SlideShare a Scribd company logo
Introduction to Venture Capital
                   EE 203
             Stanford University

               March 6th, 2007

                 Will Price
       Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
Introduction

• Will Price, Principal
  – Harvard College, AB
  – Northwestern University, MBA
  – Investment banking, product mgt, start-
    up CEO
  – wprice@humwin.com
  – http://willprice.blogspot.com


• Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
  – $1bn AUM early-stage software firm
What Is Venture Capital?

• Venture capitalists:
   – Raise pools of capital from institutional and
     individual investors
   – Finance new and rapidly growing companies;
   – Purchase preferred equity securities and take
     board positions;
   – Add value to the company through active
     participation;
   – Take higher risks with the expectation of higher
     rewards;
   – Have a long-term orientation
   – Make $$$ by via M&A or IPO liquidity events
A Long History!
Impact on Economy

• Infrastructure           • Healthcare
  – Intel, Cisco, 3Com,      – Genentech, Amgen,
    Juniper, Apple, EMC,       Alza, Affymetrix
    Sun, Wind River
                           • Services
• Software                   – Fedex, Staples
  – ORCL, MSFT, SEBL,
    EA, Lotus, Kana,
    Omniture, Sybase       • VCs partner with
                             entrepreneurs to
                             build the
• Internet                   companies of
  – GOOG, YHOO, Ebay,        tomorrow
    AOL, Skype,
    Netscape, AMZN,
    Youtube…
Snapshot
• 2006 US Deal Stats    • Players
   – $25.8bn invested      – 600 Active Firms
   – 2,454 deals           – 8,000 professionals
   – $10.5m per deal
                        • Huge Growth in Asset
• By Sector               Class (LP
   – 57% IT               commitments)
   – 26% HC                –   1980   $2.1 bn
                           –   1990   $3.4 bn
                           –   1999   $106 bn
• By Geography
                           –   2005   ~$20 bn
   – Bay Area 33%
   – CA 47%
   – New England 11%    • Internationalization
                          Ongoing
                           – India, China, EU,
                             Israel
Private Equity Returns Over 20-Year Horizon
       (by investor type; as of 3/31/05)




        The 20 year early stage risk premium is 9.4%
                      versus S&P 500
Economics of VC Firm
• Management Fees (typically 2-2.5% of AUM)
   – Charge a management fee to cover the costs of
     managing the committed capital.


• Carried Interest (typically 20-25%)
   – "Carried interest" is the term used to denote the profit
     split of proceeds to the general partner.

• Example $100m fund
   – 4x return and 2 and 20%
   – $2m per year in management fee
   – (($100m x 4) - $100m) * 20% = $60m in carried
     interest
Flavors of VCs

• VC’s segment in a number of ways
  – Sector
    • Healthcare versus IT versus clean energy
  – Size
    • Small fund (<$100M) to large fund (>$1B+)
  – Geography
    • US, EU, India, Israel
  – Stage
    • Seed/early – two guys and an idea/demo
    • Mid-Stage – initial revenue traction
    • Late-Stage – near breakeven –
      expansion/mezzanine capital
Structure of Firm

• General Partners          • Decision Making
  – 6-8 active deals at a     – Typically unanimous
    time                      – Individual partners
• Principals/Associate          champion deals to
                                group
  – Drive deal flow, deal
    process, and              – Deal team
    portfolio company           diligences prospect
    development                 and builds
                                investment case
• Finance, Marketing,
                              – Partnership acts as
  and HR Staff                  a check and balance
                                to ensure careful
                                decision making
What do VC’s want
• This depends on stage – let’s focus on early stage
  since that is what we do.
  – Team
     • Domain expertise with core technical strength and knowledge
       of given market opportunity
     • History of collaboration and success
     • A willingness to allow VC’s to help build the team
  – Market
     • Emerging and fast growing market
     • Bad markets make for bad companies
  – Business model
     • How will you make money, how will you sell
  – Technology
     • Defensible technology/IP that can be protected to form
       competitive barriers over time
What Should Founders Expect:
   Reduce Prob. of Failure

• Codified best practices
  – FP&A/budgeting, KPI, templates,
    back office infra
• Acceleration
  – Shorten cycle time for hiring,
    partnering, selling, PR, capital
    raising
• Objectivity and Insight
  – Sanity check, check and balance
Suggested Playbook
• Be committed….
• Hire a great Valley lawyer
• Figure out what stage and sector you are
• Identify 4-5 firms that focus on this stage
• Identify which partner you think is most relevant
• Get an introduction to that partner
• Prepare a 1-2 page overview to send him/her
• Prepare a 10-15 slide presentation to give in a
  30-45 minute timeframe if they ask you to present
• Only goal of the first meeting is to get a second
  meeting.
Your Pitch: 10 Slides

•   What we do
•   Who we are
•   How we plan to make money
•   What we are asking for (how much money)
•   Demo
•   Secret Sauce/Technology
•   Market Analysis
•   Competitive Assessment
•   Go to Market
•   Business Model/Financials/Targeted
    Milestones    The audience most know in first minute what you do
                                     or they will tune out
Pat your head and rub your
    tummy…Hard to Do!
• Pat your head
  – Spec out 1.0 and focus on a
    customer need
  – Narrow the focus to broaden the
    appeal

• Rub your tummy
  – Paint a picture and product
    roadmap that is a company not a
    feature
What to Expect
• 12-16 week process           • Investors will seek:
   – First meeting to close       – 20-50% of the company
   – 1st mtg  diligence         – Valuation function of
     partner meeting  TS           targeted raise,
     negotiation  close            ownership, and stage,
• Prepare Investor Package        – Preferred Equity
   –   Presentation                 securities, with key
                                    terms:
   –   Financial Plan                 •   BoD seat
   –   Personal references            •   Liquidation Preference
   –   Customer references            •   Anti-dilution Protection
   –   Market references              •   Participation
   –   Cap Table                      •   Pro Rata rights
   –   Market research                •   Protective Provisions
                                      •   Vesting terms for
   –   Product documentation              founders and employees
   –   Competitive Analysis
What to Consider

• Is the idea sufficiently baked?
   – Optimal time is 6 months of iteration
• Pick your co-founders very carefully
• Test fit with VC
   – Personality, values, knowledge of market
• Optimize for best deal not best price
• Consider the downstream effects of the
  financing
   – High-post moneys can by Pyrrhic victories if
     company misfires
   – Angel financing can be a mixed blessing – be
     careful
Approaching VC’s

• Investing is a people business, and
  getting a meeting is all about “who
  you know”
• Best way to approach a VC is some
  form of introduction
  – If you don’t know a VC, find someone
    who knows you who does and get them
    to introduce you
  – Entrepreneur, professor, attorney…
  – Sending a plan to info@vcfirmname.com
    is a waste of time
Tips

• Don’t take rejection personally, the odds
  are against you.
• Every VC is “interested” – force them to do
  work to test their level of interest.
• Don’t waste time trying to change the mind
  of someone who says “no”.
• Don’t shop to multiple partners in a firm if
  the first rejects you.
• Don’t ignore the junior partners – they can
  really help.
• There are lots of VC firms, focus on a firm
  that has some connection to you.
Resources

• http://feeds.feedburner.com/venturecap
• www.feld.com
• www.askavc.com
• http://www.venturebeat.com
Hummer Winblad Venture
      Partners

• First Fund Exclusively for Software
  Investing
  – Founded September 1989
  – 8 investment professionals
  – Fund V: $420M (raised 2001)
• All Stages, focus on early stage
  including seed
  – Usually Part of First Round of Venture
    Funding
  – Usually Lead or Co-Lead
Hummer Winblad Highlights
 • 104 investments in 17 years
 • 51 liquidity events in 17 years
   – 17 IPOs, 34 acquisitions
   – 10 were 10X or more returns
 • 4 liquidity events in 2006
   – Acquisitions: Marketwire, Akimbi,
     Employease
   – IPO: Omniture (OMTR) $670M Market
     cap (1/3/07)
 • Currently - 30 active boards
Q&A
History
•   General Georges Doroit is considered to be the father of
    venture capital industry.

•   In 1946 he founded American Research and Development
    (ARD) Corporation, whose biggest success was Digital Equipment
    Corporation.
     – When Digital Equipment went public in 1968 it provided ARD
        with 101% IRR.
     – ARD's US$70,000 investment in Digital Corporation in 1959
        had a market value of US$37mn in 1968. 528x!!

•   The first Bay Area venture-backed startup is generally considered
    to be Fairchild Semiconductor, funded in 1959 by Venrock
    Associates (Rockefeller)

• The 1979 Employee Retirement Income Security Act
  (ERISA) allowed pension funds to invest in private equity
  for the first time
Overview
•   Institutional investor will allocate ~ 2% to 3% of their
    institutional portfolio to alternative assets
     – such as private equity or venture capital

•   50% of VC capital comes from institutional public and private
    pension funds

•   50% comes from endowments, foundations, insurance
    companies, banks, individuals

•   Venture firms come in various sizes
     – From small seed specialist firms of only a few million dollars under
       management…
     – To firms with over a billion dollars in invested capital around the world
     – Specialization is a function of market size!!

•   The common denominator in that the venture capitalist is
     – Wants to make $$$$$$$$$$$$ for their LPs
     – Has an active and vested interest in guiding and growing the
       companies they invest in
Commitments to U.S.
                     Venture Funds
           $120

                                                                                                                                           10 6 . 6


           $100



            $80
Billions




                                                                                                                                       58. 1
            $60



            $40                                                                                                                                       38

                                                                                                                                30.6



                                                                                                                       18 . 1
            $20                                                                                                                                                           17 . 5
                                                                                                               11. 6
                                                                                                                                                                 10 . 5            11. 8
                                                                                                      10 . 2
                                                                                                7.8
                                      3.9 3.2   4   3.8 4.5 4.7   5.1               5.3   4.1                                                              3.8
                  2 . 1 1. 5                                            3.4   2.1
                               1. 8
             $0
                  80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 1H05



                                                                                                                                       Source: Venture Economics/NVCA
Growth of Active Firms
                                 # of Active VC Firms

1000
 800
 600
 400
 200
   0


                                                      99




                                                                           02

                                                                                  03
    92

           93

                  94

                         95

                                96

                                       97

                                              98




                                                             00

                                                                    01




                                                                                         04

                                                                                                05
  19

         19




                              19

                                     19




                                                    19

                                                           20

                                                                  20

                                                                         20

                                                                                20

                                                                                       20
                19

                       19




                                            19




                                                                                              20
                                            # of Active VC Firms*


                                *Source: Venture Source
Investment Level Surpasses
                         2005
                  Deal Flow and Equity into Venture-Backed Companies
                       $100                                     6351
                                                                                                                     6,000
                                                             $94.8
                                                4590                                                                 5,000
                       $75
Amount Invested ($B)




                                                                                                                           Number of Deals
                                                                                                                     4,000
                                                                       3308
                                                     $49.5
                       $50               2547                                                                        3,000
                                                                              2425             2422 2454
                                     2211                            $36.4           2219 2328
                              1912
                                                                                                     $25.8           2,000
                       $25                                                   $22.2 $19.7 $22.4 $23.8
                                             $17.9
                                     $13.1                                                                           1,000
                              $9.2

                        $0                                                                                           0
                              1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002                     2003 2004 2005 2006
                                       Amount Invested ($B)                             Number of Deals




                                                                                     Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young
IT Deal Flow Allocation by Industry Sector
                                  Leads Deal Allocation

                       100%    4%                                                5%     3%
                              11%           13%                                        13%     Other
                                                                          10%
                       80%
% of Total VC Rounds




                                                                                               Business,
                       60%     58%                                                     57%     Consumer,
                                            61%                                                Retail

                                                                                               IT
                       40%


                       20%                                                                     Healthcare
                                     23%
                              27%                                                      26%

                        0%
                              4Q03         2Q04   4Q04   2Q05   4Q05      2Q06        4Q06
                                                                   Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young
Bay Area Draws Most
          InvestmentUnited States 4Q’06
      Regional Investment in the
                                 Dollars

                  All Other US
                       20%
         Research                                 Bay Area
         Triangle                                   33%
            1%

Washington State
      5%

       Potomac
          3%
              Texas
               5%
                                             Southern
          New York Metro                     California
               8%            New England
                                                14%
                                11%


                                           Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young

More Related Content

PPTX
FinancementStartupsEDHEC
PPTX
Inside The Mind Of The Venture Capitalist: An Introduction to Venture Capital
PPTX
Know Your Valuation for Equity Compensation (And Avoid the Perils of 409A)
PPTX
February 2017 entrepreneur talk at Ateneo de Manila University
PPT
Scott droney - financing start-up and growth
PPT
Landmines for Entrepreneurs with Olivier Wenker, MD, MBA, DEAA
PPT
Introduction to Venture Capital
PPTX
Venture Fast Track - Pitching the Plan
FinancementStartupsEDHEC
Inside The Mind Of The Venture Capitalist: An Introduction to Venture Capital
Know Your Valuation for Equity Compensation (And Avoid the Perils of 409A)
February 2017 entrepreneur talk at Ateneo de Manila University
Scott droney - financing start-up and growth
Landmines for Entrepreneurs with Olivier Wenker, MD, MBA, DEAA
Introduction to Venture Capital
Venture Fast Track - Pitching the Plan

What's hot (20)

PPTX
4 accelerators, incubators
PDF
Entrepreneurship and Financing Options for Innovation
PDF
Funding Options
PPTX
Venture Fast Track - Funding Strategies
PPTX
TCN on Air: Breaking Down Strategic Investments for Life Sciences and technol...
PPTX
Venture Fast Track - Company Valuation and Metrics - top down or bottom up?
PPTX
4.3 lean startup
PPTX
Understanding the Venture Capital Industry
PPTX
Assessment and commercialization of entrepreneurial opportunities
PPT
Keller Williams® Realty A Paradigm Shift
PPTX
Raising Capital For Your Startup
PPTX
Venture Financings 101 (SAFEs, Convertible Notes, Seed and Series A) | Bardia...
PDF
Beyond Aid and the Future of Development Finance
PPTX
Seminar on entreprenship
PDF
10.5 due diligence.pptx
PDF
Wsgr early stage financings for start ups
PDF
Fairshare Model presentation for F50's SVE Demo Night @ Google
PDF
The Little Book That Beats the Market: A Brief Review
PDF
Incorporation Stage Issues and Seed Financings Overview w/ Kristine Di Bacco
PDF
Get Funded
4 accelerators, incubators
Entrepreneurship and Financing Options for Innovation
Funding Options
Venture Fast Track - Funding Strategies
TCN on Air: Breaking Down Strategic Investments for Life Sciences and technol...
Venture Fast Track - Company Valuation and Metrics - top down or bottom up?
4.3 lean startup
Understanding the Venture Capital Industry
Assessment and commercialization of entrepreneurial opportunities
Keller Williams® Realty A Paradigm Shift
Raising Capital For Your Startup
Venture Financings 101 (SAFEs, Convertible Notes, Seed and Series A) | Bardia...
Beyond Aid and the Future of Development Finance
Seminar on entreprenship
10.5 due diligence.pptx
Wsgr early stage financings for start ups
Fairshare Model presentation for F50's SVE Demo Night @ Google
The Little Book That Beats the Market: A Brief Review
Incorporation Stage Issues and Seed Financings Overview w/ Kristine Di Bacco
Get Funded
Ad

Viewers also liked (13)

PDF
Science Vale UK energy event - fusion technology and industry
PPS
La ranocchia (3)
DOCX
To rs for number portability assignment finclean
PDF
Rb portfolio
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event - fusion technology and industry - oi
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event renewable energy technology - wind
PPS
La Ranocchia (3)
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event keynote presentation
PPT
Power point energies
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event - energy and buildings
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event renewable energy technology - solar
PDF
Science Vale UK energy event - energy and buildings - lime technology
PPTX
Airways hotel coverage improvement #1 15042015
Science Vale UK energy event - fusion technology and industry
La ranocchia (3)
To rs for number portability assignment finclean
Rb portfolio
Science Vale UK energy event - fusion technology and industry - oi
Science Vale UK energy event renewable energy technology - wind
La Ranocchia (3)
Science Vale UK energy event keynote presentation
Power point energies
Science Vale UK energy event - energy and buildings
Science Vale UK energy event renewable energy technology - solar
Science Vale UK energy event - energy and buildings - lime technology
Airways hotel coverage improvement #1 15042015
Ad

Similar to Introduction To Venture Capital 9229 (5) (20)

PPTX
The Price
PDF
Intro to Tech Companies & Business Creation
PDF
Building a Successful Money Management Business
PDF
The Golden Equation: Product + Market + Team = Deal
PDF
101 on understanding the funds + Intro to Venture-Slides.pdf
PPTX
How Your Startup Can Raise Venture Capital in the COVID-19 Era
PDF
Webinar 4: The Top 10 Things Investors Look For In A Project
PDF
"How to maximize your potential to attract US capital" by John Bautista
PPTX
company finances 101 for junior agency people
PPTX
Competition lecture
PPTX
From Bootstrapping to Venture Rounds: A Startup Case Study
PPT
Vc.funds
PDF
Workshop fundraising at antler (herman kienhuis)
PPTX
Fundraising Tips for Techs
PPTX
Start ups challenges for funding options
PPT
Ltw phase iv founders
PPTX
Maple leaf angels lunch and learn - valuation of early stage companies
PDF
Best Practices in Understanding and Increasing Your Company Valuation
PDF
Pitching the plan 12 12_12
PPTX
How Not to Fail Your Startup Fundraising by Ardent Capital VP Araya Hutasuwan
The Price
Intro to Tech Companies & Business Creation
Building a Successful Money Management Business
The Golden Equation: Product + Market + Team = Deal
101 on understanding the funds + Intro to Venture-Slides.pdf
How Your Startup Can Raise Venture Capital in the COVID-19 Era
Webinar 4: The Top 10 Things Investors Look For In A Project
"How to maximize your potential to attract US capital" by John Bautista
company finances 101 for junior agency people
Competition lecture
From Bootstrapping to Venture Rounds: A Startup Case Study
Vc.funds
Workshop fundraising at antler (herman kienhuis)
Fundraising Tips for Techs
Start ups challenges for funding options
Ltw phase iv founders
Maple leaf angels lunch and learn - valuation of early stage companies
Best Practices in Understanding and Increasing Your Company Valuation
Pitching the plan 12 12_12
How Not to Fail Your Startup Fundraising by Ardent Capital VP Araya Hutasuwan

Introduction To Venture Capital 9229 (5)

  • 1. Introduction to Venture Capital EE 203 Stanford University March 6th, 2007 Will Price Hummer Winblad Venture Partners
  • 2. Introduction • Will Price, Principal – Harvard College, AB – Northwestern University, MBA – Investment banking, product mgt, start- up CEO – wprice@humwin.com – http://willprice.blogspot.com • Hummer Winblad Venture Partners – $1bn AUM early-stage software firm
  • 3. What Is Venture Capital? • Venture capitalists: – Raise pools of capital from institutional and individual investors – Finance new and rapidly growing companies; – Purchase preferred equity securities and take board positions; – Add value to the company through active participation; – Take higher risks with the expectation of higher rewards; – Have a long-term orientation – Make $$$ by via M&A or IPO liquidity events
  • 5. Impact on Economy • Infrastructure • Healthcare – Intel, Cisco, 3Com, – Genentech, Amgen, Juniper, Apple, EMC, Alza, Affymetrix Sun, Wind River • Services • Software – Fedex, Staples – ORCL, MSFT, SEBL, EA, Lotus, Kana, Omniture, Sybase • VCs partner with entrepreneurs to build the • Internet companies of – GOOG, YHOO, Ebay, tomorrow AOL, Skype, Netscape, AMZN, Youtube…
  • 6. Snapshot • 2006 US Deal Stats • Players – $25.8bn invested – 600 Active Firms – 2,454 deals – 8,000 professionals – $10.5m per deal • Huge Growth in Asset • By Sector Class (LP – 57% IT commitments) – 26% HC – 1980 $2.1 bn – 1990 $3.4 bn – 1999 $106 bn • By Geography – 2005 ~$20 bn – Bay Area 33% – CA 47% – New England 11% • Internationalization Ongoing – India, China, EU, Israel
  • 7. Private Equity Returns Over 20-Year Horizon (by investor type; as of 3/31/05) The 20 year early stage risk premium is 9.4% versus S&P 500
  • 8. Economics of VC Firm • Management Fees (typically 2-2.5% of AUM) – Charge a management fee to cover the costs of managing the committed capital. • Carried Interest (typically 20-25%) – "Carried interest" is the term used to denote the profit split of proceeds to the general partner. • Example $100m fund – 4x return and 2 and 20% – $2m per year in management fee – (($100m x 4) - $100m) * 20% = $60m in carried interest
  • 9. Flavors of VCs • VC’s segment in a number of ways – Sector • Healthcare versus IT versus clean energy – Size • Small fund (<$100M) to large fund (>$1B+) – Geography • US, EU, India, Israel – Stage • Seed/early – two guys and an idea/demo • Mid-Stage – initial revenue traction • Late-Stage – near breakeven – expansion/mezzanine capital
  • 10. Structure of Firm • General Partners • Decision Making – 6-8 active deals at a – Typically unanimous time – Individual partners • Principals/Associate champion deals to group – Drive deal flow, deal process, and – Deal team portfolio company diligences prospect development and builds investment case • Finance, Marketing, – Partnership acts as and HR Staff a check and balance to ensure careful decision making
  • 11. What do VC’s want • This depends on stage – let’s focus on early stage since that is what we do. – Team • Domain expertise with core technical strength and knowledge of given market opportunity • History of collaboration and success • A willingness to allow VC’s to help build the team – Market • Emerging and fast growing market • Bad markets make for bad companies – Business model • How will you make money, how will you sell – Technology • Defensible technology/IP that can be protected to form competitive barriers over time
  • 12. What Should Founders Expect: Reduce Prob. of Failure • Codified best practices – FP&A/budgeting, KPI, templates, back office infra • Acceleration – Shorten cycle time for hiring, partnering, selling, PR, capital raising • Objectivity and Insight – Sanity check, check and balance
  • 13. Suggested Playbook • Be committed…. • Hire a great Valley lawyer • Figure out what stage and sector you are • Identify 4-5 firms that focus on this stage • Identify which partner you think is most relevant • Get an introduction to that partner • Prepare a 1-2 page overview to send him/her • Prepare a 10-15 slide presentation to give in a 30-45 minute timeframe if they ask you to present • Only goal of the first meeting is to get a second meeting.
  • 14. Your Pitch: 10 Slides • What we do • Who we are • How we plan to make money • What we are asking for (how much money) • Demo • Secret Sauce/Technology • Market Analysis • Competitive Assessment • Go to Market • Business Model/Financials/Targeted Milestones The audience most know in first minute what you do or they will tune out
  • 15. Pat your head and rub your tummy…Hard to Do! • Pat your head – Spec out 1.0 and focus on a customer need – Narrow the focus to broaden the appeal • Rub your tummy – Paint a picture and product roadmap that is a company not a feature
  • 16. What to Expect • 12-16 week process • Investors will seek: – First meeting to close – 20-50% of the company – 1st mtg  diligence  – Valuation function of partner meeting  TS targeted raise, negotiation  close ownership, and stage, • Prepare Investor Package – Preferred Equity – Presentation securities, with key terms: – Financial Plan • BoD seat – Personal references • Liquidation Preference – Customer references • Anti-dilution Protection – Market references • Participation – Cap Table • Pro Rata rights – Market research • Protective Provisions • Vesting terms for – Product documentation founders and employees – Competitive Analysis
  • 17. What to Consider • Is the idea sufficiently baked? – Optimal time is 6 months of iteration • Pick your co-founders very carefully • Test fit with VC – Personality, values, knowledge of market • Optimize for best deal not best price • Consider the downstream effects of the financing – High-post moneys can by Pyrrhic victories if company misfires – Angel financing can be a mixed blessing – be careful
  • 18. Approaching VC’s • Investing is a people business, and getting a meeting is all about “who you know” • Best way to approach a VC is some form of introduction – If you don’t know a VC, find someone who knows you who does and get them to introduce you – Entrepreneur, professor, attorney… – Sending a plan to info@vcfirmname.com is a waste of time
  • 19. Tips • Don’t take rejection personally, the odds are against you. • Every VC is “interested” – force them to do work to test their level of interest. • Don’t waste time trying to change the mind of someone who says “no”. • Don’t shop to multiple partners in a firm if the first rejects you. • Don’t ignore the junior partners – they can really help. • There are lots of VC firms, focus on a firm that has some connection to you.
  • 20. Resources • http://feeds.feedburner.com/venturecap • www.feld.com • www.askavc.com • http://www.venturebeat.com
  • 21. Hummer Winblad Venture Partners • First Fund Exclusively for Software Investing – Founded September 1989 – 8 investment professionals – Fund V: $420M (raised 2001) • All Stages, focus on early stage including seed – Usually Part of First Round of Venture Funding – Usually Lead or Co-Lead
  • 22. Hummer Winblad Highlights • 104 investments in 17 years • 51 liquidity events in 17 years – 17 IPOs, 34 acquisitions – 10 were 10X or more returns • 4 liquidity events in 2006 – Acquisitions: Marketwire, Akimbi, Employease – IPO: Omniture (OMTR) $670M Market cap (1/3/07) • Currently - 30 active boards
  • 23. Q&A
  • 24. History • General Georges Doroit is considered to be the father of venture capital industry. • In 1946 he founded American Research and Development (ARD) Corporation, whose biggest success was Digital Equipment Corporation. – When Digital Equipment went public in 1968 it provided ARD with 101% IRR. – ARD's US$70,000 investment in Digital Corporation in 1959 had a market value of US$37mn in 1968. 528x!! • The first Bay Area venture-backed startup is generally considered to be Fairchild Semiconductor, funded in 1959 by Venrock Associates (Rockefeller) • The 1979 Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) allowed pension funds to invest in private equity for the first time
  • 25. Overview • Institutional investor will allocate ~ 2% to 3% of their institutional portfolio to alternative assets – such as private equity or venture capital • 50% of VC capital comes from institutional public and private pension funds • 50% comes from endowments, foundations, insurance companies, banks, individuals • Venture firms come in various sizes – From small seed specialist firms of only a few million dollars under management… – To firms with over a billion dollars in invested capital around the world – Specialization is a function of market size!! • The common denominator in that the venture capitalist is – Wants to make $$$$$$$$$$$$ for their LPs – Has an active and vested interest in guiding and growing the companies they invest in
  • 26. Commitments to U.S. Venture Funds $120 10 6 . 6 $100 $80 Billions 58. 1 $60 $40 38 30.6 18 . 1 $20 17 . 5 11. 6 10 . 5 11. 8 10 . 2 7.8 3.9 3.2 4 3.8 4.5 4.7 5.1 5.3 4.1 3.8 2 . 1 1. 5 3.4 2.1 1. 8 $0 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 1H05 Source: Venture Economics/NVCA
  • 27. Growth of Active Firms # of Active VC Firms 1000 800 600 400 200 0 99 02 03 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 00 01 04 05 19 19 19 19 19 20 20 20 20 20 19 19 19 20 # of Active VC Firms* *Source: Venture Source
  • 28. Investment Level Surpasses 2005 Deal Flow and Equity into Venture-Backed Companies $100 6351 6,000 $94.8 4590 5,000 $75 Amount Invested ($B) Number of Deals 4,000 3308 $49.5 $50 2547 3,000 2425 2422 2454 2211 $36.4 2219 2328 1912 $25.8 2,000 $25 $22.2 $19.7 $22.4 $23.8 $17.9 $13.1 1,000 $9.2 $0 0 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 Amount Invested ($B) Number of Deals Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young
  • 29. IT Deal Flow Allocation by Industry Sector Leads Deal Allocation 100% 4% 5% 3% 11% 13% 13% Other 10% 80% % of Total VC Rounds Business, 60% 58% 57% Consumer, 61% Retail IT 40% 20% Healthcare 23% 27% 26% 0% 4Q03 2Q04 4Q04 2Q05 4Q05 2Q06 4Q06 Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young
  • 30. Bay Area Draws Most InvestmentUnited States 4Q’06 Regional Investment in the Dollars All Other US 20% Research Bay Area Triangle 33% 1% Washington State 5% Potomac 3% Texas 5% Southern New York Metro California 8% New England 14% 11% Source: Dow Jones VentureOne/Ernst &Young

Editor's Notes

  • #22: Very active investors: 25 ‘A’ round deals since 2002