Collective Mining | Corporate Presentation - May 2024
11.29 TCN Boston Funding Options Overview
1. thecapitalnetwork.org - @TCNUpdate
Funding Overview: Boston
Jess McLear
Angel Investor
Launchpad Venture Group
Jean-Marie Vallet
Angel Investor
Launchpad Venture Group
Tetyana Astashkina
Venture Partner
LearnLaunch
2. Fundraising is hard. You don’t have to do it alone.
Designed for entrepreneurs, by investors, TCN events cover a full range of
topics
from finding investors, pitching and due diligence, to term sheets & exits
and everything in between.
Workshops, office hours, bootcamps, mentoring…
Let TCN guide you through the fundraising process.
Your future investors will thank you.
Want to know more? www.thecapitalnetwork.org
3. What Type of Company Are You?
Before you can get funded,
you have to know
where to look
Before you know where to look,
you need to understand
what you are
4. What Type of Company Are You?
•The type of company you have will shape the type
of funding available to you
• Consumer mobile social software company vs
Chemistry-based life science technology product vs Equipment for
emergency deployment in disaster zones
•Changes in business model can change the funding
required
• IP licensing of new battery technology to existing players vs
build a battery distribution company with outsource manufacturing or
build a manufacturing company with, or without distribution
5. NORMAL
GROWTH
COMPANY
HIGH
GROWTH
COMPANY
EXTREME
HIGH GROWTH
COMPANY
SOCIAL VENTURE
COMPANY
• Includes all
service
businesses
• Exploiting a local
market need
• Team has ‘great
jobs’
• Growth by adding
resources one by
one
• Exit will be based
on value of cash
flow (mature biz.)
• Growth profile
ultra-scalable
• Team focus is exit
• Revenue $40M+
with lots of room for
growth (5 yr.)
• Based on $20M+
investment
• Exit targeted to IPO
or by ‘large’ M&A
event
• Goal is to fulfill a
social need
• Has mission
orientation
• Team needs to
support mission
• Growth profile
often one
resource at a
time
• Exit …much
harder to find fit
• Company can
grow fast (on-line)
or has a scalable
system
• Team often
motivated by exit
• $7-10M revenue in
4-5 yrs & market
size allows
additional growth
• Capital efficient
total investment
$2-4M
• Exit by M&A
What Type of Company Are You?
6. What Kind of Funding
NORMAL
GROWTH
COMPANY
HIGH
GROWTH
COMPANY
EXTREME
HIGH GROWTH
COMPANY
SOCIAL
VENTURE
COMPANY
• Friends, family,
founders
• Debt, Bank, and
other
• Equity Crowd
funding (portal
style, Net Capital,
WeFunder etc)
Early On
• Accelerators
• Individual Angels
• Micro Cap VCs
• Seed from VC
Later stages
• Venture Funds
• Strategic VCs
• Angel Syndication
• Friends family,
founders
• Charity$$
• Crowd funding
(Kickstarter, etc)
• Impact Angels
• (Future) Crowd
funding (portal
style)
• Angels & Angel
Groups
• Angel Group
Syndication
• Angel List
• Micro-cap Funds
• Equity
Crowdfunding:
(portal style, Net
Capital,
WeFunder etc)
• Increasingly
Strategic
Corporate VCs
7. Capital Sources: Size & Cost
Investment Size
Traditional VC
Micro VC
Equipment Financing
Angel Groups
Angels
Equity Crowdfunding
Angel List, Circle Up, etc
Corporate / Strategic
Venture
Customers
Jobs Bill Portals
Vendors
Founder
Friends & Family
Crowdfunding: etc.
Grants
Venture Debt
Bank
Loans
Personal
Loans
Private Equity
B’Plan Competition
Accelerators
Investment“Cost”
8. Revenue
Debt
• Bank
• Friends/Family
• Non-convertible note
Customer/Vendor/Partner
• Prepaid product purchases from customers
• Pay later services from vendors
• Non-recoverable engineering costs from
partners
Grants
• SBIR & other Government Grants
• Business competitions
Capital Sources
Dilutive Non-Dilutive
Equity
• Convertible Note
• Stock
• Friends, Family Investors
• Common vs Preferred
9. Capital Sources
Size of Capital
Raise: High
Time
High Risk
Low Risk
Crystallize
Ideas
Demonstrate
Product
Early Scaling Growth Sustained
Growth
Market Entry
Size of Capital Raise: Low
As you develop your company, you reduce risk for your financial partners
10. Capital Sources: Equity
Stage
Crystallize Idea
and Early
Demonstration
Demonstrate
Product &
Market Interest
Market Entry
and Early
Growth
Early Scaling
Growth
Repeatable
Growth
Capital
Source
Founders, Friends,
Family, Grants,
Kickstarter, etc.
Government
grants, eg., SBIR
Accelerators,
Individual Angels,
many others now
“exploring”
government
grants, eg., SBIR
Angel Groups,
Angel Group
Syndication,
Micro-Cap Funds
government
grants, eg., SBIR
VCs, Angel
Group
Syndication,
Micro-Cap
Funds
VCs
Investment $25K - $100K $100K - $500K $500K - $1M
$5M – as
needed
as needed
These 2 need sophisticated
growth plans
This is the stage
where advice can
make you eligible
for outside
funding later
Accelerators and
a few individual
angels play here
… unless it is a
big idea
This is where
Angel Groups
do most 1st
investments
11. Equity: VC vs Angel
Angels
• Invest their own money
• Motivated to help entrepreneurs,
stay engaged
• But Return on Investment is still the
controlling metric
• Likes big returns but will often be
happy with more modest returns in a
shorter amount of time3-5 year
outlook on investments unless VCs
get involved
VC Funds
• Invest other people’s money (pension
funds, …)
• Have multi-million $ funds they need to
put to work
• Invest big and must get big returns for
their investors
• 7+ year outlook for exit returns
(10-year funds)
12. Equity: VC vs Angel
Angels
$24.6B in 2015 ~ 305,000 investors
71,000 deals:
(18,000 Seed & 32,000 Early Stage)
NE sees 12% of all US deals
Types of angels
○ Individuals
○ Organized: Funds: 16%; Network:
63% (avg 10 deals / year)
○ AngelList
○ Informal networks & 1 time investors
○ Family offices
Mostly invest locally
VCs
$59B in 2015,~ 4,300 Deals
(186 seed & 2200 early stage)
12 Companies accounted for more
than 10B
Angel Syndicates (relatively new)
• Individual angels, or several angel groups investing as a unit
• AngelList syndicates
• VC-backed syndicates
13. Debt Capital
Debt Capital
• Funding based on a set schedule of
principal and interest payments that
provide a fixed return for the lender.
• Availability may be based on asset
value or cash flow or personal
guarantee.
• MUST be paid back. Not “speculative”
cash.
Sources:
• Personal Loans – Friends/Family
• Bank Loans
• SBA Loans
• Expect debt classes from Jobs Bill
crowd funding portals
• Credit Cards
• Venture Debt (usually linked to equity
& later stage)
14. Alternate Sources
Crowd Funding
•Kickstarter, Indiegogo
•Usually associated with “product”
companies
•Can come with drawbacks
Accelerators
Many incubators across the country
• May focus on specific types eg.
LearnLaunch for EdTech
•Many different models
• Non-profit, equity stake, revenue, loan
•Can be very helpful but be wary of
being of the “accelerator circuit” too
long.
*Equity Crowdfunding (new as of May 2016)
NetCapital, Jumpstart Micro, WeFunder etc...
15. Non-Dilutive Funding
SBIR + STTR = 3% - 3.6% of federal R&D Budget
Best for research … need other commercial $$
Pros:
•It is a contract/grant – non
dilutive
Cons:
•Long Solicitation Process
•March-in Rights
•Work with universities for
expertise
•Best to incorporate (but more
acceptance of LLCs)
•Accounting systems must be
compliant with the government
•Very competitive in some agencies
16. Small Business Innovation Research
Grant (SBIR)
MISSION:
To support scientific excellence and technological
innovation through the investment of Federal
research funds in critical American priorities to
build a strong national economy… one small
business at a time.”
MONEY:
• ~$2.5 billion annual set aside | ~145,000
awards granted total | ~10 patents per
day generated (SBA)
• 11% of awardees have attracted another
$65 billion+ of venture capital
SBIR PROGRAM GOALS:
- Meet Federal research and development
needs
- Increase private-sector commercialization
of innovations derived from Federal
research and development funding
- Stimulate technological innovation
- Foster and encourage participation in
innovation and entrepreneurship by socially
and economically disadvantaged persons
The SBIR Program is managed by the Small Business Administration
- but is also directly administered by over 12 Agencies including:
17. Eligibility & Milestones
Eligibility is determined at time of award
- Organized as for-profit U.S. business
- Small: 500 or fewer employees, including
affiliates
- Work must be done in the U.S. (with few
exceptions)
- Company privately and individually
owned
• PI is not required to have a Ph.D./M.D
• Generally the PI is required to have some
expertise to oversee project scientifically
and technically
• Applications may be submitted to different
agencies for similar work
• Awards may not be accepted from different
agencies for duplicative projects
Milestone Driven Award Process
Phase I | Feasibility Study or Prototype -
~$150 thousand and 6 months
Phase II | Full Research and Development
Effort ~ $1 million and 24 months
Phase III | Commercialization Effort - Private
and Non-SBIR Allocated financing
5509 Total Awards in 2012
• 54% of $ to 10 States
• Phase I Awards | 64% of Awards | 24.2% of Funds
| Average Size $151,000
• Phase II Awards | 36% of Awards | 75.8% of
Funds | Average Size $718,000
19. Conclusion
Educate yourself about all of your funding options:
• https://www.sbir.gov
- Example NSF: www.sbir.gov/agencies/national-science-foundation
- Next funding close date of Dec 6:
Advanced Manufacturing & Nanotechnology Biological Technologies, Chemical and
Environmental Technologies
• http://nvca.org
• http://www.angelcapitalassociation.org
• http://www.thecapitalnetwork.org
Non-dilutive funding is always great but not always the easiest to get
It’s all about the numbers for equity investors
Network, Network, Network
• http://www.greenhornconnect.com For startup events going on in MA
20. Fundraising is hard. You don’t have to do it alone.
Designed for entrepreneurs, by investors, TCN events cover a full range of
topics
from finding investors, pitching and due diligence, to term sheets & exits
and everything in between.
Workshops, office hours, bootcamps, mentoring…
Let TCN guide you through the fundraising process.
Your future investors will thank you.
Want to know more? www.thecapitalnetwork.org