A short presentation I gave last night to a business audience at Creative Lancashire.
Here is a list of relevant links I provided for the audience.
Personal Comments from Edward French on issues facing Early Stage Technology Companies (see notes)
Thursday, 20 November 2008
Wednesday, 12 November 2008
How "recession-proof" is your business?
RisingStars Portfolio Seminar- A constructive look at technology companies in the recession

Saturday, 4 October 2008
Silicon Valley Goes Dry? effects of the credit crunch on VC funding
Friday, 3 October 2008
Survey on Corporate Finance Advice
I was curious to see what the aggregated view of the portfolio companies was on Corporate Finance advice. So I asked our portfolio companies to give us some feedback which I've summarised below.
Any comments would be very welcome!
Monday, 22 September 2008
Choosing an Entry Market Sector
A common issue I see with early-stage companies is over their selection of entry market sector. Obviously, all investors love their portfolio companies to have a huge vision to change large markets in a big way, and on occasion the best way to plan to reach that is to go straight to the big opportunity head-on. However, often that's going to be slow and hard, perhaps credibility is crucial, in which case it's really helpful to find a launch "beach-head" in the lines advocated by "Crossing The Chasm".
So where companies have chosen to use a beach-head, the next question is which one? If you just pick the "largest sector", or the one you're "most familiar with, you face a danger- the best entry sector is not always the obvious one. I think there's a different set of thinking about launch markets, where you highlight a slightly different set of factors as important.
I bet there are some great suggestions for improvements to this table- please let me know!
So where companies have chosen to use a beach-head, the next question is which one? If you just pick the "largest sector", or the one you're "most familiar with, you face a danger- the best entry sector is not always the obvious one. I think there's a different set of thinking about launch markets, where you highlight a slightly different set of factors as important.
Criterion | Ultimate market | Launch market |
Scale | Ideally as large as possible | Manageable, but low priority in selection process |
Differentiation of offering against competition | Important | Critical |
Focus on customer problems | Can be more general- boxed product is easier to scale | May be helpful to have solution type sales initially |
Unit sale | Very large or small is good- scalability is crucial | Ideally ~1 months burn- large enough to be useful, but small enough to avoid lengthy approvals |
Mission criticality | Mission critical to the customer provides extra value | Ideally not too critical- hard to buy from a startup |
Length of buy cycle | May be long | Short is incredibly helpful |
Easy customer identification | Useful | Vital |
I bet there are some great suggestions for improvements to this table- please let me know!
Wednesday, 10 September 2008
Plan B for Fundraising
Guy Kawasaki has an interesting post comparing the merits of bootstrapping vs. early VC backing which is well worth reading. He nicely positions bootstrapping as a Plan B, and certainly makes it appear quite an attractive option. My own take would be:
(* in our experience ventures that have insufficient capital to have other strategic options get sold for a lower price, so maybe the rewards would not be so different too.)
So my advice would be to understand the future for your business and really decide if VC money changes the potential outcome in a good way. If it doesn't then don't take the money just to give yourself a salary along the way!
Outcome | ||
Product Sells | Product Doesn't Sell | |
Venture Backed | You exit and have to share some of the rewards* with the VCs | The company fails and everyone is unhappy. |
Bootstrapped | You exit, but probably only after raising some money to give yourself strategic options and thereby boost the price. | The company fails and everyone is unhappy. |
Friday, 5 September 2008
Technology Recruitment in an Early Startup
Daniel Tenner has a great post that is good reading for people looking to build early tech startups.
I would just caveat his comments by suggesting that care is needed in understanding how you provide equity to those who help you out in those early steps. Daniel is completely right to suggest:
However, bear in mind that there are two categories of people you might want to help out with a startup- and both can contribute a great deal
"You want them to feel that it’s their company, and to do that, you have to give them equity - not options, not promises of options, but actual founder’s equity. Don’t feel like you’re giving stuff away here. If you’ve got the right person for the job, ensuring that they feel ownership of the company will ensure that your share is worth something. It’s better to own 70 or 80 or even 51% of something than 100% of nothing." |
- Ideal hires- people who you would've hired to do the job at the full commercial rate if only you had the cash, and who you'd expect to continue to be perfect for the job in 3-12 months time.
- Opportunistic hires- people who are prepared to get involved early, before an ideal candidate would join, but who are probably not long-term management or key staff.
Friday, 4 April 2008
Tuesday, 18 March 2008
The Collaboration Cycle
Three months into licensing or pursuing a market entry for a new technology everyone involved always feels like they're a few months away from a deal, and no more than a year from revenue. Time and time again we've found it always takes much longer. You can expect to see at least one change in the bigco's team, and if it's an international collaboration each cycle of meetings takes months. This graph tries to compile the wisdom from all our companies licensing and collaboration projects- the conclusion being that, even without any hiccups, it's likely to take around 3 years from first meeting to revenue. This is a real opportunity, in my view, for the largeco's to steal a march on their competitors- getting really quick and sharp about technology acquisition would buy them a great advantage.
Monday, 17 March 2008
Rahns law of investment propositions
"The quality of a proposition is inversely proportional to the amount of time the plan or team spends extoling its virtues." |
This links nicely to four tests for any business plan which I've always urged our investees employ:
Four tests for business plans
1. The superlative test
Have you obliterated all superlatives? Leave it to the judgement of the reader if something is really "exciting","superb", let alone is someone's track record is one of "success".2. Have you used facts/numbers wherever you can?
It's a good discipline to try and replace each superlative with a number or fact instead: it makes writing much punchier! Don't say there's a "multi-billion dollar market for mobile software", try and say something like "there's a £n million market for GPS software on mobile devices". It's a great deal harder to write this stuff, but it helps convey real market knowledge and understanding.3. Check that jargon is appropriate/necessary
If I was writing a plan associated with "WiMax", the I probably need to refer to "WiMax"; that's appropriate use of jargon. However, it doesn would a proposition really benefit from using "ARPU" when you're not talking about anything that's not encapsulated by the word "revenue".4. Can a non-specialist reader tell what the company provides?
Include a laymans explanation of what your product or service is/does. A good case-in-point is a company I've been reading about tonight: they provided three documents in total describing the business, but after reading them, I have only the vaguest idea what the business does. Without this information all the stuff about the team, route to market and competitors is really hard to understand, relate or assess.I'm sure there are some other great suggestions out there...?
Later ammendment
5. Did you really describe your competitors and their comparative attributes?
This is often one of the most revealing sections of a plan- it's amazing how often it's missing!Monday, 10 March 2008
Updated: Role of Chairman in Pre-Revenue Tech companies
The role of the chairman in RisingStars companies is a little different from the standard in a small company due to the emphasis on growth and support of a growing team.
Updated version, also I've added the highlights to emphasise particular areas that are unusually important in a pre-revenue technology company.
Team Building |
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Financial Governance |
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Strategy |
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Fundraising |
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Representing Shareholders Interests |
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Proceedings at Board Meetings |
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Tuesday, 4 March 2008
Top 30 Internet Start-ups- erm not!
Top 30 Internet Start-ups
Real Business published on "Thursday, 30th August 2007"
I stumbled across this fascinating article today.
The top 30 includes Beenz.com and Boo.com- so somehow I think that their content management system isn't getting the date of the article quite correct. Anyone care to guess the correct date?
Seriously, it makes interesting reading if you want to compare the original .com bubble to the web2.0 situation today. I don't think you'd be left with the impression that there was too much in common?
A more interesting comparison for me was in the IT suite of my kids (primary) school, the end wall had been peppered with around 25 Web2.0 services that they were suggesting the children might like to use for entertainment or for coursework. Interestingly very few of these were actually targeting children, no doubt many are putting out a free product with a view to building paying customers later. The most sobering thing was how few of these services I'd actually come across!
Friday, 8 February 2008
Government Agency does better Due Diligence than Investors- apparently!
I'm not sure if I'm more gobsmacked that the Development Agency that investors in their region do less DD than that, or that they put so much faith in the kind of reports they get from people like NPL and NEL to confirm the commercial potential of the innovations they see.
Thursday, 17 January 2008
Startup 2.0
Manoj threw another great event tonight with interesting speakers and audience alike.
Stuart Scott-Goldstone of Aaron and Partners gave a thorough introduction to the range of legal issues that startups face on raising their first round of venture capital. the long list or issues seemed seems like it must be scary to any startup listening!
Doug Stellman of YFM Private Equity started his presentation with a disclaimer of small print lest any of us fancied investing. Interestingly the proportion of Software and IT deals had shrunk from around 35% in 2006 to 20% in 2007, apparently due to concerns about the ease with which software companies could be established. His presentation focused on the management team as a key driver for their investment decisions. He cited that he sees applicants with a management team with a prior record of success "more often than you'd think".
Paul Barraclough of TecMentor praised the Crossing the Chasm approach to getting to early sales momentum in startups.
For me, Pam Holland gave the star presentation- starting off with a video (link to follow if I can persuade Pam to let me upload it) portraying how rapidly Telecity had grown pre-dotcom crash. She explained how they'd managed the spectacular growth in staff numbers and the attendant HR issues. I loved the story about how she had to persuade the founder to go home for his meal in the evening to encourage the staff to go home at night- even if he returned later each night! She explained the "competency based" recruitment approach she used, biased towards the attitude and raw capabilities of the individual rather than solely their technical skill-set. She also related that it was a "little bit disappointing" when the share price slumped from £23.00 to 2.3p, and she had to handle a new set of challenges!