Books
Kaiwen Leong,Elaine Leong,Wenyou Tan

Venture Capital. How to raise funds for your business

  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    Cash Flow from Investments (CFI). This is usually more important for large companies as it includes investments in property, securities, fixed deposits and acquisitions. Start-ups generally do not get involved in these activities and the cash inflow in this section is usually minor. However, there may be some outflow in terms of purchasing property, the plant and equipment. For example, if you purchase a bread-making machine for your business, it is considered a capital expense (outflow). If you merely rent the machine, it is considered an operational expense. Most start-ups will not risk spending too much on capital expenditure, as far as possible, as it is costly and jacks up the required working capital.
    Furthermore, there are two types of ‘flows’—inflows and outflows. The definition of each is quite intuitive:
    ♦ Inflow. Money coming into your bank account—when you receive a loan from a bank.
    ♦ Outflow. Money going out of your bank account—when you pay for expenses.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    Cash Flow from Financing (CFF). This covers items to do with financing, such as bank loans, equity stake (given to investors such as venture capitalists) and interest expense. For example, angel investors often take preference shares with fixed dividends. The amount of dividends you have to give out each year would be a cash outflow from financing.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    Cash Flow from Operations (CFO). Here is where your revenue and costs will show up, and it is the ‘thermometer’ to show how well your business is doing. This is by far the most important cash flow to look out for.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    Good entrepreneurs find ways to make their money work twice as hard. They survey the resources they have and find ways to maximise them. This is essentially the entrepreneur’s operational competitive advantage.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    don’t forget the formula for profit:
    Profit = Revenue – Costs
    So, there are two ways to increase profit—increase revenue (which is what most people focus on) or reduce costs. In the operational plan, your focus should be on reducing costs while being able to generate revenue at the same time.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    “Competitive advantage doesn’t really exist. We should really call it Temporary Competitive Advantage instead.”
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted6 years ago
    Since people can only coherently speak up to 250 words per minute, that means you only have 250 words to seal the deal.
  • Thomas Munk Christensenhas quoted7 years ago
    You need to understand their thought processes—what they prioritise, what the deal breakers are and what happens behind the scenes.
  • marjushkashas quoted10 years ago
    Business reports. There is a lot of information available online through sites like Factiva, Business Insider, Business Monitor and Euromonitor
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