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Raising
Capital for Your Business – How Long Does
it Take? |
by:
Dave
Lavinsky |
Most
companies vastly underestimate the time
commitment necessary to successfully complete
a financing. In actuality, a company seeking
financing needs to budget between 500 to
1000 work-hours to the capital-raising process,
spread out over a 6-9 month time period.
The key processes in the capital-raising
process include 1) perfecting the business
plan, offering memorandum, and other company
due diligence materials, 2) developing a
comprehensive, targeted prospective investor
list, 3) contacting this list and responding
to investor due diligence requests, and
4) negotiating the transaction.
Completing the business plan typically requires
at least 200 hours of work. This time is
dedicated to conducting the market research
to validate the opportunity, developing
a comprehensive financial model, determining
the most effective way to lay out the business
strategy, and actually writing and proofing
the business plan.
The next step, developing a comprehensive,
targeted prospective investor list is also
very time consuming. There are thousands
of potential investors, each of which has
very different tastes regarding the types
of ventures that interest them. Some invest
by market sector (e.g., healthcare vs. telecommunications),
stage (seed stage vs. later stage), geography,
or a combination of these. Many hours must
be dedicated to determine which investors
are the right fit for your venture. This
process involves creating a master investor
list, visiting each investor’s website to
view investment criteria and past investments,
and determining who is the right contact
at the firm.
To see how easily the time adds up, consider
that only about 25% of prospective investors
who show an initial interest in a transaction
actually progress to detailed company due
diligence. Only about 10% of this 25% actually
progress to a bonafide offer of funds, of
which only 25% of these actually result
in an investment transaction. So completing
a financing transaction requires, on average,
contacting approximately 160 pre-qualified
prospective investors.
The due diligence process, where investors
scrutinize the investment, can also be very
time consuming for the company. Investors
often request many documents, some of which
can be easily retrieved from files (e.g.,
prior tax returns), while others may take
more time to prepare (e.g., additional market
analysis, customer lists with past purchases,
contact information, etc.). Finally, negotiating
a transaction can take a significant amount
of time depending upon the complexity of
the transaction and number of parties involved.
Too many companies fail to raise capital
since they are unaware of the significant
time requirements to do so. Those firms
who understand these requirements and budget
accordingly are the ones most likely to
persevere and end up with the capital they
need.
About the author:
GT Business
Plans has developed over 200 business
plans for clients that have collectively
raised over $750 million in financing, launched
numerous new product and service lines and
gained competitive advantage and market
share. GT Business Plans is the sister site
of GT
Venture Capital
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