artilecastles.com artilecastles.com
   Main :> About Us :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article
Search:   
Add Your Link
 

Creative Arts

Shopping & Auction

Games & Play

Family & Home

Self Help

Business & Companies

Hotels & Travel

Eating & Drinking

Teens & Kids

Finance & Investment

Sports

News & Media

Medicine & Treatment

Jobs & Careers

Academics & Learning

Entertainment

Fitness & Health

Automotive

Property & Estate

Society & Issues

Fashion & Lifestyle

Computers & Software

Law & Politics

Science & Space


 

Main –› Jobs & Careers –› Entrepreneur & Business Enterprises
 

Early Stages of Entrepreneurial Financing

 

Your business plan should show how much money you will need, if it should be debt or equity, and at what stage or time period it's needed to accomplish what tasks.

For seed and concept companies, the entrepreneur almost always starts with "family and friends" money, and then proceeds on to obtaining informal investor financing prior to attracting the interest of the more formal investors such as venture capital firms.

It will be helpful to understand the accepted "stages of growth" used by financing sources. The early stages are generally referred to as: Seed or Concept, Startup, First, and Second. They are briefly described with Status, Tasks, and Financing as follows:

Seed or Concept

Status. There is an idea, a concept, no management team, no prototype, and patentability has not been determined. No business plan, timetable, or market research has been assembled. Founder(s) may be technicians.

Tasks. To begin development of a prototype, assemble some key management, develop a business plan, assess market potential, structure the company, and assess patentability or proprietary standing.

Financing. Traditional venture capital firms have little interest in funding a company at this stage. The risk level is just too high, and the time for achieving a payout or harvest is not determinable. Personal savings or friends and family money funds this stage. It ends with the completion of a seed stage business plan and the formation of the company.

Start-up

Status. At least one principal person of the company is pursuing the project on a full-time basis. The prototype is being developed, the business plan is being refined, a management team is being identified, market analysis is being undertaken, and tests are being set up or initial customers are identified. More formal funding is being accomplished.

Tasks. Complete and test the prototype and obtain evidence of commercial interest. Assemble and identify an initial management team, finish the business and marketing plans, establish manufacturing and initiate sales.

Financing. Traditional venture capital firms may show an interest at this stage, assuming that a top-rated management team is assembled, patentability or proprietorship is proven, and marketability is demonstrated. Companies at this stage commonly seek funding from private placements, early-stage venture capital firms, and various grants from both foundations and government sources.

First Stage

Status. The company is now a going concern. The product has proven manufacturing and is selling. If it's a service company, some customers have tried the service. The management team is in place, the company has experienced some setbacks, customers can confirm product usage, marketing is being refined, adjustments are being made in the business plan and the money raising efforts continue.

Tasks. To achieve market penetration and initial sales goals, reach close to break even, increase productivity, reduce unit costs, build the sales organization and distribution system.

Financing. At this stage, traditional venture capital firms are interested in investment--in fact, it's their most preferable stage. Financing is needed to get the production bugs worked out and to support initial marketing efforts. At this stage, companies may receive financing from bank loans, leasing companies, and research and development partnerships (for incremental product development). Strategic partnerships are often entered into at this stage with potential customers, suppliers, and manufacturers.

Second Stage

Status. Significant sales are developing as are assets and liabilities. The company is sporadically achieving break even, and cash flow management becomes critical. Second-level management is being identified and hired. Export marketing is being explored and more sophisticated management systems are being put into place.

Tasks. To obtain consistent profitability, add significant sales and back orders, expand sales from regional to national, identify international marketing plans, and obtain working capital to expand marketing, accounts receivable, and inventory.

Author: John Vinturella
 
Author Bio:

John Vinturella

John B. Vinturella, Ph.D. has almost 40 years experience as a management and strategic consultant, entrepreneur, author, and college professor. For 20 of those years, Dr. Vinturella was owner/president of a distribution company that he founded. He is a principal in business opportunity sites jbv.com, muddledconcept.com, and semi-retirement.com, and maintains business and political blogs.

This article can be searched using: entrepreneur home business, entrepreneur franchise opportunity, entrepreneur ideas
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
College Students Posing as Customers to Do School Projects
 
Fear Of Change: Nervous About Changing Jobs?
 
Concierge Services Gaining Popularity at Residences
 
How I Became a Reluctant Entrepreneur
 
How to Decide if a Food Service Franchise is Right for You
 
Making Money - Is $100,000 Enough? - 5 Tips On Money Making - $250,000+
 
Zero To Hero - How A Homemaker Became A Successful Entrepreneur
 
The Easy Way to Wash Cars at a Carwash is to Hire Illegal Aliens
 
Best Job Resume Spelling & Punctuation Tips
 
It's A "ME TOO" World After All
 
 
 
Main :> Privacy of Info :> Terms & Conditions  
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.articlecastles.com - All Rights Reserved.