Friday, February 29, 2008

Funding Follow-up

A commentor on my previous posting asked where he/she might find information on how to raise capital for their business. There are a number of books and online resources available. A Google search will turn up many references. Most of these focus on the "how-to" aspects of the process. Of couse this is important to know. However, with this blog I want to focus more on insights and strategies.

One useful reference is a publication that I wrote on the process of product commercialization. It has a section on financing your business. You can access it on the Web at http://www.pasbdc.org/what/consulting/dev/02.asp Select "Technology Commercialization Resources, then "New Product Commercialization Guide."

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Funding is Like Fishing

If you ever want to develop your invention into a profitable business, you will probably need to seek funding from outside investors. Most banks simply will not loan for purposes of trying to develop and market an invention.

When you seek outside investment, you need to have the right frame of mind and approach the process with the realization that you are basically "fishing" for investments.

Those who have ever gone fly-fishing (or watched the movie A River Runs Through It) understand that fishing works like this:

You try to find the best fishing hole and the best fly to use there. The fly should "match the hatch," which means it should imitate the items that the fish in that hole are currently feeding on. Of course, this means you must first determine what the fish in that hole are feeding on!

Next, you cast your fly to a likely looking spot. As your fly drifts downstream, you need to make constant adjustments so that it moves along with the current as naturally as possible (referred to in fly-fishing circles as the "presentation"), thus increasing the likelihood that a fish will bite.

The large majority of the time the fly floats to the end of its drift without any fish taking the bait. Occasionally a fish swims up to take a look. But often it sees something suspicious in your presentation and darts immediately away.

Sometimes a fish strikes at the fly but does not get hooked. Usually, when this happens, you make another drift past that fish. Sometimes a fish gets hooked, and it feels like a big one, but it gets off within seconds. Sometimes you hook one and bring it into your net, but it's a small one.

Sometimes you get very excited because you have obviously hooked a very big fish. You play it for a seeming eternity with great skill so that it does not break off and get away. You're completely exhausted from the epic battle. But when you get it into your net and examine it, it turns out to be a carp, not that lunker brown trout that would be so delectable in your frying pan.

But occasionally-- very occasionally-- you hook that big fish, bring it in, take it home, fry it up, and it tastes absolutely delicious!

Of course, in this example, the fish is the funding.

If you don't know how to fish, you will probably be ineffective. If you don't have the equipment or the patience of a good fisherman, you will probably be ineffective. Especially, you must have the perseverance and the fortitude to go out there, rain or shine, and flail away at that fishing hole!