This course focuses on understanding the broad range of debt and equity alternatives offered by capital providers around the world. The program examines the asset [fund] composition of venture capital [VC] firms, individual and pooled angel investors, hedge funds, and private equity firms. It will look at case studies for each of the four providers in terms of internal investment policies, financial positioning, expected time horizons, risk assessment, and management, as well as the types of ventures [start-up and emerging growth], larger companies, and product-service projects they invest in. This seminar will also look at several global networks for proactive deal flow and screening-evaluation process flow and referrals, including a diverse range of firms, funds, and individual investors from Silicon Valley to Southeast Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and online crowd-funding consortia.
The roles these four entities play in the global economy and investment infrastructure
All types of Venture Capital [VC] firms and their typical investment target-profiles
All types of angel investors and networks, and their typical investment target-profiles
All types of hedge funds and their typical investment positions/target profiles
All types of private equity firms and their typical investment positions/target profiles
The role these four capital providers play in global enterprise development and growth
The investment criteria, risk positions, and time-horizons required to approach such firms/funds
Strategies for engaging such firms/funds and securing various types of capital provisions
Review the asset portfolio mix of a typical VC firm, hedge fund, or private equity firm
Analyze the risk positions and screening protocols for capital providers
Differentiate the key targeted investment opportunities for these four entities
Explain the primary financial intermediary roles these entities serve in the global economy
Develop a review and analysis profile for any of these four capital providers
Evaluate the pros and cons of early-stage individual [angel] investors vs. VCs or private equity
Produce an executive summary profile for a contemporary VC firm, hedge fund, private equity firm, and/or angel network-association
Select the best potential matches of these providers for companies, ventures, projects, or product-service development related to your own company and industry
This course will use an inductive reasoning approach for introducing new terms-concepts-models-methods, followed with highly interactive case-discussion aimed at practical application. Small-group team case projects will apply capital provider concepts directly to the attendees’ firms/organizations/industries. The main focus is about being proactive in developing a strong understanding of capital providers that could provide strategic, value-added support for a wide range of potential future investment opportunities.
Attendees will have immediate return on investment [ROI] to their own firms/organizations by bringing models, concepts, terminology, perspectives, and capital provider network approaches directly to their workplace, colleagues, staff, and senior management.
A strong understanding of VCs, hedge funds, private equity, and individual angel investors
Creating selection criteria for approaching various capital providers relative to opportunities
Being proactive in assessing risk positions and time horizons for different capital providers
Being proactive in building investment portfolio selection criteria for new projects
Readily understand different focus – industry – risk – timing profiles for new investments
Be the point-person to establish dialogue-rapport with different capital providers
Understanding key nuances, differences, and similarities among various capital providers
Gaining a new managerial mindset about how best to approach potential investment partners
Enhancing their use of objective screening-selection criteria for various capital sources
Objectively assess any type of funding source and capital proposal [term sheet]
Learning forward-thinking processes to identifying, approaching, and securing new capital
Bringing new capital sources into the regular line-up of potential investment providers
Anyone looking to expand potential new sources of funds opportunities well beyond traditional commercial banks and investment banks
Anyone looking to improve financial alternatives for partnering with various capital providers on a wide range of business opportunities and projects
Anyone looking to identify new sources of funds to support product-service and marketing expansion opportunities
Board Members looking to enhance the range of capital provider alternatives to support long-term strategic initiatives and industry-market positioning
Business Development Directors looking to proactively open up new dialogues with a broad range of potential capital providers, each with different motives and selection criteria
Commercial Banking
Investment Banking
Debt Instruments
Equity Investment Products
Basics on Risk Assessment, Exposure, and Management
Federal, State, and Local Government Funds, Grants, and Partnership Allocations
Define: Seed, Angel, VC, PE, Hedge Stages of Investment Profiles and Expected ROI
Qualified High-Net-Worth Criteria for Individual Risk Exposure
Very Early-Stage “Ground Floor” Investment Opportunities and ROI Expectations
Dealing with Individual Angel Investors and Angel-Investor Funds
Convertible Notes – Cumulative Interest and Conversion Pricing-Features
Series A Preferred Stock [Cumulative and Convertible Features]
Voting Common Stock for Angel Investors
Key Components of Angel Investor Term Sheets: Project Timing and Risk Profile
C-Corporation, Limited Partnerships, S-Corporations, Limited Liability Companies
The Risk Profile and Investment Expectations of VCs
VC Portfolio Approaches to Investments and Selection Criteria
Venture Stage/Life-Cycle and VC Investment Uses of Funds
Small “Frontier” VC Entities
Midsize “Working Capital” VC Firms
Large “Capital Acquisition” VC Firms
The VC’s Focus on “Scalability” of the Business Model
VCs Managing Other VC Funds in Massive Portfolios
History and Typical Life-Cycles of PE
Securities That Comprise “Private” Equity: Time Horizons and Relative Betas
“Private” Equity vs. “Public” Equity … Valuations, Risk Profiles, Investment Expectations
Liquidity vs. Illiquidity Concerns for Private Equity Management
Market Efficiency and the Value of Information
Active Company Involvement vs. Passive / Non-Involvement and “Value” Investing
Mergers and Acquisitions [M+A] and PE Opportunities
Nontraditional Investment Profiles and ROI Expectations of Hedge Funds
Basics on: Arbitrage, Short Positions, Derivatives, Bonds, Index Funds, and ETFs
Structures of Hedge Funds
Strategies of Hedge Funds
Assessment-Performance and Mark-to-Market for Hedge Funds
Institutional vs. Individual Capital for Hedge Funds