Post on 02-Jun-2018
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INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW
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2012 South-Western Cengage Learning
ENTREPRENEURIAL FINANCE Leach & Melicher
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Characterize the entrepreneurialprocess
Describe entrepreneurship andsome characteristics of
entrepreneurs Indicate three megatrends
providing waves ofentrepreneurial opportunities
List and describe the seven
principles of entrepreneurialfinance
Discuss entrepreneurial financeand the role of the financialmanager
Describe the various stages of a
successful ventures life cycle Identify, by life cycle, the
relevant types of financing andinvestors
Understand the life cycle
approach used in the textbook
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Process:
Developing opportunities
Gathering resources Managing and building operations
Goal:
Creating value
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Entrepreneurship:process of changing ideas into commercial opportunities and creatingvalue
Entrepreneur:individual who thinks, reasons, and acts to convert ideas into commercialopportunities and to create value
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Definition:
An individual who, rather than working as an
employee, runs a small business and assumes allthe risk and reward of a given business venture,idea, or good or service offered for sale. The
entrepreneur is commonly seen as a
business leader and innovator of new ideas andbusiness processes.
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Explanation: Entrepreneurs play a key role in any
economy. These are the people who have theskills and initiative necessary to take good newideas to market and make the right decisions tomake the idea profitable. The reward for the riskstaken is the potential economic profits the
entrepreneur could earn.
Source: http://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asp#ixzz25C6XAZpz
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http://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asphttp://www.investopedia.com/terms/e/entrepreneur.asp8/10/2019 Lec 01 quality
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During the past century, entrepreneurialfirms innovations included personal
computers, heart pacemakers, opticalscanners, soft contact lenses, and double-knitfabric.
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A successful entrepreneur Sees and seizes a commercial opportunity Tends to be doggedly optimistic (perhaps
even to a fault) Plans to obtain the physical, financial, and
human resources needed for the venture to
succeed
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Success is unlikely if you are seldom able to see an opportunity, until
it ceases to be one (Mark Twain) view the glass as being half empty instead
of half-full (unknown) are paralyzed by a fear of failure
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Opportunities: New U.S. business formations in the
millions annually Firms with less than 500 employees
represent over 99 percent of all employers
account for about one-half of the annual gross private domesticproduct
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Risks: Annual employer firm births (~659,093 in 2005-07)
terminations (~578,793 in 2005-07)
Note, however, that bankruptcies are only a fraction(~29,073) of terminations - terminations not allbad
For new firms, a representative study (Headd) found(a) one-third of new employer firms endure < 2 years
(b) one-half endure < 4 years(c) 60 percent endure < 6 years
(d) but, about one-third were successful at closing
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Nearly half of business failures are due toeconomic factors such as inadequate sales,
insufficient profits, or industry weakness. Almost 40 percent cite financial causes, such
as excessive debt and insufficient financialcapital.
Other reasons include insufficient managerialexperience, business conflicts, familyproblems, fraud, and disasters.
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Research (J. Case) suggests
12% of Inc. 500 success is due to extraordinary idea
88% due to exceptional execution of ordinary idea Trends suggesting possible entrepreneurial
innovations
Societal changes
Demographic changes
Technological changes
Crises and bubbles
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Naisbittsreflections still relevant!(Megatrends,1982)
1. Industrial Society to Information Society- Suggested focus on human response to
information
2. Global economy- Awareness of international innovation and sourcing
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Dents Generations The Baby Boom1. Spending wave (1990s)
- Behind the stock and bond market booms2. Power wave (to peak in the 2020s)
- Aging baby boomers with great business influence- Aging baby boomers provide business opportunities creating them, financing them, using them
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Information Age Internet
Wireless Cross-functionality Truly global in reach and competition
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2007-09 Financial crisis changed the game Cloudy time almost always have silver linings
Cost containment innovations Alternative energy
Government stimulus
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Real, Human, and Financial CapitalMust be Rented from Owners
Money has owners and therefore costs
Time value
Risk
Expect to provide a return or the venture will not survive ina market economy
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Risk and Expected Reward Go Hand in Hand
Time value is not the only cost when using others funds
More risk => More expected reward
How much more? Market-determined!
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While Accounting is the Language ofBusiness,Cash is the Currency
Two important reasons to employ accounting
Tracking and accountability for actions taken
Quantifying different visions of the future
But, remember cash flow is a new ventures lifeblood
Get enough accounting to see through the accruals to thecash account
Cash burn: gap between cash being spent and that being
collected
Cash build: excess of cash receipts over cash distributions
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New Venture Financing InvolvesSearch, Negotiation, and Privacy
Public Financial Markets (Market Efficiency):standard contracts traded on organized
exchanges
Private Financial Markets: customized contracts
bought and infrequently sold in inefficient private
negotiations
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A Ventures Financial Objective is toIncrease Value
Many objectives including personal ones But, the unifyingfinancialobjective is to increase
value rather than price, margin or sales
rather than profit, return or net worth (Market) Value derives from the ability to
generate cash to pay capital providers for theircapital
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It is Dangerous to Assume that People ActAgainst Their Own Self-Interest
Aligning incentives (investors, founders, employees, spouses,etc.) is critical
As situations change, incentives diverge and renegotiation is
important
Owner-manager conflicts: differences between a managersself-interest and that of the owners who hired him/her
Owner-debtholder agency conflict: divergence of the owners
and lenders self-interests as the firm gets close to bankruptcy
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Venture Character and Reputation Can beAssets or Liabilities
Ventures have character that can be different from the
individuals who founded or manage it
Many entrepreneurs state that high ethical standards are one of
a ventures most important assets and are critical to long-term
success and value Ventures can - and do - make meaningful societal contributions
Many successful entrepreneurs are financially and personally
involved in charitable endeavors
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Entrepreneurial Finance application and adaptation of financial tools and
techniques to the planning, funding, operation, and
valuation of an entrepreneurial venture
focuses on the financial management of a venture as it
moves through its life cycle, beginning with its
development stage & continuing through to when the
entrepreneur exists or harvests the venture
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Venture Life Cycle:stages of a successful ventures life from development
through various stages of revenue growth)
Development Stage:
period involving the progression from an idea to a promising
business opportunity
Startup Stage:period when the venture is organized, developed, and aninitial revenue model is put in place
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Survival Stage:period when revenues start to grow and help pay some, but
typically not all, of the expenses
Rapid-Growth Stage:period of very rapid revenue and cash flow growth
Maturity Stage:period when the growth of revenue and cash flow continues
but at a much slower rate than in the rapid-growth stage
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Development StageDeveloping opportunities and seed financing
Startup Stage
Gathering resources and startup financing
Survival StageGathering resources, managing and building operations and first-round financing
Rapid-Growth StageManaging and building operations and second-round mezzanine, & liquidity stagefinancing
Early Maturity StageManaging and building operations and obtaining bank loans, issuing bonds, &
issuing stock
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Seed Financing:funds needed to determine whether the idea can be converted into aviable business opportunity
Startup Financing:funds needed to take the venture from having established a viablebusiness opportunity to initial production and sales
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Venture Capital:early-stage financial capital often involving substantial risk of total loss
Venture Capitalists:individuals who join in formal, organized firms to raise and distribute
venture capital to new and fast-growing ventures
Business Angels:wealthy individuals operating as informal or private investors who provideventure financing for small businesses
Investment Banker:individual working for an investment bank who advises and assistscorporations in their security financing decisions and regarding mergersand acquisitions
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First Round Financing:equity funds provided during the survival stage to cover the cash
shortfall when expenses and investments exceed revenues
Second Round Financing:financing for ventures in their rapid-growth stage to supportinvestments in working capital
Mezzanine Financing:funds for plant expansion, marketing expenditures, working capital, and
product or service improvements
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Bridge Financing:temporary financing needed to keep the venture afloat until thenext offering
Initial Public Offering (IPO):a corporations first sale of common stock to the investing public
Seasoned Securities Offering:the offering of securities by a firm that has previously offered thesame or substantially similar securities
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Thanks