November 18, 2024

Self-Finance or Raise Money? A Quandary for Start-Ups

But while Mr. Stanek and Mr. Moore went after roughly the same market at roughly the same time, they differed in one critical aspect: how they financed their dreams. One quickly raised more than $50 million, while the other mostly self-financed, thus creating a rare opportunity to assess the difference venture capital can make and bring new perspective to an age-old debate.

When Mr. Stanek, a Czech entrepreneur, founded GoodData in San Francisco in 2007, he already had plenty of experience with venture capital. He had sold a venture-backed software development tools company, NetBeans, to Sun Microsystems in 1999 for a little more than $10 million. And in 2006, he sold Systinet, a Web-service company, to Mercury Interactive for $105 million.

After financing the first year of GoodData’s software development with several hundred thousand dollars from his Systinet sale, Mr. Stanek began to seek investors. Eventually, he brought in $53.5 million from the likes of O’Reilly AlphaTech Ventures and Andreessen Horowitz. “We spent three years building a product and we are still building big pieces. That was funded by the V.C.’s and myself,” said Mr. Stanek, 47. “It’s like the printing business. I have to spend money on my printing machine. There’s an initial large investment, and then once you have the printing press running, it’s very predictable. So if we wanted to create a dominant large company, we didn’t have a choice.”

By contrast, before starting RJMetrics, the co-founders, Robert Moore and Jake Stein, worked as junior analysts at a New York venture capital firm, Insight Venture Partners, where they came across entrepreneurs who had built profitable businesses without a lot of capital and put off fund-raising as long as possible. “What happens in those situations is those entrepreneurs do extremely well personally,” said Mr. Moore, 29.

When they started RJMetrics in late 2008, Mr. Moore and Mr. Stein invested $10,000 of their own money. Mr. Moore wrote the first version of the company’s software in his attic in Collingswood, N.J. They did not hire their first employee until 2010, and they moved to an office in Philadelphia, where costs are far less than in New York or San Francisco.

By the time they did raise some money, in early 2012, they had 100 customers and annual revenue of about $1 million. “That put us in excellent negotiating position, because we had a proof point that other companies at our stage didn’t have,” Mr. Moore said. The owners raised $1.2 million, almost all from RJMetrics customers.

The two approaches have created very different companies. RJMetrics signed its first paying customer to a rudimentary prototype just three months after it started. To build revenue, it had to hope for good word of mouth (which it got) because it did not have a sales staff. But bootstrapping, or self-financing, did allow the founders to keep a large percentage of the company’s equity and to avoid the distortion that can come from having money and the demanding investors who supply it.

The venture capital industry views bootstrapping in the face of a big market opportunity as false economy. John O’Farrell, a partner at Andreessen Horowitz, said that it generally took an investment of $75 million to take a software company from start-up to initial public offering. “If you want to capture a big open market, you want to bring in money to grab land,” he said. “If you bootstrap, the tendency is to try to get profitable early so you don’t need to put in more money, but you end up missing a big opportunity.”

GoodData’s war chest allowed Mr. Stanek to staff up for the land grab. The company now has about 250 employees, half dedicated to the product and half charged with sales and marketing. RJMetrics, on the other hand, has 26 employees, more than half of them working in product development and only four on sales and marketing. The company’s first director of marketing started in February.

Inevitably, the companies have gravitated toward different markets. While RJMetrics has gone after small and midsize companies, GoodData has pursued Fortune 2000 clients that demand robust products and have the money to pay for them. RJMetrics had about $1 million in revenue in 2011 and about $2 million in 2012, according to Mr. Moore. Mr. Stanek declined to specify his company’s revenue, but he noted that last year GoodData signed 42 contracts that were each worth more than $100,000 a year, which would suggest an annual run rate of at least $4 million.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/20/business/smallbusiness/self-finance-or-raise-money-a-quandary-for-start-ups.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bits Blog: Jack Ma Is Very Interested in Buying Yahoo

Qilai Shen/Bloomberg NewsJack Ma, chief executive of the Alibaba Group, at the 2011 AliFest in Hangzhou, China, in September.

Jack Ma, chief executive of the Chinese e-commerce company the Alibaba Group, said on Friday that he was strongly considering buying Yahoo. It was the first public overture for the struggling Web portal.

“We are very interested,” Mr. Ma said when asked if his company wanted to make such an acquisition.

The comment from the stage at the China 2.0 conference at Stanford University confirmed what had already been reported: that Alibaba was among Yahoo’s suitors. Silver Lake Partners, Providence Partners, Andreessen Horowitz and Microsoft have also reached out to Yahoo’s board.

Yahoo’s board is reviewing its strategic options after firing Carol A. Bartz, the company’s chief executive, who failed to turn around the company during a rocky two-and-a-half-year tenure. Selling all or part of the company is among the options the board is considering.

Yahoo declined to comment about Mr. Ma’s interest in an acquisition.

Mr. Ma’s history with Yahoo goes back several years, when Yahoo acquired a 40 percent stake in Alibaba. The relationship between the two companies soured, however, over human rights issues and a recent dispute over the online payment service Alipay.

Mr. Ma transferred ownership of Alipay into a separate company that he controlled. Yahoo said it had been unaware of the transfer until it was already complete and implied that Alibaba had not been adequately compensated.

The two sides later settled the dispute.

But the bad blood remains, and Mr. Ma has said repeatedly that he wants to buy back Yahoo’s 40 percent stake in his company. By buying Yahoo, he would get that stake back.

Mr. Ma indicated on stage that he had also talked with partners to join him in a Yahoo acquisition bid, without offering more details.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=2bae7fee9f3b429737aed760d227ceff

Talk: Bubble? What Bubble?

Contrary to all the recent hype about a bubble, you’ve said that tech companies are actually undervalued. So in true 1999 fashion, should I take my life savings out of mutual funds and toss it into tech stocks?

I’m certainly not an investment adviser, but on a 30-year basis, these things are cheap. If you compare how big industrial companies like G.E. are valued compared with big tech companies like Microsoft, Cisco, Google and Apple, tech stocks have never been valued more poorly in comparison. So not only is there no bubble — these prices are reflective of the fact that the market still hates tech. This bubble talk is about everybody being unbelievably psychologically scarred from 10 years ago.

Your venture-capital firm, Andreessen Horowitz, is heavily invested in Twitter, Facebook and Foursquare. You’re hardly an unbiased observer.

True, but the counterargument is I put my money where my mouth is.

The nearly $3 billion I.P.O. of Netscape, a company you helped found, has been cited as the beginning of the 1990s tech bubble. Do you recall a moment back then that felt like the last days of the Roman Empire?

There was a point in the late ’90s where all the graduating M.B.A.’s wanted to start companies in Silicon Valley, and for the most part they were not actually qualified to do it. They brought the whole sideshow of the hype and parties and all that crap. M.B.A. graduating classes are actually a reliable contrary indicator: if they all want to go into investment banking, there’s going to be a financial crisis. If they want to go into tech, that means a bubble is forming.

How has the M.B.A. migration been lately?

It’s heating up again, but it’s still not anything near like it was in ’99. And even though people love to badmouth ’99 and 2000, you also have to remember that’s when Google got built.

After hearing a story about Foursquare’s co-founder, Dennis Crowley, walking into a press event in athletic wear and eating a banana, I developed a theory that bubbles might be predicted by fashion: when tech founders can’t be bothered to appear businesslike, the power has shifted too much in their favor.

Believe it or not, this goes deep into the interior mentality of the engineer, which is very truth-oriented. When you’re dealing with machines or anything that you build, it either works or it doesn’t, no matter how good of a salesman you are. So engineers not only don’t care about the surface appearance, but they view attempts to kind of be fake on the surface as fundamentally dishonest.

That reminds me of Mark Zuckerberg’s criticism of ‘‘The Social Network.’’ He said that ‘‘filmmakers can’t get their head around the idea that someone might build something because they like building things.’’

Aaron Sorkin was completely unable to understand the actual psychology of Mark or of Facebook. He can’t conceive of a world where social status or getting laid or, for that matter, doing drugs, is not the most important thing.

People view you as an oracle in the valley. I was hoping you’d blow my mind with something you see in the future. Gordon Bell at Microsoft is working on wearable computing, where it literally records everything around you all the time — video, your conversations. He wants to get to where it’s like a pendant around your neck. We also have a company called Jawbone that makes peripherals for smart phones and tablets. Today, they sell Bluetooth headsets and speakers, but soon they will sell all kinds of wearable computing devices.

Will we soon be dealing with antigaming laws so that drivers can’t play wearable video games while driving down the highway?

That assumes they’re driving. Google is working on self-driving cars, and they seem to work. People are so bad at driving cars that computers don’t have to be that good to be much better. Any time you stand in line at the D.M.V. and look around, you’re like, Oh, my God, I wish all these people were replaced by computer drivers. Ten to 20 years out, driving your car will be viewed as equivalently immoral as smoking cigarettes around other people is today.

INTERVIEW HAS BEEN CONDENSED AND EDITED.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=206a01bce7ff71634b80a807f074840e