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FOUNDATIONS OF ENTREPRENEURSHP

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FOUNDATIONS OF ENTREPRENEURSHP CLASS SIX: ACQUIRING FINANCIAL CAPITAL Elikem Nutifafa Kuenyehia Management Consultant & Corporate Lawyer – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FOUNDATIONS OF ENTREPRENEURSHP


1
FOUNDATIONS OFENTREPRENEURSHP
CLASS SIX ACQUIRING FINANCIAL CAPITAL
  • Elikem Nutifafa Kuenyehia
  • Management Consultant Corporate Lawyer

2
Agenda For Class Six
  • Recap of Class five
  • Acquiring Financial Resources
  • Give you opportunity to ask questions

3
Distinct Stages for Capital
  • Founding Stage
  • Initial vision for business.
  • Development of strategy
  • May require capital for research, concept
    development etc
  • Entrepreneur friends/family
  • Seed Stage
  • Money required to start the business (seed)
  • Typically comes from friends family, bank
    loans, etc...

4
Distinct Stages for Capital
  • Growth stage
  • Where you need to fund business to enable it
    sustain its growth
  • Stage where you are likely to get the most
    interest from investors
  • Harvest Stage
  • Where founders seek to harvest their investment
  • Trade Sale, Sale to other investors, IPO etc

5
Considerations in seeking capital
  • Be clear what you need money for, how much
  • Starting point should be b/plan cash flow
    statements
  • Give consideration to Fixed Capital vs. Working
    Capital
  • From whom you raise capital is more important
    than the terms
  • Investors typically want to see that the
    entrepreneur has his skin in the game

6
Acquiring Financial Resources
  • SOURCES OF CAPITAL
  • Equity Capital
  • Personal Savings
  • Friends Family
  • Angel Investors
  • Stock market
  • Debt Capital

7
Equity v Debt Capital
  • Equity capital is an investment in the ownership
    through the purchase of shares
  • Debt capital is money that is borrowed and which
    must be repaid over time. Usually doesnt include
    any share ownership

8
Sources of Funding
  • Self funding/Bootstrapping
  • Friends Family
  • Angels
  • Venture Capital
  • Stock market
  • Bank Financing
  • Lease Financing
  • Corporate profit/Internal sources

9
Self funding
  • Self funding
  • Cheapest Form of Capital
  • No other associated costs other than opportunity
    cost
  • Shows your skin is in the game
  • More savings you have, the less equity you have
    to give up
  • Generally 'unreliable' source takes long time
    to save/inflation etc
  • Takes away 'survival money'

10
Friends Family
  • Relying on personal relationships to fund venture
  • Friends Family more patient and less meddlesome
    than other investors
  • Can put strain on underlying relationship
  • Particularly when business is not going well
  • Maybe difficult to raise huge sums through this
    route
  • Friends Family should be able to accommodate
    losses.
  • Unrealistic or misunderstood expectations
  • Clarify!

11
Angels
  • Basically a good guy with money who can be
    persuaded to invest in your venture
  • Typically retired entrepreneurs
  • Might be investing for reasons other than returns
  • Smart Money - can add significant value to
    entrepreneur's business

12
Venture Capital
  • Venture Capitalists
  • finance new growing businesses
  • Acquire equity in ailing companies with prospects
  • Bring smart money, contacts and active hands on
    management
  • Invest for medium term
  • Exit is important

13
Why Some Cannot Access VC funding
  • No knowledge of what VCs offer
  • Poor corporate governance
  • Unwillingness to give up control
  • Lack of transparency/honesty
  • No business plan/corporate plan

14
Equity Capital
  • Shareholders acquire shares in the company
  • For partnerships, you invest in the partnership
  • May give investor say in the direction of company
  • Adv for entrepreneur is that he does not have to
    repay
  • Shareholders get paid dividends out of profits
  • Involves parting with ownership
  • 50 of something is better than 100 of nothing

15
Debt Capital
  • Overdrafts
  • Term loans
  • Floating rate vs Fixed rate
  • Demand vs. Fixed Maturity
  • Secured vs. Unsecured

16
Stock Exchange
  • IPO provides medium to long term capital needs of
    company
  • IPO initial public offer
  • A company is listed when its shares are approved
    to be bought and sold on the Stock Exchange
  • Must appoint a licensed dealing member of GSE to
    sponsor application and take through listing
    process
  • Both existing and new shares can be listed on
    exchange

17
Stock Exchange
  • GSE has three official lists
  • First Official List
  • Second Official List
  • Third Official List
  • Minimum capital requirements
  • FOL 100M
  • SOL 50M
  • TOL 25M
  • Minimum public float
  • Shares offered to public should not have a market
    value of less than 30M for FOL, 15M for SOL and
    5M for TOL
  • 25 or more of Companys shares should be issued
    to public
  • Spread of shareholders
  • Spread of shareholders at close of IPO should be
    adequate (in opinion of GSE)

18
Stock Exchange
  • Minimum Period of existence
  • TOL one year but can be waived
  • Profitability
  • SOL/TOL must have strong potential to be
    profitable
  • Management Directors
  • Evidence that management possesses requisite
    expertise
  • Character and integrity of management directors
    must be acceptable to GSE

19
TIPS
  • Real Money Needs Real Structures
  • -A worthy vessel is needed for a worthy cause
  • -The scheduling of repayment of investments and
    reporting of profits may require specific
    management skill this will be demonstrated this
    through complex projections
  • -Corporate governance structures give investors
    some confidence that their money will be put to
    good use and that their returns will be managed
    and delivered

20
TIPS (contd)
  • Personal Investment
  • Most investors want to know how much the
    promoters have put into the venture
  • The smaller your personal investment, the smaller
    the share you retain after others invest
  • Structure friendly investments as part of your
    personal investment

21
TIPS (contd)
  • Financial Reporting
  • Income Statement net income
  • Cash Flow Projection net cash
  • Balance Sheet Projection net worth
  • 1 year, 2 years, 5 years
  • Unlike what youd imagine, you need these reports
    even more than your potential investors do

22
TIPS (contd)
  • What Do Financial Reports Demonstrate?
  • Fundamental understanding of your business
  • How long it will take to break even
  • What your profit margins are likely to be
  • How much money you need (and when youll need it)
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