“Hi, I am Bob, and I am bootstrapping a startup.”
“Oh, great!. What do you do?”
“Well, we are building this service which does that in a different way”
“oh” (with a little disappointment) “So bob, how can I help?”
“I would like to run my business plan with you. Is that okay?”
“Sure, go ahead.”
Ten minutes later..
“So bob, how much do you require as the bare minimum to start operations”
“hmm.. about half a million”
“ah.. bob.. lets think bootstrapping, without any fancy hardware, expensive people, health or employee benefits, and no snazzy offices, furnitures or secretaries… how much do you need?”
“About half a million”
Ladies and gentlemen, that would not be bootstrapping.
The first mindset that you need to have when bootstrapping is possibly the same position that Bill Gates and Allen would have been in when they started Microsoft. Yep, Microsoft was actually bootstrapped and in a very good way. Its probably because of that process that the company continues to thrive – in one or more ways – through the ages (compared to companies such as Lotus, which kinda had an early start and also are below the radar as of now).
Quick fact: Microsoft was bootstrapped, whereas Lotus was Venture financed.
Well, do you think Bill and Allen were a little crazy to want to bootstrap when they could have approached the VCs that have always been around in the valley? Well, actually they did. They didnt go too far. Both Bill and Allen were college dropouts. They were targetting a market which wasnt proven yet, and everyone knew that there was going to be lot of ploughing before anyone can sit before the candlelight and eat the bread made from the grains of that field – if there was a field to plough in the first place (PCs themselves werent a popular concept back then).
The two man team didnt have money, nor could raise money, so they decided to grow organically till the point when they could establish the credibility, the track record and gain the upper hand to negotiate a fair deal. Thats the position that every startup should aim for.
I met a very enthusiastic aspiring entrepreneur yesterday, who quoted me about 200,000 USD as seed capital requirement, but doesnt have a team in place yet. When you start doing a breakup of that initial capital, most of it was going towards the licensing of content for a service they would be delivering.
One thing you learn while bootstrapping is that, you never hand out money like that. You always negotiate and make people believe and bet on you. If you are going to make an investor do that, might as well do that to some more others as well – atleast you will have people cheering for you.
Before getting back on track, I’ll leave a note: Never make an all cash deal when you are a startup. And never make the deal which makes an upfront payment of what you require. I do realize that it is subject to deals, but always make a small downpayment and base the rest dependent on your growth. You will have to do some hardselling here, but that is expected from you when you are building a startup and are going to be challenging someone to take the money in the ecosystem away, into your pockets.
Read this for a fact: Less than 5 – 10% of companies in the Fortune 500 Inc. have taken venture capital. Some chose not to go for it, the rest were actually rejected. Was it a bad choice on the part of the entrepreneur, or on the Investor’s camp is a topic I would not want to venture into, but one thing I can say for sure is that… stay away from easy money as long as possible. What you learning during your “bootstrapping” days, is what will enable you to survive in the days ahead. It will make the difference between a company that rises like a mushroom, and a company that is build to last. I absolutely believe in that.
Disclaimer: This is a post that has been made on my personal blog and is reposted here.
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Anurag,
I will take that advice to heart 🙂
Suramya:
1. Bare minimum would be defined as what is required to build the product, and company to a level where it would move to the next milestone of valuation.
I would go beyond just bread-butter and shelter, cause thats out of context here when bootstrapping. Bread-butter and shelter can be sought out from parents or by means of a supporting spouse. What I mean by bare minimum is purely in terms of the company.
For One, I am very skeptical of a founder who cant roll up his sleeves and code to complete his project. If the founders cant complete the project on their own, or atleast the major pieces of the puzzle, we really have a problem. That’s a post entirely for another day.
2. Managing Parental pressure is all part of the baggage. I dont think its part of the excuse. I am sure every successful entrepreneur and those who have made the leap have birth parents as well… it would be interesting to compile a list of ways as to how people convinced their parents. The bottomline is this: You know your parents and your parents know you. If you cant convince them about this, I am not sure whats your success rate… it doesnt look too great.
3. Management team. This goes with (1). When We built our company, we basically said that we all are either going to believe in it and bring in sweat capital – both in terms of finances and hard work, or we are all going to walk out of it and find a day job. Find a team that loves challenges and is willing to walk that path. If they are not equal, well, find someone else.
interesting thoughts.
try to use simpler sentences next time. it took three readings to make some sense out a the second half. always proof-read before publishing. makes life easy for the rest of us.
Well, I understand and faced every word you mentioned. It would have been
better if you answered the following as well : –
1) Bare minimum (Bread-butter and shelter).
2) Parental pressure (Should they be restricted from saying get married and live happily ever after?)
3) All people in management team might not be equally (mental pressure) strong (its effect, though toughest would survive).
Thanks
I second this post, and Vijay has made a very important point about doing non cash deals.
I started my venture on less than $1000 and I think today we are India’s largest or 2nd largest private ecommerce company. I cut all kinds of non cash deals: office in my friend’s place in exchange for nothing other than friendship; software, where the 1st 8 months were to be “at cost” and then after that a bump up; negotiated all kinds of credit; tried to do as much myself, and had just 1 assistant to take support calls at night…. yea, preserve cash, its in shortsupply when bootstrapping.
Then after I launched I had to market, so I focused on SEO as that was free and available in those days. I think I must have been the only guy in the world who figured out Google at the core, because I got myself ranked no. 1 or 2 for 7000+ search terms (I think Larry even wrote me though a discussion forum and asked me if that was me, I think because he used to post as Google Guy and we were not sure but suspected it was him), and we are still in the top 2 for all those terms (I never had to ever tweak my seo because it did what Google fundamentally was all about).
I am bootstrapping another project now in much the same style as above. I have cut a deal with the software developers to do it for me at 75% of cost (!) in exchange for a 3x payout when I get funded :). I did all the site design and copy inhouse. Now I’m figuring out what the new FREE marketing thing is, now that SEO has no more scope in it (its saturated, noone can get to the top for more than a few keywords). I think I have figured it out: its blogs
The best thing about bootrapping is that you can do it yourself so the product quality comes out high as nothing is lost in translation.
Good luck and stay focused; and don’t let anyone ever tell you that your’s is weak idea, cause they don’t know it like you do.