Launch - Spring 2009 - (Page 14) >> funding Stay Focused! Don’t get distracted by goals that won’t lead to the next round of funding. “Valley of Death,” a reference to the fact that many companies fail because they lack the funding to make it to market. Years of experience suggest companies with large rounds of initial funding actually have a higher failure rate than firms with limited funding. There are lessons in this that inform how we handle funding for our companies. Initial funding is typically personal and may include “friends and family.” Individuals making startup investments want to see that you have “skin in the game,” and knowing grandma’s pension is at risk assures them you are going to work 23 hours a day to make the company successful. You also want to make the most of this limited funding, which is why lesson one is so important. Lesson 1: Set a critical path goal and stay focused. Do not spend two days designing a logo and letterhead when your company does not have a product. Focus on your time, your money and your partners. It is not a company without a product, so put everything into product development and get a working prototype you can show to potential investors. Lesson 2: Know your market. “I think people will buy it because” is not market research. Show your product to people. Try giving it away if it is a service or something an individual can use like software. If you cannot give it away, you probably cannot sell it. You need to know who your buyers are, what they think of the product and what its value is to them (and this is not your cost of production). Creating a product or service that appeals to customers may seem simplistic, but it’s the foundation for any business that hopes to attract investors. A surprising number of companies get it wrong, spending all their initial capital on logos, letterhead, legal and leather chairs. These matter at some point, but they are not the things that secure another round of funding. $ Click here for the HTML version of this article on launchutah.com. By Jack Brittain, Ph.D. Jack Brittain, vice president for Technology Venture Development, has served as the dean of University of Utah’s David Eccles School of Business since 1999. He can be reached at dean@business.utah.edu. In the past three years, Technology Venture Development at the University of Utah launched 61 companies. We have a deep interest in seeing these companies succeed. Such startups advance research by providing development funding, jobs for Utahns and economic strength for the state, which improves Utah’s funding environment. Every startup — whether a restaurant or advanced medical device company — faces an immediate financial crisis. Every business has to buy equipment and hire employees before it makes its first sale. One reason new restaurants fail so quickly is that the owners assume sales are going to cover expenses right away. It rarely works this way. The financial crisis for technology-based companies is even more difficult because they are not sure when they can expect sales. As a consequence, they require a higher initial capitalization and need to carefully manage capital resources before having revenue to pay the bills. It is this pre-revenue period that is commonly called the 14 launch spring 09 http://www.launchutah.com/article-funding-q12009.php
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Launch - Spring 2009 Launch - Spring 2009 Contents Editor's Note Dashboard Mentor: Mind Your Business Ps & Qs Diary: Great Idea, Now Show Me the Money Sales: Buying Eyeballs Funding: Stay Focused! NETworking Do’s and Don’ts Be the Networking King Entrepreneur Spotlight Launch - Spring 2009 Launch - Spring 2009 - Launch - Spring 2009 (Page Cover1) Launch - Spring 2009 - Launch - Spring 2009 (Page Cover2) Launch - Spring 2009 - Contents (Page 3) Launch - Spring 2009 - Editor's Note (Page 4) Launch - Spring 2009 - Editor's Note (Page 5) Launch - Spring 2009 - Editor's Note (Page 6) Launch - Spring 2009 - Editor's Note (Page 7) Launch - Spring 2009 - Dashboard (Page 8) Launch - Spring 2009 - Dashboard (Page 9) Launch - Spring 2009 - Mentor: Mind Your Business Ps & Qs (Page 10) Launch - Spring 2009 - Mentor: Mind Your Business Ps & Qs (Page 11) Launch - Spring 2009 - Diary: Great Idea, Now Show Me the Money (Page 12) Launch - Spring 2009 - Sales: Buying Eyeballs (Page 13) Launch - Spring 2009 - Funding: Stay Focused! (Page 14) Launch - Spring 2009 - Funding: Stay Focused! (Page 15) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 16) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 17) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 18) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 19) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 20) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 21) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 22) Launch - Spring 2009 - NETworking Do’s and Don’ts (Page 23) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 24) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 25) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 26) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 27) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 28) Launch - Spring 2009 - Be the Networking King (Page 29) Launch - Spring 2009 - Entrepreneur Spotlight (Page 30) Launch - Spring 2009 - Entrepreneur Spotlight (Page 31) Launch - Spring 2009 - Entrepreneur Spotlight (Page Cover3) Launch - Spring 2009 - Entrepreneur Spotlight (Page Cover4)
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