.9
A Taxonomy of Information and Incentive Problems
12.10 Essentials of Contract Design 12.11 Organizational Choice 12.12 Summary
489
490
495
508
516
520
Review Questions Notes
483
522
522
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 13 Value Creation and Contract Design
525
529
13.1
Staged Investment: The Venture Capital Method
13.2
Staged Investment: CAPM Valuation with Discrete Scenarios 536
13.3
Valuation-Based Contracting Model
13.4
Negotiating to Increase Value, Signal Beliefs, and Align Interests 549
13.5
Using Simulation to Design Financial Contracts
13.6
Information, Incentives, and Contract Choice
13.7
Summary
567
530
545
550 560
xiii
xiv
Contents
Review Questions Notes
568
568
References and Additional Reading
Chapter 14 Choice of Financing
569
571
14.1
Financing Alternatives
14.2
The Objective and Basic Principles of the Financing Decision 573
14.3
An Overview of the Financing Decision Process
14.4
First Step: Assess the Current Stage and Condition of the Venture 577
14.5
Second Step: Assess the Nature of the Venture's Financial Needs 584
14.6
Financing Choices and Organizational Structure
14.7
How Financial Distress Affects Financing Choices
14.8
How Reputations and Relationships Affect Financing Choices 594
14.9
Avoiding Missteps and Dealing with Market Downturns
14.10 Summary
599
Review Questions Notes
571
600
601
References and Additional Reading
605
PART 6 Harvesting and Beyond Chapter 15 Harvesting
611
15.1
Going Public
612
15.2
Acquisition
15.3
Management Buyout
15.4
Employee Stock Ownership Plans
15.5
Roll-Up IPO
625
638
633 634
575
589 591
596
Contents
15.6
The Harvesting Decision
15.7
Venture Capital Harvesting and the 'Internet Bubble'
15.8
Summary
640
, 643
648
Review Questions Notes
xv
649 -..-.
650
References and Additional Reading
654
Chapter 16 The Future of Entrepreneurial Finance: A Global Perspective 658 16.1
Completing the Circle
16.2
Breaking New Ground
16.3
Public Policy and Entrepreneurial Activity: An International Comparison 669
16.4
The Future of Entrepreneurial Finance Notes
659 664
689
References and Additional Reading Index
695
683
691