Sitting in an angel investor presentation last week, an entrepreneur, when asked, what the exit plan was, was quick to say when “Our company achieves $30 million in sales, we will either sell to a strategic buyer or IPO.” Since the presentation, I have been reflecting on this certain and specific statement, and whether I can take it to the bank or not. Most entrepreneurial founders pay lip service to the exit, and that is why at last year’s ACA event, it was recommended that angel investors sitting on a startup board make it part of every board meeting to discuss what an exit might look like.
As you think about IPO, you might be tempted to think about the IPO debacle and fleecing called SNAP. Why was it a colossal failure? Snap…
The result: Snapchat went public at $17/share but opened at $24/share, reached a high of $29.44/share and has now settled in on $14.27/share. With a 2016 negative free cash flow of $677 million, slower growth rate of new users due to big and significant competition from Facebook and Instagram, Snap lost billions of market capitalization and its credibility in a blink of an eye.
As I think about IPOs, here is what I have discovered and learned:
“So we think in terms of that moat and the ability to keep its width and its impossibility of being crossed as the primary criterion of a great business. And we tell our managers we want the moat widened every year. That doesn’t necessarily mean the profit will be more this year than it was last year because it won’t be sometimes. However, if the moat is widened every year, the business will do very well. When we see a moat that’s tenuous in any way — it’s just too risky. We don’t know how to evaluate that. And, therefore, we leave it alone. We think that all of our businesses — or virtually all of our businesses — have pretty darned good moats.”
3. A diverse product portfolio with strong revenue growth, momentum and traction (attractive product mix and platform); and
4. Attractive product margins, strong company profitability trends and compelling industry growth dynamics.
5. In order to facilitate development of trading liquidity, the company’s potential market capitalization should be at least $200 million to $250 million.
A recent Indiana-based health care company filed an original IPO of $75 Million last year and reduced it to $57.5 Million in 2017. Despite strong sales growth over the last few years, the company lost nearly $24 Million over the last three years. While it scores high on the management team, product portfolio and revenue growth, the margins and profitability leaves a lot to be desired and the shear company size of $30 million in revenue leaves it vulnerable as it goes public so what should early stage, growing ventures think about before heading down this road.
For early stage companies, they should keep in mind: