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Ecosystem Roundup: SEA produces 2 new unicorns, Migo raises US$40M, Pluang bags US$35M

Xendit

Xendit becomes a unicorn after a Tiger Global-led US$150M Series C round
Accel Partners, Amasia and Goat Capital also participated; Xendit enables businesses of all sizes to accept payments, disburse payroll, run marketplaces on an easy integration platform; The fintech firm plans to expand into select countries across Southeast Asia.

Carousell enters unicorn club after a new US$100M round led by Korea’s STIC Investments
It is currently valued at US$1.1B; CEO Quek Siu Rui said Carousell will deepen its investments in re-commerce across new categories and markets and will continue to seek opportunistic acquisitions in scaling up.

Capria Ventures partners with and invests in AC Ventures
The partnership is in line with Capria’s plans to invest in Southeast Asia, India, Latin America and Africa; Capria will also look to co-invest directly in AC Ventures’s portfolio companies; AC Ventures is in the process of hitting final close of a US$120M target fund.

Jungle Ventures makes US$225M first close of Fund IV
Investors include Temasek, IFC, DEG, and some Asian and global family offices; Jungle targets to raise US$350M for this fund; Jungle plans to invest in 12-13 startups from seed to Series B; The ticket size will range from US$1million to US$15 million.

Indonesian conglomerate MNC Group pours US$40M into entertainment app Migo
The app lets users access movies and TV shows by connecting their smartphones to Migo Hotspots or brick-and-mortar locations and allows them to download video content without using any mobile data.

A woman among women: 27 female-led startups in SEA that are going places
The year 2019 marked the deadly coronavirus’s arrival, but also welcomed a slew of female leaders who have sparked innovation on all fronts.

A horse of another: Here’s the full list of Southeast Asia’s 23 unicorns
Since having only three unicorns in Southeast Asia in 2014, the ecosystem is now brimming with more billion dollar startups in the region.

Alibaba-backed eWTP fund enters Indonesia by joining insurtech startup Fuse’s Series B round;
CE Innovation Capital and Saratoga also participated; Fuse recently raised US$30M in Series B led by GGV Capital; With over 60K agent partners on its platform, Fuse claims its total gross written premium exceeded US$50M in 2020.

Pluang raises US$35M, bringing total funding this year to US$55M
Investors are Square Peg (lead), SIG, UOB Venture Management, Go-Ventures and Openspace Ventures; Pluang offers a broad suite of asset classes for retail investors, enabling them to invest in gold, equity indices, mutual funds and cryptocurrencies.

Adatos nets Series A for its AI-driven remote sensing solution for agri, carbon markets
Investor is Malaysia’s Genting Plantations; Adatos’s tools analyse complicated open-source satellite data sets to give operational and strategic insights for agriculture and carbon markets.

Thai retail giant Central joins lifestyle e-commerce startup Mercular’s US$4M Series A round
The initial backers of this round are Kairous Capital, CyberAgent Capital, 500 TukTuks, N-Vest Venture, and Premier Advisory Group; It currently sells more than 20K hobby and lifestyle products, including headphones, speakers, smart home devices, computers and accessories.

GlobalCare bags funding from VinaCapital to provide insurtech solutions to Vietnamese insurance firms, agents
It allows insurance companies and agents to sell policies via a cloud-based and on-premises app; The solution enables end-to-end service management, including monitoring transaction history and processing claims; It has a network of 3K+ O2O stores providing consumers with various insurance products.

CoderSchool bags US$2.6M pre-Series A led by Monk’s Hill to provide online coding course to Vietnamese
Its centralised platform employs data analytics to manage classrooms at scale and improve individual student performance; CoderSchool guarantees job placement for students through its assistance in counselling, mock interviews, mentor introductions and workshops with technical experts.

Vida attracts funding to provide digital signatures, identity authentication services to Indonesian MSMEs
Investors are Jungle Ventures, Alpha JWC Ventures, and Monk’s Hill Ventures; Vida helps companies verify identities digitally using biometrics, machine learning and computer vision, and Big Data to run checks on identity cards and facial biometrics against government databases.

Digital Media Nusantara raises pre-Series A funding round from Malaysian finance ministry subsidiary
The company aims to accelerate its mission to become Southeast Asia’s first fintech media firm, operating at the first mile of the financial markets infrastructure and market intelligence value chain.

BNPL giant Affirm former execs join Fundiin’s oversubscribed US$1.8M seed round
Investors include Genesia Ventures, JAFCO Asia, Trihill Capital, 1982 Ventures, Zone Startups Ventures; Fundiin claims to have collaborated with over 100 merchants in Vietnam and boasts of increasing retailers’ sales by 30%.

Bluesheets raises US$1.5M to further expand its business, enters new client segments
Investors are Investible (lead), Antler, 1982 Ventures, Kiplex Ventures and Kistefos; Bluesheets uses AI, classification algorithms, and ML to automate enterprise accounting and enable financial automation for local and global businesses.

East Ventures injects US$1.5M into vehicle management and tracking startup McEasy
McEasy’s solutions assist allows real-time tracking of vehicle locations and enables companies to plan, implement, monitor, and optimise logistics processes; Its customer portfolio covers various industries and business sizes, such as MGM Bosco, Rosalia Indah Group, RPX and FedEx Indonesia.

Touchstone Partners injects US$1M seed funding into telemedicine platform Medigo
Vietnam-based Medigo helps people buy medicine remotely from the comfort of their homes, especially during lockdowns; Medigo is developing more service offerings such as advertising and ordering medicine in bulk for the pharmacies in the network.

Mobility safety startup Rider Dome raises US$1M
Rider Dome has developed a collision alert system that aims to make riding motorcycles safer; The system utilises algorithms combining computer vision and deep learning to analyse real-time video feeds from the front and rear cameras mounted on a motorcycle, providing riders with real-time alerts on critical threats on the road to prevent accidents.

Exceptional founders to nurture, invest in promising startups as part of Monk’s Hill Ventures’s new programme
The Venture Scouts programme comprises over 20 venture scouts including Bukalapak’s Achmad Zaky, Snapcart’s Araya Noon Hutasuwan, Zopim’s Royston Tay, and Turochas Fuad; They will invest in high-growth pre-seed and seed startups across Indonesia, Vietnam, Singapore, Thailand, the Philippines, and Malaysia.

Dezy automatically converts users’ deposits into SGD-backed stable coins, attracts funding
Investors are DeFiance Capital, HH VC Investments, Impiro, and Tranglo founder HY Sia; Dezy commits to secure users’ access to decentralised finance with inclusivity, transparency, and no lock-in of deposit.

 

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Growthwell Foods raises US$22M Series A to manufacture plant-based meat, seafood for F&B businesses

Singapore-based alternatives for meat and seafood company Growthwell Foods has secured US$22 million in Series A funding led by PE firm Creadev.

GGV Capital, Iris Fund and existing investors Temasek and DSG Consumer Partners co-invested in the round.

The startup said in a press note that the new fund is nearly 3x of the money it raised in 2019. Growthwell Foods plans to use the capital to accelerate its business expansion and product development efforts within Southeast Asia.

Also Read: Alt.Flex.Eat: Flexitarianism is the flavour of the SEAson

The company claims that the capital will be used to further Growthwell’s vision to “become Asia’s leading plant nutrition foodtech company”. It aims to care for 100 million lives with sustainable and nutritious plant-based choices while reducing the world’s reliance on meat and seafood and with that reducing the impact on the environment”.

Established in 1989, Growthwell Foods manufactures plant-based meat and seafood solutions for F&B businesses and organisations globally. With its origins in meat substitutes, the company currently focuses on seafood alternatives. It plans to launch new seafood and chicken alternatives collection aimed at the growing number of flexitarians.

Growthwell is also ramping up its production and distribution capacity by setting up a technology centre. The centre will house innovative technologies to cater to the growing demand for plant-based meat and seafood alternatives in the region.

Jenny Lee, managing partner at GGV Capital, added: “Sustainability, especially around the food supply chain and ingredient sources, is a key thesis for the GGV team globally. We look forward to partnering with Growthwell to capture the big mass-market opportunity in alternative protein and to develop new, affordable, and delicious plant-based analogues that people from all walks of life will enjoy eating.”

Also Read: ‘Global demand for plant-based meat products will be driven mostly by flexitarians: Next Gen’s Andre Menezes

Singapore is a market crowded with several startups such as Shiok Meats and Next Gen operating. In July, Next Gen Foods, a plant-based foodtech company, raised US$20 million from a clutch of investors such as Temasek and K3 Ventures. Shiok Meats is another startup in this space that secured US$12.6 million in a Series A funding round in September 2020, led by Aqua-Spark.

The global plant-based protein segment is expected to reach US$85 billion by 2030, according to UBS. Global investment in food technology for the first three quarters of 2020 was US$8.37 billion, beating the US$7 billion raised in 2019.

Image Credit: Growthwell Foods

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SOCAR raises US$55M in Series B funding round from new investors EastBridge Partners, Sime Darby

SOCAR CEO Leon Foong

Malaysia-based car-sharing platform SOCAR today announced that it has raised up to US$55 million Series B funding round from South-Korea-based EastBridge Partners as well as Malaysian multinational Sime Darby Berhad.

Putting the company’s valuation at US$213 million, this is the first investment that EastBridge Partners and Sime Darby has ever made in SOCAR.

This funding round also takes SOCAR’s financial tally to US$73 million.

According to a press statement, the investment will be structured into two tranches, with 60 per cent upfront and the additional 40 per cent disbursed based on agreed conditions.

SOCAR plans to use the funding to support continuous tech enhancements, the introduction of clean mobility initiatives, and further development of its P2P car-sharing marketplace TREVO.

“We will utilise these funds to supercharge our vision of multiflex mobility and bring the convenience of car-sharing to more people across Southeast Asia. As countries move into new phases of post-COVID-19 recovery, we are committed to using our TREVO platform to create more economic opportunities for car owners while leveraging the supply of vehicles on our platform to remind consumers what it’s like to be free to travel again in the comfort of their own private space, in a vehicle of their choice,” said SOCAR CEO Leon Foong.

Also Read: Leveraging OKRs in the face of Malaysia’s ‘Great Resignation’

Launched in Malaysia in January 2018 as a joint venture between SK Inc and Socar Inc, the company is behind the car-sharing app SOCAR and P2P car-sharing marketplace TREVO.

It closed a US$18 million Series A funding round in February 2020. The investors involved in this funding round are Eugene Private Equity Co. Ltd. and KH Energy Co. Ltd.

The company said that it has 2,200 cars onboard its SOCAR platform in 36 different models in over 1,000 locations in Selangor, Kuala Lumpur, Penang, Johor, Ipoh and Melaka. It currently has close to 6,400 car listings in major cities in Malaysia and Indonesia onboard its TREVO platform.

Prior to this funding round, SOCAR has teamed up with Sime Darby Auto Selection (SDAS), a multi-brand used car dealer under Sime Darby Motors, for the ‘Fund Your Drive’ programme.

Image Credit: SOCAR

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SEA tech founders playbook: A to Z of becoming a fundraising legend (Part 2)

 

fundraising

If you are reading this, I believe you would have already read through Part 1 and now know the importance of hiring a good lawyer, the basics of a financial model and key documents which can go in the data room in addition to some other fundraising tricks.

After the quick pit-stop, let’s resume my unsolicited (but, hopefully, welcome) monologue, starting with marketing materials.

Marketing materials for fundraising

There are several types of marketing materials used in a fundraising process. Here are the major archetypes:

  • Teaser: five to 10 pages are used to entice investors to a pitch and further interact with the company.
  • Pitch deck: 10–25 pages, is used for the company’s first formal pitch to investors and is often key to whether the initial interest will sustain and progress into tangible intent to proceed.
  • Information memorandum (IM), 40–60 pages, together with the financial model and basic due diligence materials, are required to provide sufficient information for the investor to evaluate the opportunity and provide a Term Sheet.

I suggest build out the pitch deck first as it is more intuitive and summarise it for a Teaser and only, if required, provide more detail to make it an IM — IMs are more suited for larger fundraises and are increasingly being replaced by pitch decks (with a few additional slides).

Minimalistic materials do significantly better than text-heavy and cluttered materials. You aim to create a positive visceral gut reaction as the gut is where the decision is really made. The mind, the laggard it is, will unconsciously look for data/confirmation of what the gut has already decided.

Here are some quick tips:

  • Use pictures, graphics, and charts to illustrate the opportunity as much as possible.
  • Short, sharp, and conversational. As Winston Churchill once said, “let us not shrink from using the short expressive phrase, even if it’s conversational”.
  • Try to alternate between emotional (qualitative) and factual slides.
  • Share real benefits being delivered versus overly focusing on the features. People care about how you’re creating value for your users, not just what you’re using to do it.
  • Aesthetics, can’t be stressed enough, make it easy on the eyes, less cluttered and pleasant-looking — it will go a long way.

Also Read: SOCAR raises US$55M in Series B funding round from new investors EastBridge Partners, Sime Darby

Outreach strategy. Market of one

“I learned the most important rule of raising money privately: Look for a market of one. You only need one investor to say yes, so it’s best to ignore the other thirty who say no.” – Ben Horowitz.

It’s been seven years since Ben Horowitz wrote that in his book Hard Things About Hard Things, and it still stands true as ever.

When it comes to fundraising, all you need is the one champion investor who will lead the round and build conviction for others to follow.

Sure, you will have to kiss many frogs before you find your prince, but the aim is to sift through the frogs quickly. Let’s explore some concepts.

  • Go big when building the investor list using any sources available to you spanning online databases, news articles, industry reports and friends in the industry (this would also help in introductions later down the road);
  • Now that you’ve got a comprehensive list of investors, ruthlessly tier each investor, i.e.,the likelihood of investment based on their past investment, preferred sector, cheque size, and focus geography;
  • While the most intuitive approach may be to reach out to the tier one’s first, let me propose an alternative strategy — for the first wave, reach out and pitch to 10–15 investors who are unlikely to invest and don’t know you from before — this will help you to iterate in real-time to lock your pitch down plus offer lesser false positives;
  • In terms of the investor feedback you receive, any single investor’s feedback may be highly useful or complete rubbish, so you want to look for the patterns of feedback, even down to determining what you need to explain or outline better — you won’t get multiple shots at an investor, so hearing from some of the early pitches that you need, as an example, to better explain how your revenue model works, or why your customers need your product is vitally important;
  • Once the first wave at Normandy has been hit, then you rely on the age-old adages — quality > quantity and activity != progress — while it is a great sign that many investors want to speak with you and you’re spending a lot of time on pitches, but it does not necessarily mean you’re getting closer — instead, leverage on the interest and get closer to finding your champion investor by focusing your efforts on the tier one investors;
  • First, always try to find a common connection and ask for an introduction when reaching out to an investor. This is a warm introduction and warmer, yet if you can get an introduction from your shareholder or a fellow founder — no warm or warmer? — then you hustle still to get an introduction, and only when you fail, do a cold outreach;
  • Constant visibility is good, and you should continue to engage directly or indirectly through different avenues (LinkedIn, Twitter, Newsletter, Business Updates via Email) — sometimes you catch people at the wrong time, and you want to maintain mindshare to capture situations where investors have gone silent or are slow to respond; lastly.
  • Maintain a negative list of investors, which could comprise of your competitors’ investors, timewasters, or even strategics competing directly with you — negative does not necessarily exclude these investors from outreach. Still, it is a marker so that you can be more thoughtful about the approach.

Pitch. It’s showtime!

With the outreach strategy locked in and everything else in place, it’s time to sing your song. In this section, we will cover off-pitch flow, basic mechanics, and some common etiquettes.

Also Read: Entrepreneurs, now is a great time to start companies and seek funding

Pitch flow and content

  • Company’s overarching purpose
  • Market dynamics which have opened up a substantial opportunity
  • How does this translate for your customer in terms of opportunity or pain points
  • Description of products and solutions uniquely solving these pain points, i.e. value creation
  • How do you capture the value for yourself, i.e. business model
  • Is this evidenced by customer adoption and current traction
  • What would you have built-in five or ten years if all goes to plan not only in terms of size and metrics but also impact and market position
  • Market size and why you will win against your competitors, and lastly
  • Do you have the team to win, i.e. product-market-founder fit and intricate understanding of the market

Mechanics

  • Sprezzatura or Studied carelessness means you have to put in more effort to make something appear effortless — effortless and elegant pitches are often the results of a large volume of effortful and gritty practice, so practice, practice and practice, and then maybe practice some more.
  • Know your audience — do background research on the investor and the specific person beforehand so you can customise your pitch accordingly.
  • Crowd balance — make sure not to overcrowd the call on your side, especially if it’s the first pitch, by only inviting people who are active participants but try not to exceed the other side.
  • Get basics out of the way —  send the deck ahead of the meeting so the person can familiarise themselves with basics enabling you to have a deeper discussion.
  • Time management — Ideally, you pitch for 30–45 minutes, then leave time for Q&A and next steps. However, you are likely to be interrupted during your pitch with questions, and that’s okay — manage your time and cover the main points. Remember, the objective of the first pitch is to deliver a second meeting and not an endless sermon.

Etiquettes/Questions to ask

  • Ask how much time you have, don’t assume — increasingly, you’ve got people running 30/45-minute meetings instead of the standard 60 minutes (probably after reading a productivity hack on Twitter);
  • Ask for a brief background on the firm and person — you might learn something which you missed or wasn’t there from your background research since everything is not public when it comes to private investors;
  • Announce the intended agenda upfront, ask if they read the deck, how much they know about the industry and any specific areas they want to focus on;
  • In the end, once you’ve covered your process, ask about the investor’s internal process and typical timeline — agree on the next steps and follow up at an appropriate time.

FAQs

You probably have a list in your mind already. A list of questions has been asked to you about your company so many times that the answer rolls of your tongue or your fingers can type it themselves. Convert this list into a FAQ document.

Also Read: SOCAR raises US$55M in Series B funding round from new investors EastBridge Partners, Sime Darby

Keep on adding to the list as you go through the pitches, fundraising conversations and informal chats. Do fortnightly releases of the updated Q&A via the data room.

It may seem tedious at first, but it gets the basics out of the way, saves everyone’s time, gives confidence to investors and creates the spectre of competitive tension.

Resources, databases and tech tools

There are several resources, databases, and tech tools you can leverage to make the fundraising process more efficient, spanning across investor selection, sector intelligence, investor tracking, due diligence process management, financial information and valuation support, cap table management and legal document templates.

  • Investor selection and sector intelligence (1): Trackxn, Crunchbase, Pitchbook and Capital IQ are some of the database platforms to use when building the initial investor list — the first two being more bang for the buck and suitable for early stage fundraises
  • Investor selection and sector intelligence (2):  e27, Tech In Asia, The Ken, DealStreetAsia, initially started as news portals, are now churning out some high-quality research — these are highly affordable, and you should have a subscription to these anyway
  • Project management and investor tracking: Asana, Monday and Trello are some examples of project management tools that you can customise to track the progress of the preparation phase and marketing (investor) outreach space — they all have plugins to commonly used applications (e.g. Outlook, Slack)
  • Document tracking: DocSend and HubSpot let you track documents sent via email — primarily applicable for when you send Teasers/Pitch Decks
  • Due diligence process management and Virtual Data Room (VDR): A specialised VDR allows you to set different levels of permissions for each investor, track the data room activity in detail, encrypt your documents and disable them even if it’s taken offline and allow Q&A via the platform — Ansarada, Datasite, and iDeals are some options for this
  • Financial information and valuations: Capital IQ and Pitchbook are the best-in-class when it comes to financial data for relevant public companies. VentureCapInsights, relatively new and limited regional coverage, is increasingly becoming a reliable source for private company data.
  • Cap table management: Carta and Qapita are examples of some cap table management software solutions available to manage your cap table, ESOPs and valuation effectively
  • Templates: Y Combinator, Index Ventures, and Kindrik Partners offer some high-quality document templates related to transaction documents in addition to guidance on various fundraising related matters

Like most tools, whether productivity, project management, research or templates — use it to serve you, not to serve it.

Every company will have different needs, so the right size of the offering per your need, and as long as these tools help you save time and work more intelligently, they have served a purpose.

Super angels

Super angels are the individuals you want to invite to become shareholders in your company. Why? Early on in your start-up life— you need seasoned advice, market validation and network.

The advice can be wide-ranging, e.g. business model (how to charge customers), human capital development (how to retain and incentivise employees) or regulatory (how to engage with the government).

Having well known and reputable individuals as shareholders makes for a great signalling effect that gives you instant market validation, especially when you are a first-time founder and relatively unknown commodity to the investors and larger community.

Similarly, these Super angels bring with them a solid network and “cut-que access” to potential investors, partners, and employees.

Some examples of Super angels include partners in venture capital funds, senior executives at large corporates, key employees of big tech companies, superstar founders who have built unicorns, and fellow founders running complementary startups.

Also Read: GlobalCare bags funding from VinaCapital to provide insurtech solutions to Vietnamese insurance firms, agents

While Super Angels, as the name suggests, predominantly invest in angel rounds — they are increasingly investing alongside institutional investors even in later stages.

Bukukas, a fintech startup focused on digitizing Indonesia’s small businesses, has executed an impressive Super Angel strategy by cornering senior executives of larger fintech and founders of regional startups.

Term sheet, transaction documents and closing

A term sheet is a non-binding document outlining key terms of investment to enter into binding legal documents subject to certain approvals, procedures and checks.

What are key terms to look out for? What happens between signing a term sheet to signing a legal document, and what are the key legal documents?

Let’s cover, at a high level, key economic terms to look out for in a preferred equity round:

  • Right upfront, you would find the valuation stated something like “…at a pre-money valuation of US$20 million on a fully diluted basis with a price per share of US$0.3”. Pre-money is the valuation at which the investors value your company on an “as-is basis” (before their investment goes in), and a fully diluted basis means all shares if all options, warrants and convertible debt were converted to equity.
  • Preferred shareholders can usually elect to convert their holding to ordinary shares at any time or can have it automatically converted to ordinary shares at the time of a qualified public offering (IPO) — definition of qualified is outlined in the term sheet (e.g. the market cap of at least $US100 million). This is fairly normal, and there is no push back required (or expected) from you but the point to remember is that the preferred shareholders can convert their holding at any time to ordinary shares.
  • Liquidation preference and participation is probably the most important term after valuation to look out for “1.0x and Pro-Rata Participation with Ordinary Shares”. It means that preferred shareholders have priority to be paid back their initial investment (or more) first over ordinary shareholders (and previous round’s preferred shareholders) in case of a liquidity event such as a trade sale, merger or liquidation on winding down. In the given example, participating preferred shareholders get to participate proportionately with the ordinary shareholders in the proceeds from the liquidity event after they have got their initial investment (or more). This is when it gets tricky and onerous for ordinary shareholders like yourself and your early backers. In a nutshell, change the “and” to “or”; do anything you can to avoid the “double-dipping” scenario. As mentioned previously, precedence means everything when setting terms, so negotiate well from the start (seed round).
  • Incoming investors will ask for expansion of the stock option pool to bring it to a certain percentage of shareholding (see ESOP section) and ask for this to come out of the existing shareholders’ pockets (including yours), which means your dilution is not only tagged to the incoming investors’ funding but also the expanded ESOP pool. This is an acceptable ask, but you do have some room to negotiate to fund the ESOP expansion pro-rata with the new investors (post-investment)
  • Investors may often ask founders to invest their outstanding shares in disincentivising founder(s) from leaving the business. In principle, this is ok since you are a big factor in their decision, rightly protecting their investment. Still, they do not readily put all shares out for vesting but rather retain a proportion based on year of inception and year of investment.
  • Redemption rights is an uncommon ask and should be avoided where possible; “At the election of the preferred shareholders, the Company shall redeem the outstanding shares on the third anniversary of this Agreement …”. From an investor perspective, this is downside protection and exit certainty. Still, from a founder’s perspective, it is an unnecessary headache and liability on her company — push back, but if you have to concede on this one, be very mindful of the redemption triggers, especially if it’s not time-based.
  • At its simplest, pro-rata rights are the right of the shareholder to participate in future fundraisings proportionately to maintain their shareholding level — no problem. It gets interesting if an investor, usually a strategic investor, start asking for super pro-rata rights which effectively gives them the right to disproportionately participates in future fundraising, e.g., take 60 per cent of the next round even when their shareholding is, say 20 per cent. For the strategic investor, this is a great optionality play. Still, from your perspective, these are handcuffs that could potentially lock you out from your own company and alienate new investors.

There are a few important control terms to look out for, such as voting rights, veto rights, reserve matters, board seat and protective provisions — I can cover this off in detail another time, but the principle to follow is to keep it standard and clean unless you’re getting something valuable in return or running out of options.

Also Read: Touchstone Partners injects US$1M seed funding in telemedicine platform Medigo 

The term sheet will also outline an exclusivity or “no-shop” period, asking you not to invest actively with other investors. In contrast, this investor conducts confirmatory due diligence and runs internal approval processes. Typically, this should be 60 days or less — do not give anything more.

You may have also been asked to fulfil certain conditions for the transaction to close, known as conditions precedent. Some examples are completion and provision of audited accounts and expansion of stock option pool.

During the Exclusivity Period, you would also start negotiating the binding transaction documents, mainly the Share Subscription Agreement (SSA) — between the investors and the company formalizing the terms of investment and Shareholders Agreement (SHA) — between the investor, existing shareholders, and the company to govern the relationship between these parties.

By now, I am hoping you have a good lawyer, and she can take charge of the negotiation here but learn to read and understand these agreements for yourself — very important.

I won’t go into the details here, maybe just a quick tip, insist that you create the first draft of these agreements rather than the investor — remember, the foundation is key.

Valuation, dilution and round size

How much you raise is as important as the valuation as both affect your shareholding (dilution).

I know it sounds simple, but we often obsess over the valuation, which underweight the round size and percentage dilution.

So how much should you raise? Ideally, you raise enough to reach profitability, so you are in a much stronger position if and when you go out to raise the next round, but some business models don’t work like that and need regular funding over several years to break even and that’s ok.

A good thumb rule is to raise as much to reach the next funding milestone, which can be a certain revenue threshold, the number of customers or market share— no less than 12 months of runway, about 18 months is ideal.

Valuation, especially for early rounds, is largely a matter of perspective. Investor’s perspective on the founders’ pedigree, size of the opportunity and market conditions spurring on your sector.

They also need to play within the boundaries created by themselves, such as standard shareholding thresholds and cheque sizes, by you, such as the financial projections and capital markets, such as the relative valuation multiples.

Despite all the analysis and factors at play, guesswork and FOMO both play a big part. Your absolute goal is to drive demand, secure multiple term sheets, close the round and move on.

Subject to the amount being raised and the valuation sorcery, you will typically accept dilution between 10–25 per cent for your first couple of rounds.

Adjust either or both variables but no more than 25 per cent, please.

Also Read: Digital Media Nusantara raises Pre-Series A funding round from Malaysia Debt Ventures Berhad

Workforce communication

Keeping your workforce informed on the fundraising plan and process is the right thing to do and an effective strategy. Here is why.

Every team member hopes for a big payday when joining a startup. If you are transparent and convincing about the path to the exit and a fundraising plan to get there, you will hire and retain great talent.

You would also need to call in for their help with fundraising as investors progress with due diligence and ask for deep dives in key areas (e.g. product demos, marketing strategy). Having employees who are well informed, incentivized, and “bought-in” will ensure a smooth process.

Now you do not need to do weekly or even a monthly update, but I suggest announce your plans before embarking on the raise, give an intermediary update and once the transaction is closed (but before the market knows).

Exit. Study the endgame.

“To succeed, you must study the endgame before anything else” – Peter Thiel / Jose Capablanca

As you can imagine, returns and exit analysis is a big factor in any investment decision — an early-stage investor’s business model is based on realising disproportionate returns from your company to provide proportionate returns to their own investors while paying for other failed investments.

You need to spend some time here and draw out an exit strategy— now, this is at least five years down the line if you’re an early-stage startup, so no one is looking for specific answers but rather a plan of the plan.

Strategic sale and public listing are the two most common exit avenues. For the former, you should have a good understanding of the potential acquirers and their businesses, recent M&A activity in the industry and acquisition rationale/your value proposition.

For the latter, please learn about the potential listing destinations (exchanges) and their requirements and thresholds, structures available (e.g. SPAC merger, direct listing, and listed comparable companies.

As you progress through fundraising rounds, the exit strategy will need to be constantly refined and upgraded; you will have to develop relationships with potential acquirers, perhaps, first as a partner or a customer; and you may also want to start speaking with bankers and/or directly with exchanges around Series B/C — to be aware of the market developments and plan if nothing more.

Plan Y, Z. What can you do when everything fails?

It’s been between four to six months since your first outreach, and you have spoken to over 100 investors with no success. You’re not alone.

Per a Report by Cento Ventures — In Southeast Asia, after raising a seed round, 25–40 per cent companies raise a follow-on round, and 10 per cent raise around after that (and five per cent after that), which means you are part of rapidly decreasing minority as you raise subsequent rounds.

What happens if you find yourself in the majority? Press pause.

Pause and reflect on the feedback — I suggest you compile and find the recurring themes from the feedback, e.g., “highly competitive market”, “unproven business model”, “low monetisation/margins”, “conflicted”, “not a focused geography”, “too early”, “uncertainty due to COVID-19”.

Also Read: Entrepreneurs, now is a great time to start companies and seek funding

Tag each of these recurring feedback themes into either controllable — can change with effort and time (e.g. unproven business model) or non-controllable — not yours to change (e.g. don’t understand the business model).

Check if the high-frequency uncontrollable feedback exceeds the controllable and if not, best to ignore it, and if yes, ask yourself — will the market evolve soon to look at it differently? For the high-frequency controllable feedback, ask yourself — can you solve this, and how long will it take to solve?

After you have mapped out the feedback and believe there is light at the end of the tunnel, go back to the drawing board and draw a map of the tunnel but first, you may need to chart out a plan of survival.

It may mean that you have to raise funding from shareholders or put in money yourself, failing which, scale back operations to essentials-only. If that is not feasible either, file for liquidation and if you still have it in you, start again.

If you have read through both parts and reached the end of the post, congratulations — you can now continue your journey of becoming an absolute fundraising legend.

Remember and take comfort in knowing that no matter external factors at play, it is ultimately your resilience, execution, and vision that will get you the deserved success.

This article first appeared on LinkedIn.

Editor’s note: e27 aims to foster thought leadership by publishing views from the community. Share your opinion by submitting an article, video, podcast, or infographic.

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The post SEA tech founders playbook: A to Z of becoming a fundraising legend (Part 2) appeared first on e27.

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Managing your wealth as entrepreneurs with Dimitry Farberov

entrepreneurs

For entrepreneurs, making profits is more than just a matter of accumulating wealth –it is also a matter of managing said wealth.

Having a good understanding of wealth management can either make or break one’s financial situation. While there are experts that can help us entrepreneurs in this matter, it is always great for us to have a basic understanding of how it works.

Meet Dimitry Farberov, a Certified Financial Planner and Chartered Financial Analyst at Miracle Mile Advisors LLC, who helps successful entrepreneurs make long-term plans for developing and diversifying their financial portfolios.

In this episode of the We Live To Build podcast series, we will listen to his advice on how entrepreneurs can start managing their wealth in a better, more advantageous way.

We will start with understanding the difference between CFP, CFA, and CPA; the pros and cons of working with wealth managers; the difference between asset and liability; what it means to diversify your portfolio; and even the psychological impact of having a massive amount of money at a short time.

Also Read: Peter Thiel’s Valar Ventures leads Singapore wealthtech startup Syfe’s US$30M Series B round

If you don’t see the player above, click on the link below to listen directly!

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This article about managing wealth for entrepreneurs was first published on We Live To Build.

Image Credit: kantver

The post Managing your wealth as entrepreneurs with Dimitry Farberov appeared first on e27.