Tim Draper Tai Lopez Lopez has always used more of his own money and limited outside investors. Never underestimate trying to raise funds from your existing customers. The modern world of Kickstarter, Indiegogo, and the internet enable you to pre-sell things before they’re produced. This has a two-fold benefit. One, it’s the same as raising capital, but you don’t have to give away equity or decision-making control. And two, it validates whether the idea is good or not—and ensures you’re not raising a bunch of money for a business that’s doomed to fail. There was a guy at Lopez’s house who raised a million dollars to build an app. The second he explained the concept to Lopez, Lopez said, “This is the dumbest app idea. No one’s ever going to buy it.” And sure enough, he lost a million dollars. Had he tried to pre-sell the app idea, one or two things would have happened. One, it would have sold, and he’d have pre-order sales to fund the business. Or two, he would have gotten the signal that it’s a horrible idea that no one will pay for. — Tai Lopez, investor and advisor to many multimillion-dollar businesses, who has built an eight-figure online empire. John Hanna First off, before you can pitch your business, someone must be interested in listening. So, create a “30-second elevator sell” to capture someone’s attention. Remember: you’re just another business asking for money; there are thousands of you out there. Once someone is willing to listen, the most important factor is a rock-solid business plan containing the most detailed SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats) analysis of your business and industry. Ensure that your plan is believable and realistic with enough evidence to substantiate your cash-flow projections: if it’s exaggerated—showing a higher than normal profit—you’ll instantly lose credibility. More than anything else, your investors aren’t just investing in your business (or product), they’re investing in you. You’re there to sell “why” they should risk their money in your business, which is no easy task. Therefore, your certainty will be a key determinant of whether they proceed. Your passion should be so real that your venture capitalists can see and feel the future success. Remember: sales is nothing more than the transference of feelings. Those who have more certainty usually get what they want. If your “Why” is big enough, the “Hows” take care of themselves. — John Hanna, author of “Way of the Wealthy” and CEO of Fairchild Group. Roy McDonald When raising capital, my experience is that banks are the last resort. I prefer joint ventures, equity participation, and loans with profit share. The most important aspect is to always look from the investor’s point of view and what’s in it for them. Align your business with their purpose to ignite their passion. When presenting to investors, be confident, concise, and clear about your outcome. You must have a step-by-step plan of what you are offering and how it will work and be monetized. Show investors how they’ll make money and have their capital returned. Investors will ask many questions. You must have clear, well-reasoned answers to their concerns. Offer an escape hatch—a way out—if everything fails. The most important part is to demonstrate you have a team to produce the intended outcome. This includes the three most important aspects of your operation: marketing, finance, and administration, with monthly/quarterly reports to the investors. Lastly, always underestimate the profit and overestimate the time it will take. That way, you’ll exceed expectations. — Roy McDonald, founder and CEO of OneLife. Ken Lebovic As the largest volume buyer of distressed homes in Illinois, I’ve seen many real-estate investors come and go. Often, they fund a deal using outside capital, only to realize the terms don’t give enough share of the pie to make it worthwhile. So, don’t be a deal junkie. Only do deals that have enough upside to make your time spent and your investor’s return worthwhile. Time is money. Make sure you get paid accordingly. Once you’ve done several good deals and have shown your investors that you do what you say, consider talking about structuring the next investment opportunity differently. This is easiest when multiple investors have had a positive experience with you. A good experience always makes it easier for them to say, “Yes!” Over time, your investors will get more comfortable with you; they won’t hesitate for smaller returns, knowing their risk is minimal. — Ken Lebovic, president of North Shore Holdings; built a real estate empire acquiring thousands of properties over 20 years with no equity partners. Com Mirza Mirza used to send monthly progress reports about his startup to investors he wanted to work with. Investors love momentum, especially when things are scaling quickly. After sending reports for months to multiple investors, he landed a few million dollars from one investor—simply because he sent regular progress updates. But the latest move that worked was to set up an ICO (Initial Coin Offering) for Habibi Coin: digital currency solution backed by real estate. They’ve raised $2 million in four weeks by building a community around our idea. The cryptocurrency market is full of potential: worth $150 billion USD and poised to grow to $500 billion within one to two years. With such growth, there are tremendous opportunities to create an ICO to launch your startup. More venture capitalists are seeing startups bypass them and go straight to the mass market to raise high seed rounds through cryptocurrency. You give less equity to investors and use your community to validate the startup model—while raising enough funds to run operations for six to 18 months. Mirza can see this approach only scaling. In the next one to three years, you’ll see thousands of ICOs. And a good portion of them will be startup entrepreneurs pioneering the way forward. — Com Mirza, “The $500 Million Man” and CEO of Mirza Holdings; failed in eight companies back to back and today, runs a nine-figure empire with over 600 employees. |