In the May 2013 issue of HBR that has a ‘spotlight on
entrepreneurship’, Adi Ignatius observes in the very first paragraph of his
editorial that the “IPO market has been soft for years” & on a closing note
hoped for ‘a steadier flow of IPOs’ as the economy is on the path to recovery.
This angst I thought pretty much reinforces the dominant LP
complaint of an ‘absent IPO market in venture backed firms’ these days. Given
this, I expected the articles to focus on elucidating about scalability of an
early enterprise to the entrepreneurs – which I realized wasn’t the case after
reading through the same.
Each of the four articles & the one interview instead
seemed standalone in content & interestingly anti-VC in tone & tenor –
not sure why. Since an elaborate hypothesis on these already elaborate academic
articles didn’t appeal to me, I felt capturing the essence of each article in a
single line would make it crisper - but given the duality of the message in the
articles/ interview, I decided that the take-away messages should be in two
sets, one for the entrepreneur & one for VC.
Here goes;
FOR THE ENTREPRENEUR
Go the Lean-way or Fade away1
Seek out the client, not just an investor2Go the Lean-way or Fade away1
To err is VC – YOU, be the driver3
Marry the VC if you must, just make sure the pre-nup is not one-sided!4
If you are good, a Top VC will find you / If a Top VC funds you, you must be good!5
FOR THE VC
Lean is in – Junk the flab (read: 5yr business plan et al.)1
Failing early is a virtue, at times, most times2
Focus on great returns, not on large fees – Stay relevant3
VCs are good but dated – Brace up for the Gen-Y entrepreneur4
If you aren’t a top-quartile VC, tough luck!, great deals don’t happen to you5
Article reference:
Click link to access the
article, (I pay for my Kindle edition tho’..)
1.
Article “Why
the Lean Start-Up Changes Everything” by Steve Blank
2.
Article “What
Entrepreneurs Get Wrong” by Vincent Onyemah, Martha Rivera Pesquera, and
Abdul Ali
3.
Article “Six
Myths About Venture Capitalists” by Diane Mulcahy
4.
Article “How to Negotiate
with VCs” by Deepak Malhotra
5. “In Search of
the Next Big Thing, Interview of Marc Andreessen
Most of the above messages have been around for some time
now, only this comes across as a tacit academic endorsement of the market
grapevine - If I forget scalability for a moment, my summarized takeaway from
the above is;
Whether or not there’s something basically and drastically
wrong with the current VC model, the emerging new trends in the start-up
strategies make it pertinent that the early investors, in particular the VCs,
should evolve in tandem – This is important not only for sustaining the
radically different new-gen start-ups but also for the sustenance of the VC
domain itself.
I always liked the way the professors are called out to
defend their research in “Idea Watch” section of HBR, So do I now say;
Dear
HBR, defend your research?
Game on…
After thought:
Ponder the following exchange between Adi Ignatius (Editor HBR) and Mark Andreessen (Venture Capitalist) - ref: “In Search of the Next Big Thing
After thought:
Ponder the following exchange between Adi Ignatius (Editor HBR) and Mark Andreessen (Venture Capitalist) - ref: “In Search of the Next Big Thing
Adi: You’ve developed a strong philanthropic focus. Is the next generation of investors thinking about social investment?
Marc: No. [Laughs.]
Adi: So much for my hopes for the next generation.
Considering this is towards the end of the conversation, I thought Marc was pretty dismissive about another aspect that investors both big and small HAVE to eventually look at "Corporate Social responsibility" of financial organizations. I pondered on this in my earlier article titled "IRR v/s Social Impact: Do financial institutions necessarily go through this dilemma?" - No answers tho'.Marc: Many younger entrepreneurs have a social mission or a philanthropic agenda. They start early. Investors, not so much.
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