ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Bonds Videos 389 videos
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...
What is Collateralized Mortgage Obligation (CMO)? A CMO is a mortgage bond that consists of a large number of different individual mortgages bundle...
What are kickbacks? Well, they're things we don't get for working at Shmoop, that's for sure. Hit play to find out more.
Finance: How Do You Get Your Startup Funded? 96 Views
Share It!
Description:
How do you get a startup funded? Depends if we're talking about a tech startup, or a non-tech startup. If you've got a promising, budding tech company, you'll find it's much easier to raise capital. But if you're looking to get a restaurant off the ground... your chances of finding funding are about as good as literally getting a restaurant off the ground. So... good luck with that. You'll do an A round in your first funding, a B round next, and so on. Venture capitalists are the ones writing the checks. Investment bankers are the ones taking you public in your IPO.
- Social Studies / Finance
- Finance / Financial Responsibility
- Life Skills / Personal Finance
- Finance / Finance Definitions
- Life Skills / Finance Definitions
- Finance / Personal Finance
- Courses / Finance Concepts
- Subjects / Finance and Economics
- Finance and Economics / Terms and Concepts
- Terms and Concepts / Bonds
- Terms and Concepts / Company Management
- Terms and Concepts / Company Valuation
- Terms and Concepts / Entrepreneur
- Terms and Concepts / Incorporation
- Terms and Concepts / Investing
- Terms and Concepts / Stocks
- Terms and Concepts / Tech
- College and Career / Personal Finance
Transcript
- 00:00
Finance a la Shmoop. How do you get your startup funded? If you're leaning is in
- 00:08
this direction, well then first you pray. Can't hurt right? Okay well maybe it can,[two men in church]
- 00:13
shocking. Well the world of startups is really a tale of two cities or types of
- 00:18
business. There's tech startups and then there are
- 00:21
non tech startups. The former is lavishly funded with tremendous resources and
Full Transcript
- 00:27
huge valuations. Which means that the capital invested is almost free for the
- 00:31
founders and there are literally thousands of companies around the world
- 00:35
who invest in early technology startups.[Global map with business buildings] But if you're trying to fund a
- 00:39
restaurant, a bar, flower-arranging chain, a bug spraying service and auto service
- 00:45
business. Well then you're probably badly out of luck. If you do get financing,
- 00:50
it'll be on vastly worse terms than if you would have invented a new robot operating
- 00:55
system that could see in the dark, or an electronic zit zapper, or a drug that
- 00:59
made you happy you knew it and you didn't even have to clap your hands. [T-Rex clapping hands]
- 01:03
Since the restaurant industry for example is such a bad investment with
- 01:08
some 95% plus of them going bankrupt in the first few years.
- 01:12
Very few investors are willing to take any risk investing in them. As a result
- 01:17
if you want to fund that kind of business, well you most likely have to
- 01:21
fund it yourself by saving your pennies, waiting for old uncle Larry to kick the
- 01:25
bucket and leave you money and/or mortgage whatever you can of your house [man at Chase Bank]
- 01:29
at the bank. Knowing that if your restaurant goes belly-up, you rethink
- 01:33
your five-year-old SUV in terms of living room, kitchen here and bathroom
- 01:39
there. Well if you do have the knack for tech, well and you come up with the lawn
- 01:43
Roomba which will make mowing the lawn a breeze. Then the process usually begins
- 01:47
with a business plan. You'll leverage Google slides, a free presentation tool,
- 01:51
where you can have one page describing your product, a page covering the size of[business slides]
- 01:55
the market, ie the number of potential buyers, anyone with a backyard basically,
- 01:59
along with the price you'd expect them to pay. Another page covering the costs
- 02:03
of making the first one, the first hundred, the first thousand, the first
- 02:07
hundred thousand units. Were presumably the marginal cost per unit
- 02:11
down with scale production and finally you have a page or three showing, what it
- 02:15
is you've done that's hard to do. IE you have patents protecting your idea, [board meeting presentation]
- 02:20
which you've already filed and it's not some idea that people at Google, with its
- 02:25
engineer army could likely read your slides as you build them and just copy
- 02:30
what you've done and do it themselves. Well you figure out how much money you
- 02:34
need to get a couple of years down the road. This point where you're pushing
- 02:37
product out the door and well say you asked for three million dollars from[cost pie chart]
- 02:41
investors who would then own maybe a third or more of the company day one.
- 02:44
You're valuing then your idea, your time, your brain, your patents, all combined for
- 02:49
I'll say six million dollars already then you're asking investors to pile
- 02:53
three million dollars in cash on top of that six million. So that the combined
- 02:57
company of your ideas and you, are now worth a total of nine million bucks.
- 03:03
You'll also want to make talented hires to whom you can't afford to only pay[business woman shaking hands]
- 03:07
cash. So you'll allocate a bunch of shares or
- 03:10
options on shares to be granted to those new highly talented employees as well.
- 03:15
Maybe those options or shares are worth another million boxes, as you add everything
- 03:18
up. Such that your total company now has a notional combined value with
- 03:23
everything of ten million bucks and that's when the Trojan hit the road [man driving red car]
- 03:28
and you see if you actually can build this thing. Mow little Roomba mow.
Related Videos
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
What is bankruptcy? Deadbeats who can't pay their bills declare bankruptcy. Either they borrowed too much money, or the business fell apart. They t...
What's a dividend? At will, the board of directors can pay a dividend on common stock. Usually, that payout is some percentage less than 100 of ear...
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...