Down Round

  

Categories: Investing, Banking

See: Anti-Dilution Clause.

You are the founder of whatever.com. You got investors all excited about your vision of whatevers "in every pot." Like FDR's chickens. They invested at $14 a share. But you failed. You missed your revenue and profit targets. You missed your unit volumes projections. You missed pretty much every metric you notionally promised. And now you're running out of money. You need to raise more or you're bankrupt.

So...you do a down round. It's down in value and down in mood. You need to raise $10 million, so you have to dilute yourself (and your previous investors) with a $5 a share round, valuing the company almost 1/3 of where it was valued previously. But you have to. Or you're dead. So you sell two million shares in this down round at five bucks. And hope for better times.

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Finance: What are Five Questions You Can...10 Views

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Finance a la shmoop what are five questions you can expect to be asked in

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a venture capital investing interview? okay so if you're watching this video

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we're gonna assume you're not an already successful entrepreneur who takes a seat [Woman watching shmoop video]

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as an EIR or entrepreneur in residence which is a completely different kind of

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interview in that case you're likely investing five million or so of your own

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dollars into the fund as a limited partner and then opining on which

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investments you like and don't like as the firm is rating your rolodex and in

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this case it's more like the firm is interviewing you than the other way [Men appear beside woman]

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around so we're gonna skip right through the EIR thing we're also going to

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assume that this is a Sand Hill Road Silicon Valley VC firm that you're

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interviewing stunningly few great companies have been built outside of

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that little bubble on earth so there is understandably not a lot of demand from

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investors to throw money at such tech hubs as Clearwater Florida Nashville

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Tennessee and burnt corn Alabama you know that's a real place but ok so you

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just graduated the business school at Stanford or you have a PhD with a whole [Woman standing beside her details]

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lot of work experience at Google or Facebook or Amazon or one of the blessed

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hot companies fast on the rise you're likely in your mid to late 20s

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and you're not really sure what you want to do with your life maybe become an [Woman walking through the park]

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investor maybe become a founder of a hot company yourself you just haven't found

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that great idea yet or maybe you want to be a very early employee at the next

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Google or Facebook hundreds of amazingly talented

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candidates want your seat they're all fighting for them and there are precious [Woman with candidates for interview]

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few seats you actually want that are available like there's a lot of really

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bad VC firms you don't want to work for you note that only a dozen or so venture

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funds are actually demonstrably good most of them kind of sort of almost

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break-even year after year but have a prayer of something grey maybe someday

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but investors couldn't get into Sequoia or kleiner or f8 so the overflow goes to

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the next dozen or hundred or thousand and yes,

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there are actually thousands of mediocre VC firms who exist and yes, only a few

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of them are actually good meaning that they have returned to investors

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consistently better results than they could have gotten just investing in an

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S&P 500 index fund so beware that you're entering the lottery ticket business [Person scratches lottery card with coin]

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yeah that's kind of what the world of VC is great work if you really know how to

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flip head 16 times in a row and we have an award-winning video on that subject

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if you want it first up why are you doing this? why are you here

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and the person asking you that question will have kind of some rancor in their

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voice with the eyebrows knitted... best answer in the world because I couldn't [Baseball thrown into air from stadium]

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throw a curve ball yeah if we could all be pitchers and make like a million

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bucks a game like why wouldn't we do that but we can't so we don't and well

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here we are but you give it to them straight I don't know what I want to be

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when I grow up and most VC's will laugh at you with no investing track [VC woman laughing]

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record if you tell them that you want to be a general partner at the firm in

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order to get a portfolio to run money to manage well you have to have a long

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track record of making money for shareholders a magnetic history that

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attracts the best entrepreneurs to want to take money from you instead of the 87

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others all throwing money at them and so on so be straight you don't know all

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right second question what do you know? well you're an ABD; all but dissertation

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PhD from MIT now expert in underwater robotics [A robot under water]

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particularly with the military applications

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well you detail for them the challenges in operating machinery in cold saltwater

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battery issues volts recovery when one fails the cost structure the

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state-of-the-art like what the Russians and Chinese are building and what

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they're doing in Atlantis and then you regale them with your amazing knowledge

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on this arcane but hot investment area like imagine digging for gold [Robot digging under water]

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robotically under the sea under the sea and then you dangle the golden nugget a

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golden nugget yeah you talk about the discovery show gold and dream about an

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army or fleet of automated underwater drilling robots who just drill all day [Woman celebrating]

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and night at non-union wages and return a week later with pot loads of gold well

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who knows maybe one of the VC's will be so enamored

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the idea they'll want to angel fund you to go start that company and you amused [VC woman celebrating with arms in the air]

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yourself that the VC's who funded Google made like 8 billion bucks

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the founders made 80 billion so in a bake-off being a founder of a company

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that does well is always preferable to just being the one who poured coffee and [Man takes sip of coffee]

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equity for them but being the investor right better to be the founder than just

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the investor all right third question what do you expect your day to be like?

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well early on in a VC career you're just smiling and dialing you literally do [Woman answers phone]

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nothing all day long other than email and cold call CEOs and key executives of

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hot startups asking if they need money well you'd better know this in advance

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it's called deal sourcing and it is the hazing entry job of the VC world so why

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do they need PhDs and Stanford MBAs doing this perfunctory task well because

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the VC firm has to appear smart on the other end of the phone line it's kind of

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a firm branding thing like an ego thing like the firm wants the best and [Candidates lined up for interview]

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brightest of the country to be their front end and firms always think they're

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better than they actually are or at least perceived the clients want

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the Harvard Stanford MIT moniker and so the VC's pay up for that highly

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synthesized talent and they pay a lot all right fourth question what do you

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want to earn? well if they are already asking you that question in the

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interview that's a really good sign they wouldn't be asking if they were trying

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to convince you to take a job as a business development exec at pre-

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bankruptcy.com yeah and the right answer whatever you pay will be just [Woman waving arms in the air]

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fine I'm sure you guys have a rep for being fair to your young people that's

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the right answer when they ask you about comp whether they do or don't VC's love

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hearing crap like that so feed the beast you're marketing yourself here not at a

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confessional right all right fifth question what happens if you wash out?

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well as we mentioned the VC business is largely the business of picking the

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right lottery ticket there are thousands of VC's actively managing money and only

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ten good deals happen in a year a good year so the odds of you washing out are [Man discussing chances of washing out]

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extremely high and if you do well there's no option to stand on the street

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corner holding up a sign saying we'll roll dice for food [Man holding sign to roll dice for food]

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so what do you do well I'm really good at creating financial models so I could

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work for an investment bank right? no you'll be too old when you wash out

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you'll be 30 or more oh well it could be a CFO for one of the companies right?

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no the skill of a VC is about investing high risk capital, not about counting the

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beans of an already going concern well after a long silence you ask about the [Boy sitting at desk with PC]

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interviewers belief and trust and tarot cards and psychics and ask about job

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opportunities in that field yeah you wash out there's no mercy

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so may the spirits be with you roll them well roll the bone...

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