Bijan Sabet

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Exit Strategy

When I meet an entrepreneur for the first time I like having a conversation about the idea or see the product (or prototype) in action or even a “chalk talk” for those of us that are more visually inclined.

I’m generally not a fan of slides, especially if it’s an early stage company.

But if the founder wants to use slides then I usually go along. Founders should use whatever tools they feel most comfortable.

The one thing I am allergic to is when a founder includes a slide that says “Exit Strategy” and then has a few bullets that says “IPO or sell company to company a, b or c.”

Oy.

An early stage company should be thinking about how to create something great and how they want to get there. How to build value. Not think about exits.

Now most VCs that I know feel the same way about that dreaded slide. But there is a topic where I’ve seen disagreement amongst successful VCs related to the concept of exits when considering an early stage investment. Some VCs will think about who might be the potential buyers of the company.

They do this analysis upfront because most companies never go public. So they want to know if there could be multiple buyers of a company someday. If there aren’t any potential buyers then they it might impact the VCs decision.

I don’t see the world that way.

If you build a great company then you don’t have to worry about exits because you will have many options (e.g. public, get profitable & stay private, secondary offering, sell the company).

I believe there have been many exits where the actual buyer wouldn’t have been on any list at the time the initial venture investment.

This is just speculation on my part but at the time of the initial investment in the following companies who would have guessed the ultimate buyer:

-Flip Video (Cisco)

-Danger Research (Microsoft)

-Daily Candy (Comcast)

-Sling (Echostar)

-StumbleUpon (eBay)

The list goes on.

Yes, you can imagine the strategic rationale for those deals. But not on day 1 of the venture investment. The world just moves too fast to try and predict this stuff. And it’s not the most important question anyway.

We would all agree, the real question is whether a particular team & product can make something special.

Update: A few folks have reblogged this post and disagreed with me. To be clear, I never said exits aren’t important. I just don’t believe it should be something founders or VCs should think about at the start.

    • #Venture capital
  • 2 years ago
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59 Notes/ Hide

  1. bdsmbrutalreality liked this
  2. david liked this
  3. gbattle reblogged this from rafer and added:
    gbattle sez: Rafer, it appears you’re suggesting the so called “exit strategy” discussion moot as it has much more to do...
  4. gbattle liked this
  5. jitle liked this
  6. rafer reblogged this from bijan and added:
    liquidity early, but...median deal size and half-life
  7. ryantwomey reblogged this from bijan and added:
    So many companies are purchased...such myriad reasons
  8. caterpillarcowboy reblogged this from spiers and added:
    For whatever reason, I think many (usually first-time) entrepreneurs feel like there is an expected format for VC pitch...
  9. monsieurledan liked this
  10. suzannexie liked this
  11. philleif reblogged this from spiers
  12. funsize liked this
  13. ryanbrown liked this
  14. spiers liked this
  15. ninety9 reblogged this from spiers and added:
    Really? A set-top manufacturer buying Sling? A content distributor buying Daily Candy? Yeah, I can’t imagine anyone ever...
  16. spiers reblogged this from bijan and added:
    often than not, but...pretty disingenuous...venture capital...
  17. reecepacheco reblogged this from bijan and added:
    here. Sure, it’s nice...game first. To use another war reference, this one from WWII - ‘We...
  18. mbb liked this
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Hi, I'm Bijan and this is my personal blog. I live just outside of Boston. I grew up in NY and lived for nearly 10 years in the Bay area. I travel a ton.

I have 3 great kids and a wonderful wife, Lauren. And I am a partner at Spark Capital. Thanks for visiting!

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