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The Fundamentals of Raising Capital from Investors
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| Guest post by: Ken Hollowell |
Article Overview: There are various fundamentals associated with raising capital. Once mastered, success is realized.
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Free Download - What are Angel Investors? By Ken Hollowell |
The Fundamentals of Raising Capital from Investors
There are certain fundamentals that you must have in place in order to raise any amount of capital from investors properly (whether it be one investor or one hundred):
First, you must have proper transaction structure in place before you interact with investors. The overwhelming majority of companies that are just using a business plan to raise capital (whether for $50,000 or $15,000,000) typically have very little transaction structure beyond "we're selling 20% of the company for $2,000,000". This is wholly inadequate.
How many shares or units are being sold? Preferred return or common ownership? What is the share/unit price? What is the total authorized share/unit pool and how will it affect future dilution of the investment? What is the exit strategy? How is the investor return modeled? Are the securities convertible?
Not addressing this information places the responsibility for creating proper transaction structure on the investor - which is very unprofessional and reflects poorly on the subject company. To raise private capital successfully you need to go well beyond simply stating to investors an aggregate amount of capital needed and providing information on the business. Do not expect investors to have any interest in your opportunity without providing them concise terms and conditions regarding their capital investment in your company. If you were an investor - would you not want the same information and structure provided for your investment?
Second, proper documentation for raising capital from investors is of critical importance. A business plan is not even the bare minimum needed for raising private funding - of any amount. The specific documents needed for raising private capital are:
• Private Placement Memorandum: The Private Placement Memorandum, or "PPM", is the document that discloses all pertinent information to the investors about the company, proposed company operations, the transaction structure (whether you are selling equity ownership or raising debt financing from the investors), the terms of the investment (share price, note amounts, maturity dates, etc.), risks the investors may face, etc. Do not confuse the detailed corporate disclosures, SEC disclosures, and transaction structure in a PPM with the general information a business plan provides - they are not the same.
• Subscription Agreement: Business plans do not even provide the documentation necessary to allow the investor to actually invest. Don't expect investors to provide you funding based on a handshake. Would you invest funds into a company without signing a document that sets forth the terms and conditions of the investment? The Subscription Agreement sets forth these terms and conditions - this is the document the investor signs and returns to you with their investment check. You will have a very hard time raising debt or equity capital without this basic document.
• Promissory Note: In debt offerings you need to have a Promissory Note outlining the terms of the loan arrangement with the investors. The note is the actual "loan document" between the company and the investor. It is impossible to have a "loan" without a "loan agreement" that sets forth the terms and conditions of the loan.
Third, in order to sell securities to investors you must follow the rules and regulations that govern these sales as set forth by the Securities and Exchange Commission and State securities regulators. The SEC has specific rules concerning how a private company solicits capital from investors - even if very few investors are involved. The Regulation D Offering program is the exemption program designed by the SEC for private business. It is the most widely used program the SEC offers and provides the proper exemption needed to raise capital from investors. Not raising capital properly can provide investors with a "right of rescission" in the future - meaning they can get their investment back regardless of the circumstances.
Don't rely on your business plan to perform a function it was not designed to accomplish. Let us structure a Regulation D securities offering for your transaction and begin raising capital the right way.
Article Tags: capital, funding, ppm, private placement offering, raising capital, raising capital for your company
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About the Author: Ken Hollowell RSS for Ken's articles - Visit Ken's website – Ken M. Hollowell, founder of both Prfran Consultants, Inc. and Profran Capital Group, Inc. and is a leader in the field of franchise development and non traditional methods of raising capital since 1980. Mr. Hollowell has lectured before many business organizations, Universities and Colleges on the subject of franchising and hosted a radio talk show of radio for years. He conducts numerous seminars annually on franchise development and investing in a franchise business throughout the United States. He is regularly requested by the Small Business Administration in Washington, D.C., S.C.O.R.E., Learning Annex and the International Franchise Association to speak on franchising. Mr. Hollowell's well-rounded experience and practical knowledge in both development and marketing have led him to be one of the most sought after franchise consultants in America. Mr. Hollowell has written many articles on both developing a franchise network and buying a franchise. Mr. Hollowell sits on no less than a dozen boards of directors. Mr. Hollowell works with as many as 120 new clients each year on teaching techniques and methods of raising capital through the SEC's Reg D Series of Offerings Click here to visit Ken's website About the Report THE HISTORY OF FRANCHISING Equity Private Placement vs Debt Regulation D NonPublic Offering of Securities Open Letter To Business Owners About Franchising Understanding How Franchising Works |
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