Preparing for the game…
If you have been following our recent insights, you’ll be up to speed knowing that professional investors negotiate tough terms, from provisions of control over asset acquisition, eventual sale of the company, future investments, forced co-sale when others attempt to sell their shares and more. And yet, in an earlier post, we spoke of the problems that come when taking unstructured investments from friends and family.
So how does this fit into this sandwich of alternatives?
Trusted, close resources include sophisticated relatives, friends and business associates who know how to structure a deal as a win-win for you and for them, while allowing you to retain control over your vision and execution. Their investment should be structured with the help of a good attorney who understands the mutual goal of maximum leverage of funds with minimum interference in your business decisions.
Protect the investor as well as yourself.
A personal story as an investor…
[Email readers, continue here…] My very first investment as a professional angel was in a small startup where the entrepreneur’s vision fueled my imagination in the audio market niche where I had run a business in an earlier life. I was so enthusiastic that I coached the entrepreneur to approach his mother, who invested $50,000 under the same terms as my investment. A small venture firm and a few more angels rounded out the total investment.
Building the business with investors and board members
As the company grew and became profitable, it became more visible to others in the market niche. Two of us who invested served on the board of the company, advising the first-time entrepreneur with our business and industry experience.
A liquidity event opportunity
Several years later, with the approval of the board and entrepreneur, I was able to engage a
The shock I didn’t see coming…
After weeks of negotiation, the entrepreneur suddenly disengaged, claiming that he was no longer interested in a sale of his company. The rest of us were shocked and disappointed that after weeks of work and a fair price, we were left with nothing but to follow his lead and disengage.
My reaction and proposal to the entrepreneur…
Shortly thereafter, in a board meeting, I brought up the issue of starting to pay board members for service in cash or in stock options, typical for outside board members but rarely for venture investors. The entrepreneur was angry, abusive, in his negative reaction to even bringing the issue to the board for a discussion. Five years had passed since my original investment in what I now clearly perceived as investment into a lifestyle business, one where the entrepreneur had no interest in selling or sharing.
So, I made my move…
I resigned from the board on the spot and negotiated a sale of my stock to the entrepreneur at five times the earlier investment, a fair return for both, since the company was by then worth much more. It is now years later, and his mother along with other early investors are still in the passive game, not likely to see liquidity from this mistaken investment in an entrepreneur unwilling to take money in exchange for the eventual promise of liquidity.
Why tell this story at all?
Mother is surely satisfied as a passive investor who probably would have given her son the money without structure. The other investors are probably in the unhappy never land of not being able to see liquidity after a decade and unable to write off the investment as a loss for tax purposes. This story would probably have ended in a lawsuit if a larger professional investor had been involved, since the entrepreneur did not follow the rules and seemed to have no desire to do so.
Trust works both ways.
Take money from close resources but treat it as if the responsibility is even greater to protect the investors and their money than from a professional. These investors trust that you will do the right thing for them if at all able.
Thanks for sharing this story Dave….
I too have been mistreated by entrepreneurs whose apparent belief is that we independent investors and directors were there to serve his needs and nothing more.
Many of us truly appreciate your work, Stender