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INVENTION TO STARTUP SOURCES OF FUNDING

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Exercise potential sources and their attributes. Quick case study: SonoSite, Inc. ... Rapidly ageing population ~10% of world population is over 65 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INVENTION TO STARTUP SOURCES OF FUNDING


1
INVENTION TO STARTUPSOURCES OF FUNDING
  • Trevor Moody Frazier Healthcare Ventures
  • Jens U. Quistgaard LipoSonix, Inc.

2
Overview
  • Observations on the current financial climate
  • Sources of funding
  • Exercise potential sources and their attributes
  • Quick case study SonoSite, Inc.
  • Quick case study LipoSonix, Inc.
  • Venture funding in depth
  • What is a venture capitalist?
  • Venture capital funding criteria
  • What has changed recently?

3
World Market Conditions
  • Fear is high
  • Global credit crunch/recession
  • Uncertainty about size and extent of problem
  • Companies most affected have
  • Operational leverage to GDP or
  • Balance sheet debt

VSX Volatility Index Sept 2000- Sept 2008
Data courtesy of SV Life Sciences LLP
4
Effect on Private Companies
  • Relatively limited impact on healthcare companies
  • Reduced access to public markets for exit or
    financing
  • Reduced availability of credit and increased
    financing costs
  • Potentially longer time period to exit and lower
    exit valuations

5
Performance of Healthcare Indices
  • Health sector is driven by non-discretionary
    spending and therefore traditionally a safe haven
    at times of economic turmoil
  • U.S. healthcare indices have all outperformed the
    SP500 over the last 12 months
  • SP 500 down 30
  • Medical device (DJUSMC) down 11 and biotech
    (NBI) down 10
  • Healthcare services (IHI) down 17 due to HMOs
    reduced rates of growth, credit contraction and
    fears about reimbursement

6
Performance of Healthcare Indices
12 month performance of US Healthcare indices to
5 October 2008
Data courtesy of SV Life Sciences LLP
7
Healthcare Fundamentals Strong
  • Recession resistant characteristics
  • Rapidly ageing population
  • 10 of world population is over 65
  • Rising incidence of chronic disease
  • Rising healthcare costs
  • US healthcare spending 2.3 trillion in 2007,
    7000 per person
  • Healthcare spending outpaces overall economic
    growth and inflation
  • Regulation creates high barriers to entry
  • Globalization and new markets
  • Innovation creates new markets

Forecast rise in chronic disease 2003-2023
Predicted population growth 19
Data courtesy of SV Life Sciences LLP
8
Healthcare Investing (USA)
Equity into US VC-backed healthcare companies
Pro-forma
Data courtesy of SV Life Sciences LLP
9
So
  • Financial markets are a mess
  • Healthcare is a great place to be in these times
  • Funding is still available, but
  • Bar is raised for new investments
  • Valuations are down
  • Each type of funding is affected differently

10
Sources of Funding
  • What are they?
  • Self
  • Friends Family
  • Debt
  • Grants, contracts NIH, SBA, DARPA, etc.
  • Angels
  • Venture funds
  • Crossover funds
  • Strategic (other companies)
  • Public markets

11
Sources of Funding
  • What are they?
  • Self
  • Friends Family
  • Debt
  • Grants, contracts NIH, SBA, DARPA, etc.
  • Angels
  • Venture funds
  • Crossover funds
  • Strategic (other companies)
  • Public markets

12
Quick Case SonoSite, Inc.
  • ATL Ultrasound parent
  • Digital ultrasound pioneer
  • Core competence in ASIC implementation
  • The hand-carried ultrasound vision
  • The internal funding reality
  • DARPA dual-use program
  • ATL Ultrasound
  • University of Washington
  • VLSI Technology
  • Harris Semiconductor

13
SonoSite Getting Off the Ground
  • Basic development 1996-1997
  • 12.6MM DARPA matching grant
  • Handheld Systems Business Group 1997
  • Spin-out as SonoSite, Inc. - April 1998
  • 17MM cash (13MM later)
  • Technology license
  • NASDAQ listed distributed to ATL shareholders
  • First working prototype September 1998
  • First follow-on financing April 1999 (33.8MM)

14
SonoSite Lessons Learned
  • Government grants are a wonderful thing
  • But
  • You need an impressive consortium to get large
  • There are some complications
  • Government technology rights
  • Consortium members technology rights
  • Reporting requirements
  • Etc
  • Being a pre-revenue public company, in my humble
    opinion, is not a wonderful thing

15
Quick Case LipoSonix, Inc.
  • Originally pitched to investors by two
    individuals
  • Not successful
  • Picked up by a medical technology incubator
  • LipoSonix, Inc. founded in late 1999
  • Initial venture funding, January 2001 (1.4MM)
  • IP licensing
  • Exploratory work
  • Series-B, tranche 1, November 2001 (4MM)
  • More exploratory work

16
LipoSonix The Bothell Story
  • First full-time employee and dedicated facility,
    August October 2002
  • Series-B, tranche 2, September 2002 (5.9MM)
  • First human study, July 2003
  • The joy of venture debt
  • Series-C, July 2004 (27.0MM)
  • More debt
  • Initial customer shipment
  • More debt
  • Acquired by Medicis Pharmaceutical Corp., July
    2008

17
LipoSonix Lessons Learned
  • Top-drawer investors really help!
  • Be aware of capital structure issues associated
    with incubators
  • Be aware of capital structure and terms issues
    associated with venture financing
  • Multiples requirements
  • Liquidation preferences (!)
  • Etc
  • Venture debt is a wonderful thing
  • If you can get it, and use it appropriately

18
Different money sources are likely to be involved
as the company grows
19
Funding needs increase significantly as the
start-up moves towards commercialization
Typical Funding Requirements Through a Company
Lifecycle
20
Sources of Funding Venture Capital
  • What is a Venture Capitalist?
  • What criteria do VCs use to decide what to invest
    in?
  • What has changed recently?

21
What is a Venture Capitalist?
Follow the Money
Investments in US Healthcare Portfolio Companies
The General Partner And the Fund
Sources of Capital
  • Retirement funds
  • University endowments
  • Families / high net worth individuals
  • General partners

Update!
22
What is a Venture Capitalist?
  • Typically small partnerships made up of a few
    General Partners (2-10) and other staff
  • General partners collect a percentage of the
    profits
  • Payouts over several years
  • Lucrative but high risk
  • Manage one or more funds raised sequentially over
    several years
  • Fund sizes range from lt5MM to gt2B
  • Some firms have been around for gt50 years but
    vast majority have emerged in the last 15 years

23
Medical Device VCs are looking for the most
exciting new technologies
A typical large healthcare VC may see 1000-2000
plans per year and invest in only 10
  • Opportunities of great interest to medical device
    companies
  • Innovations that will be rapidly adopted by
    physicians
  • Incremental improvements
  • Products, not companies

24
The Medical Device Investors checklist
  • Management / Founder Teams
  • Big Markets / Rapid Adoption
  • Regulatory/Reimbursement pathway
  • Early Clinical Proof-of-Principle
  • Patents

25
Management/Founder teams
  • Most startups wont have a CEO who has taken 3
    companies public
  • Experience in other successful ventures
  • Have recruited top-tier mentors, board members
    and advisors
  • Open to adding other great executives to the team
  • Deep understanding of the target market and
    technology
  • Just want money, dont want a partner
  • Unrealistic expectations of how hard it will be
  • Looking for a quick win

26
Big markets/Rapid adoption
  • A very large existing or potential market is
    critical for generating investor interest
  • Physician specialty has demonstrated that they
    will rapidly adopt new technologies
  • 1B potential market
  • Targeting procedurally oriented specialties e.g.
    cardiologists, orthopedic surgeons, etc
  • Challenging physician referral patterns
  • Requirement for large upfront capital outlays

27
Regulatory/Reimbursement
  • FDA and CMS challenges are often underestimated
    by founders
  • Clear FDA approval requirements
  • Compelling economic argument to key decision
    makers e.g. physicians, hospitals
  • Physician community excited enough about
    technology to lobby for reimbursement
  • Trials requiring long follow-up
  • Great macro-economic argument but no-one incented
    to adopt

28
Early Clinical Proof-of-Principle
  • A rapid path to clinical proof-of-principle
    greatly increases the fundability of a company
  • Rapid, ethical path to early clinical feasibility
    testing
  • Early clinical data that is highly suggestive of
    likely success of the pivotal trial
  • Need to run large, lengthy clinical trial to see
    if it works
  • Mediocre efficacy results

29
Patents
  • Strong patent protection is essential in a
    technology-driven venture
  • Very strong protection around key innovation
  • Building a patent thicket to cover other
    related inventions
  • Broad early patents (an added bonus)
  • Sloppy patent strategy / disclosures that have
    limited patentability
  • Freedom to operate concerns

30
What is the impact of the economic crisis on
venture capital?
  • Limited impact in the short term in 95 of
    cases, funds will continue
  • Quality VCs raise money from quality, long-term
    Limited Partners (LPs)
  • VCs have not typically used debt fortunately
  • Potentially dramatic impact in the long term
  • Exits Definitely delayed significantly
  • LP appetite for VC investments will decline over
    time
  • VC investment criteria will be more conservative
  • Early-stage VCs will still invest in early-stage
    companies but hurdles will increase
  • More sensitive on capital needs, time to market
    etc.

31
Wrap-Up
  • Healthcare - Perhaps no better place to be
    driving innovation
  • Buyers less affected by acute economic turmoil
  • Insatiable demand
  • Demographics
  • Lots of money still out there the bar is much
    higher but great opportunities and great teams
    will get funded
  • Take a strategic approach to fund raising. Target
    the best sources of money given your opportunity
    and stage of development
  • Expect to spend a lot of time raising money
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