Philip Baddeley, Venture Capital Tips from London

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Are you an entrepreneur thinking about going for venture capital? Well, Philip Baddeley works with startups in Cambridge, England, and helps entrepreneurs know what to expect and prepare their pitches. I found him interesting to talk with, and he gave me lots of good information on how to approach the venture capital industry, not just in England, but anywhere.

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17 Responses to “Philip Baddeley, Venture Capital Tips from London”

  1. André-Francois Landry, développeur web freelance. Says:

    […] Scoble frappe encore avec un podcast assez intéressant avec un investisseur nommé Philip Baddeley du coin de Cambridge en Angleterre. […]

  2. Philip Baddeley Says:

    merci pour votre comment!
    Mais je ne parle pas Le Francais tres bien.

    Je suis desole mais….

  3. Philip Baddeley Says:

    Time line of the video at Robert Scoble and Equity Fingerprint video on Podtech

    Who are you? Where are we?
    What do you do? Explain to people why they need Equity Fingerprint - VCs
    Venture capital in Cambridge; Microsoft in Cambridge
    Cambridge accounts for 24% of VC investment in the UK
    Podtech.net raised $5.5million
    YouTube.com plus VCs
    Podtech already has 30 employees; VCs and runways; make the plane fly
    How Equity Fingerprint helps? - Entrepreneur = Equity + MBA; It is the equity which makes the difference
    After the business planning process, you need to plan your equity
    Difficult to get out after making an investment
    Extra resources offered by VCs; contact with customers
    Non-executive director makes you think through all the time; due diligence
    Most common mistake made my entrepreneurs is customer engagement
    Pick up a phone and talk to customers; feedback from customers - Equity Fingerprint Guide – a business plan resource
    Life-style (consultancy) v high growth (scaleable)
    Download from www.equityfingerprint.com;
    Survey with Lancaster University Management School
    Getting away from not understanding equity
    What is the value offered by Equity Fingerprint?
    Working with entrepreneurs; founder shares - How much money should an entrepreneur take?
    Why does a software engineer want lots of money?
    $50k start; $500k second round and then $5million
    Difficult with lots of money from VCs but exciting,; run, run and run
    Their business, their way
    When you take money, you give up your freedom - No place to hide! Have you performed?
    Are you in charge, lifestyle; or someone else in charge, VCs
    How much do you own? - Stamp your personality on the company
    Remember it is difficult for VCs to raise funds
    With VCs, you are right at the sharp end of a tough market
    You must communicate with other investors; talk, talk and talk
    VCs like to know what is going on
    Equity Fingerprint Journey Planner
    How do you value a company?
    VCs generous at start but VCs claw back if you stumble
    Find a VC who likes your space to get good valuations
    VCs are very special; networking for you providing you keep going
    VCs want a good share; too little, they get poor returns; too much, they run the business
    Structure the deal so that the founders get options
    What happens with the Angels?
    Difficult to split he pie three ways so Angels can lose out
    Squeeze the Angels
    Negotiating with the VCs – what happens
    What can the VCs bring to the party?
    The VCs bring so much more to the party than just money
    Structure of board of directors; small board with focus
    Which founders go on the board?
    Second round stage; ramp up even further with second and third round
    Do early investors have the cash to continue investing?
    Getting second round investors to revalue the business
    What is dilution? Balance dilution with growth
    Opportunity, opportunity, opportunity
    VCs add so much value
    How VCs helped build eBay
    VCs start lots of buinesses; entrepreneurs just a three or four
    What should an employee look for when joining a company?
    What should an employee ask?
    Noam Wasserman study at Harvard - CEO gets 5%; CFO 1%
    Employees get diluted but the option pool is normally protected
    Provide an incentive to employees
    What is view of VCs to option pool?
    Equity Fingerprint Journey Planner www.businessplanresource.biz
    Which path? Bonzer business or bonanza business?
    Fantastic question by Robert Scoble
    If you own it you control it and sell it
    Once other people involved you have to sell the business or IPO
    EF Board Game to show the difference of bringing in other shareholders
    Different tracks
    VC want quick result in one or two years
    Is YouTube the moat round the castle for Google or money making opportunity?
    Lots of non-paying customers is so valuable
    VCs have ten year funds (I say entrepreneurs by mistake)
    EF Graphic Book design – a new idea
    Graphic novel on 9/11 report – it is a complete book of cartoons
    The cartoons help make the report accessible
    Graphic Novel will have different types of businesses
    Special super glue which does not stick to the skin
    Two story boards; one fun, one serious
    Contact www.equityfingerprint.com business plan resource
    Jingfang translating guide into Mandarin
    Thanks to Prof Bill Fitzgerald, David Excell, Dill, Abbi and everyone in the Cambridge Cluster
    “It is a great pleasure and privilege to meet you, Robert Scoble” (said by Philip)

    Thanks also to Geoff Jones and to Hugh MacLeod

  4. Philip Baddeley Says:

    Anyone know how I can add more tags to this posting?

  5. Philip Baddeley Says:

    This is a reply to the post on 21 December 2006.

    You posted to my Scoble Show. Yes, there is a third way and some entrepreneurs do manage to start a consultancy and then develop a product company. The best known example in Cambridge is Geneva Technology which was sold for over $600million in 2000. A very special entrepreneur who bought in a serially successful CEO who managed the transition.
    Great post
    Equity Fingerprint - Business Plan Resource
    Anyone want to translate our guide into French?

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  10. Kirk Says:

    Thank for making this valuable information available to the public.

  11. Get your Equity Fingerprint - und behalten Sie den Überblick | easn.de - everything a StartUp needs Says:

    […] Insgesamt ein fantastisches Tool für jeden Gründer der auf externe Kapitalgeber angewiesen ist. Hier erklärt Philip Baddeley den Equity Fingerprint noch mal im Detail. […]

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