| You have heard the
expression, “failing to plan is planning to fail.”
Well, a big part of success in negotiating takes place before
you even schedule the first meeting. Most people assume that
negotiating is all about fast talking, intimidation and power.
In reality, a very important key to a winning negotiation is
the research and planning that should take place in advance
of any serious conversations with the other side. In our Negotiation
Training workshops, we will lead you step-by-step through
the process of analyzing, evaluating, planning strategy, setting
your limits, estimating their limits, and a host of other factors
that will come in handy when you finally sit down at the table.
The negotiation skills you learn now will make you a winner
over and over again.
How to make investors an offer they can't refuse
Q: I need to establish a profit percentage to present to
prospective investors. Where do I begin?
A: Your question assumes the profit percentage is something
that gets figured out. In fact, the profit percentage is the
subject of your negotiations with prospective investors. Don't
analyze your business hoping to find a profit percentage;
rather, establish a percentage and then ask yourself how you
can pull it off.
The return you're offering investors drives your fund-raising
strategy. When you raise money, you're giving investors a
chance to invest in your company instead of putting their
money into another investment. You're just one choice among
many for investors, so you need to compete against other investment
vehicles for investors' money. Here's how:
You can compete on the profit you'll offer. You'll usually
have to promise
investors a better return on their money than they could
get elsewhere. In many cases, because new businesses are very
risky propositions, you must offer a return high enough to
compensate investors for taking a bet on you. It's common
for angel investors to want a return on their money that's
anywhere from 40 to 60 percent per year. Venture capitalists
may expect even higher returns. Because most start-ups fail,
investors need very high returns from the survivors to recoup
the money they've put into less profitable companies.
Investors don't necessarily believe you'll return 40 to 60
percent, but they need to be convinced such high returns are
plausible. Your business planning must create a company valuable
enough to give that level of return.
You can compete on risk. Investors have a risk tolerance.
Warren Buffett,
for example, will only invest in well-established companies
with lots of cash and high earnings potential. He's not a
big fan of risk. Other investors will toss in huge sums of
money on a rumor. You can present your opportunity as either
or less risky depending on the investor's risk tolerance.
They will generally expect a greater return if they perceive
a greater risk. U.S. Treasury Bills are considered risk-free
investments, and the long-term T-Bill rate sets the minimum
rate of return you must offer an investor. (Otherwise, they
can just invest in risk-free T-bills.)
There are many forms of risk. Bio-tech companies risk not
making it through the FDA approval process. Many dotcoms use
unprecedented business models, which risk not being feasible
given customer behavior. Years ago, Microsoft risked standardizing
its office suite on Windows 3.1 before the market had accepted
Windows. Your business plan should outline the risks you're
taking and the return you believe you can promise.
You can compete on the payback schedule. Investors can put
their money in a bank account and get interest paid monthly.
By investing in a U.S. Savings Bond, they can get interest
several years later when the bond matures. If an investor
writes a loan, he or she often receives monthly interest plus
a little bit of principal repaid at the same time.
Investors needing ongoing income may prefer
investments that generate monthly income over those that
pay out at the end of several years. Such investors may be
willing to accept lower interest rates in return for the favorable
payback schedule.
Finally, you can compete on the kind of investment. Banks
invest by offering loans; venture capitalists invest by taking
stock in companies. You can structure your investment offering
as a loan or as stock, making it fit different investors'
profiles. For high-growth companies that anticipate several
rounds of funding, the deal structure may have profound effects
on the company's ability to raise later rounds. Both loans
and stock come in many forms with different legal and payback
implications.
Since I believe that if something's worth doing, it's worth
getting help with, I'd find someone who has done several venture
deals before and ask for their help thinking through the way
the payback will be structured. I find that lawyers who specialize
in small-business creation have often seen just about everything
in the book and can be a great resource. Start asking around,
and you're sure to find someone who could help.
By Stever Robbins
Seattle, WA

Negotiation Training - Research and Plan for Your Next Negotiation
Negotiation Training Quote
"Most people spend more time and energy going
around problems than in trying to solve them."
Henry Ford
Suggested Reading:
Negotiation
Training Through Gaming: Strategies, Tactics, and Maneuvers
by Elizabeth Christopher, Larry Smith
Kennedy's Simulations for Negotiation
Training
by Gavin Kennedy
Lawyer negotiation training materials: Exercises, video problems,
instructor's manual
by Joseph D Harbaugh
Negotiation and mediation
training manual
by Joseph B Tulman
Conflict Negotiation
Skills For Youth Training
by Not Available
Essentials of Negotiation
by Roy J Lewicki
Strategic Negotiation : A Breakthrough Four-Step Process
for Effective Business Negotiation
by Max Bazerman
Women Don't Ask : Negotiation and the Gender Divide
by Linda Babcock, Sara Laschever
Bargaining for Advantage : Negotiation Strategies for Reasonable
People
by G. Richard Shell
The Shadow Negotiation : How Women Can Master the Hidden
Agendas That Determine Bargaining Success
by Deborah Kolb, Judith Williams |