Spins on Corporate Venture Capital
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Transcript of Spins on Corporate Venture Capital
@NYUEntrepreneur
Spins on Corporate Venture Capital
Frank Rimalovski Executive Director, NYU Entrepreneurial Institute Managing Director, NYU Innovation Venture Fund Adjunct Professor, NYU Polytechnic School of Engineering @rimalovski April 13, 2015
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Agenda u Corporate venture capital
o Motivations & models
o Challenges & consequences
u Corporate Spinouts o Challenges
o Lucent’s New Ventures Groups
o New Venture Partners
u Universities o NYU Innovation Venture Fund
o Similarities & differences
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Corporate Venture Capital 101 Motivations u Strategic *
o Provide a window on new technology (85%)
o Support/leverage existing businesses (69%)
o Provide window on new markets (58%)
o Develop new products (56%)
o Seek new directions (55%) u Financial
o ROI
Models u Direct
o In-house venture teams o Separate CVC groups/
funds u Indirect
o Invest as LP in externally managed funds
u Incubators with or without venture funds o Spin-in o Spin-out
* Source: Corporate Venture Capital Study, NIST/MIT 2007
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Corporate Venture Capital 201
Challenges *
u Lack of well defined/shifting missions
u Insufficient corporate commitment
u Inadequate compensation schemes
* Source: Gompers & Lerner, The Venture Capital Cycle
Consequences
u Conflicting agendas with VCs/entrepreneurs
u Slow decision making
u Shallow pockets
u Short lived funds
u Attracts ‘B’ players
u Not welcome by some VCs/entrepreneurs
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Corporate Spin-outs
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The Search for Innovation…
“The search for innovation needs to be organizationally separate and outside of the ongoing managerial business. Innovative organizations realize that one cannot simultaneously create the new and take care of what one already has...” ~ Peter Drucker, 1974
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Intrapreneurship challenges
u R&D not always well linked to markets u Lack of true entrepreneurs u Underestimating time & funding required u Overestimating corporate synergies u Lacked “credible threat” of discontinued funding u Different biz models make it hard to support u Different metrics lead to poor decision making u Ignores portfolio theory u Different decision making/funding timelines u Risk tolerance/acceptance of failure
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Intrapreneurship challenges
“The interests of a corporation and the venture capitalists are seldom, if ever, aligned.”
~ Jonathan Schwartz
CEO, Sun Microsystems
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1996: Lucent forms New Ventures Group
1876
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1996: Lucent forms New Ventures Group
u To commercialize “discontinuous” innovations
u For strategic innovations that can be developed faster in a venture model
u Mission o Leverage Bell Labs technology to create new
ventures to innovations to market quickly
o Create more entrepreneurial environment that nurtures & rewards speed, teamwork and prudent risk-taking
o Realize value by selling ventures to Lucent BUs or external investors and/or corporations
1876
1947
1954
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NVG Experience
u Challenges o Finding the right people to join a startup (inside/out) o “Spotlight effect” o Ebbs & flows of macro & micro economic factors o Contributing to quarterly & annual targets o Lacked “credible threat” of discontinued funding (early on)
u Critical success factors
o Executive sponsorship with “use it or lose it” POV o Strong supply/deal flow with lots of pent up supply initially o Good timing = strong demand / ease of syndication o Aligned comp incentives: people do what they’re paid to o Syndication led to more entrepreneurial behavior, risk
sharing, etc.
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2001: New Venture Partners formed
© New Venture Partners
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2001: New Venture Partners formed
u Raised fund to buy out portfolio in 2001 u Operating as independent VC fund since Dec 2001 u Focused on commercialization of corporate
innovations through creation & funding of spin-out ventures
u Identified, founded & funded +35 corporate spin-outs u 4 offices & 12 investment professionals in US & Europe u Experience spans materials & components, to
software &services across IT, comms & cleantech u Cumulative capital under management of $800M+;
closed last $300M fund in April 2006
© New Venture Partners
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NVP: Strategy and Focus
• Transform corporate R&D into valuable assets through venture spin-out creation
• Formal & informal partnerships o 2 cornerstones o Many non-exclusives
• Three types of deals o Early-stage disruptive technologies o Non-strategic commercially-ready
products & services o Commercially-ready “incubands”
• Provide capital & services in return for equity in new ventures—a value-added investor, not a consultant
Business maturity
Prod
uct m
aturity
?
© New Venture Partners
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NVP: Why do Corps do Spin-outs?
u Strategic o Corporate BUs become a customer or partner o New channels to markets for tech corporate BUs can’t or won’t do o Preserves option to re-acquire or re-invest later with diminished risk
u Technological o Brings culture of entrepreneurship to labs, attract young researchers o Increases clock speed of innovation o Elicits market feedback to shape project direction o Relieves researcher frustration
u Financial o Creates financial gains through equity ownership o Accesses high risk capital funding otherwise not available o Complements, does not compete with, a licensing program
© New Venture Partners
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How NVP Does it
Opportunity Iden=fica=on
Market Qualifica=on
Transi=on Venture Value
Realiza=on
Form new company
New Venture Partners’ Role
Traditional VC Role
Go/No Go Go/No Go
Corporate Decision
NVP Decision
Exis=ng product line
© New Venture Partners
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What do these have in common?
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Universities
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Helping startups start up
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Our Playbook
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Inspire Educate Connect Accelerate Fund
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NYU Innovation Venture Fund u Philanthropic seed fund
u Evergreen: NYU sole “LP”
u Active diligence
u Help build smart syndicates
u $100-200k direct investments
u Converts, Series Seed & A
u Board observer seats
u Opportunistic follow-ons
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I V F
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Fund Portfolio
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Select Co-Investors
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By the Numbers
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Investments
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Sectors
Info Tech: 7* Life Sci/Health: 4*
NYU Founders (School) CAS: 2 Medicine: 6 Eng: 1 Stern: 5 Dentistry: 2 Law: 1 Courant: 1
NYU Founders (Type) Students: 8 Faculty: 8 Researcher: 2
IT Investments
Hardware: 2 Software: 5
Invested Capital
Invested: $1,125,000 Value: $1,289,309
Female Cofounders
40% Total Capital Raised
$20,490,000 (>18x)
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Why this investment model? u Participate in larger rounds to achieve
meaningful milestones & value inflection
u Invest as part of a larger syndicate
o Leverage diligence, expertise & connections
o Follow-on financial support
o Co-investors to serve on boards
u Other sources exist in/outside NYU to fill pre-VC needs
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Critical Role of the Fund u Return on investment
u Demonstrates University commitment & importance of entrepreneurship
u Raises NYU's profile amongst peer institutions & government agencies
u Credibility & bridge building with NYC investor community
u A catalyst for entrepreneurship within NYU
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Money not 1st item in critical path
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Universities & Corporates
Similarities
u Often based on research u Publishing & recognition
driven u Gov’t & corporate grant
funding u Need to evangelize
entrepreneurship u Personnel not always
suitable for a startup u A lot of handholding
Differences
u Limited development u Not measured on IP
creation u Less access to
commercial validation u Less aware of IP &
commercialization pathways
u No secondment u College is a lot more fun!
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Questions?
[email protected] @nyuentrepreneur nyu.edu/entrepreneur nyuentrepreneur.com 16 Washington Place
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Helping startups start up