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July 24, 2008

 
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Shaping Up Your Business


By: Eric Reyes

September/October 2007 Issue: Page 60 Print Version Print | Send To a Friend Email | DIGG Digg This

Venture capitalist firm Bay Partners recently created a fund specifically to finance startups that are building applications for Facebook.

Facebook, of course, is the social networking site college students used to call their own. Since the site opened up to the general public, its profile has definitely been on the rise. Bay Partners' Facebook program – called AppFactory – will be aimed at giving entrepreneurs microbursts of funds as they need it, from $25,000 to $250,000 in as little as a few days' turnaround.

That venture capitalists would sustain a program for such a niche field as social network applications on a single website speaks volumes about how strong the tech sector is these days.

In fact, most nonmanufacturing businesses are riding pretty high. Venture capitalists are bolstering this image with their wallets, putting $25.5 billion into companies in 2006, according to PricewaterhouseCoopers, Thomson Financial and the National Venture Capital Association. That's up 35 percent from the previous year. While that is less than the $52-plus billion VCs put into firms at the height of the dot-com boom in 2000, it is still 85 percent higher than the lowest of low points for investment five years ago.

In the online advertising and performance marketing industries, there is similar reason to celebrate. Venture capitalists and equity firms are in a buying mood, too, as they realize that many start-ups are making their funds last longer, having learned their lesson from the outrageous burn rates of the go-go late-1990s – companies such as Pets.com went through $110 million in about two years.

While start-ups are getting less from VCs (about $8 million, on average; down from $11 million in 2000), their ideas are better, fulfill better-defined business goals and, more importantly, stay lean enough to make them very attractive to larger companies looking to buy adjunct technologies and services. ValueClick, for example, owners of Commission Junction, Search123 and others, has acquired several companies this year and "are clearly not done yet," according to company officials.


This wild west of mergers and acquisitions in the online advertising and performance marketing space means great opportunities for smaller and midsize companies with three to five years since launch and profits or a road map to profits. Of course, it isn't that simple. Start-ups can't just have a cool technology and a funny mascot anymore. Being acquired or becoming a target for acquisition is a lot more difficult than calling up a big ad network and asking if they are interested.

It's About People

More often than not, VC firms are the ones spearheading these complicated dances and advising smaller companies with an innovative technology or compelling business plan on what to do to make themselves attractive to buyers. Consultants say that one of the most important signs of a strong company, ripe for acquisition, is a talented team. Sara Holoubek, who consults with companies looking to be acquired, says, "Strategically you need the right vision, but tactically you need – especially if you are the sole owner – to know what you need when you sell. Do you want to sit on a beach or do you want to stay and grow the company?"

She says larger companies looking to acquire prefer when a founding executive team wants to stay and grow the firm. A start-up might have a good idea, she says, but the founders might be very young and not really know when to hire people smarter than they are. Early on in the life of a company, a few people do nearly everything and often they have a hard time giving up those roles. But, she says, those workers are more likely to stay on and be passionate about the business.

Mike Kwatinetz, a founding partner at Azure Capital Partners, which invests in early-stage companies, says the hardest decision to make is to determine whether a CEO and founder can "take it all the way." In a transition from founder CEO to IPO, the easiest road to success is to have the founder stay. But it's an unknown quantity, he says.

Sam Paisley, chief administrative officer at ValueClick, who has spearheaded about 13 of the company's recent acquisitions, says, "Our criteria are that it must be complementary to the online performance marketing world. Our aim is to be a full-service company." Beyond that, ValueClick is definitely interested in the people at the businesses it buys. "Sometimes you think that when you acquire an entrepreneurial company you expect them to stay nine months," Paisley says. "And some stay three years or more and some others are still here." He says it is the people who know how to make the assets work.

Profits Get Noticed

Profitability is also very important and crucial for a deal – with ValueClick anyway. "We love companies that are growing even faster than us," Paisley says.

Profitability helps a company receive a strong valuation, ultimately making for a better purchase price for the seller. "We love unfinished businesses that can finish it with us. We put heavy emphasis on postclose and integration. We have a reputation of being fair with the deals. We pay a fair price that treats them fair and our shareholders fairly."

ValueClick has vetted more than 700 companies to close on 14 deals. Holoubek, who was iCrossing's chief strategy officer, says while her advice is solely strategic and not financial, profitability is way up there on her list, too.

Profitability and a great outlook to profits driven by rapid growth could mean a greater valuation and indeed a higher purchase price. Paisley says that they "insist that a potential target have a same profitability growth as us," if not more. He admits that a target company with a better valuation will ask for a higher purchase price and that they may be willing to pay more, especially if you fill a need the company may have strategically or technologically. He says ValueClick recently paid $95.5 million in cash for Mezi- Media because of its presence in China.

Azure's Kwatinetz says he advises companies that want to be sold that they should never say they are for sale. Continued on Page 2...


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