How to Finance and Grow Your Startup – Without VC
Who? If you’re an entrepreneur at any stage of your journey, or even an aspiring one, and you need money to start or grow your business, this course is for you.
What?
This course will introduce, and help you put to use in your startup, the five models through which your customers can – and will, if you ask them! – fund your business. These five time-tested models have been put to use by entrepreneurial superstars like Michael Dell, Bill Gates, …
How to Finance and Grow Your Startup – Without VC
Who? If you’re an entrepreneur at any stage of your journey, or even an aspiring one, and you need money to start or grow your business, this course is for you.
What?
This course will introduce, and help you put to use in your startup, the five models through which your customers can – and will, if you ask them! – fund your business. These five time-tested models have been put to use by entrepreneurial superstars like Michael Dell, Bill Gates, Richard Branson and more. Sadly, though, the five models are rarely talked about and not widely understood. Until now! The five models will be brought to life by the real-world stories of an inspiring collection of incredibly creative entrepreneurs from around the world – including successes and failures – through a series of captivating no-holds-barred interviews with founders and others, and investors, too.
Why?
More than two generations ago, the venture capital community – VC’s, business angels, incubators, and others – convinced the entrepreneurial world that writing business plans and raising venture capital constituted the twin centerpieces of entrepreneurial endeavor. They did so for very good reasons: the sometimes astonishing returns they’ve delivered to their investors and the incredibly large and valuable companies their ecosystem has created. But the vast majority of fast growing companies never take any angel or venture funding. Are they onto something that most of today’s entrepreneurial ecosystem has missed? Indeed, should a business angel or VC be seen as the first port of call for getting your nascent entrepreneurial venture off the ground or growing it faster? Perhaps not.
How?
You’ll be asked to do a series of exercises – out in the real world – to put your growing toolkit to use in your business or the one you hope to start. Hands-on, practical tools to help your business start and thrive – without venture capital. You’ll join our discussion board of fellow participants, if you like, and learn from others who are putting the tools to work, just as you are. And to suit today’s fast-paced lifestyles, we’ve broken what you’ll get – short lessons, interviews, thought-provoking questions, even some optional things to read – into bite-sized chunks, so you can log in and grab them whenever and wherever you are.
And what else?
If, after checking out and perhaps completing this course, you find your company in a position where seeking venture capital turns out to be the right thing to do next, John Mullins leads an inspiring and hands-on executive education course at London Business School – this one face-to-face – called Financing the Entrepreneurial Business. There, among a room full of investors and entrepreneurs, you’ll study a series of captivating real-world cases and learn everything an entrepreneur – or an investor, for that matter – needs to know to handle the person who sits across the deal table and take an entrepreneurial business from start-up to exit. See https://www.london.edu/education-and-development/executive-education/topic/finance/financing-the-entrepreneurial-business#.WIVY_FyTQ-0 for info.
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Syllabus
Syllabus - What you will learn from this course
Week 1
Introduction: Why this course?
Module 1: Why taking venture capital is a bad idea
A widely-held notion in entrepreneurial circles is that the way to start and grow a thriving business is to come up with a great “idea”, write a great business plan, raise capital from angels or VCs, flawlessly execute the plan, and (Voila!) get rich! But it hardly ever happens that way. In fact, the vast majority of fast-growing companies never raise any venture capital. How do they do it, and how can you do it? This MOOC holds the answer. So let’s get going!
Week 2
Module 2: Matchmaker models
Welcome to Module 1! As you can see by the title of this first module, I hope to convince you in this chunk of the course that seeking (and taking) money from an angel or VC investor, at least early in the life of your venture, is an exceedingly bad idea. Here we go!
Week 3
Module 3: Pay-in-advance models
Welcome to Module 2! In this module we’re going to focus on matchmaker models (sometimes called marketplaces - eBay, Airbnb, and Uber and the like) and how you can put them to work in your business. We’ll see examples of both successes and failures and, as in Module 1, we’ll get several perspectives other than mine, including that of a VC investor who knows this kind of business intimately. Ready? Let’s go!
Week 4
Module 4: Subscription models
Welcome to Module 3! In this module we’ll see that taking a problem-solving perspective will be useful as we look at how to put pay-in-advance models to work in your business. You’re also going to learn from another failure story, this one in India - from rags to riches and back to rags again - as well as travel to Latin America to get the lay of the land there. And you’ll see that social entrepreneurs can use customer-funded models, too, even one tackling a problem as challenging as youth literacy! Here we go!
Week 5
Module 5: Scarcity models
Welcome to Module 4! In this module we’ll dig into the economics of subscription models, while exploring the key building blocks that underlie many other kinds of e-commerce models, too. Because subscription models have been, in my view, over-hyped, you’re going to hear about a handful of failure stories in this module, along with the story of a fast-growing online wine business that’s put a subscription model to work in a novel way. Are you ready for this one? Let’s go! John
Week 6
Module 6: Service-to-product models
Welcome to Module 5! In this module, we’re going to look at the most counter-intuitive of the five models: the scarcity model. You’ll get the story of a fashion retailer that’s making life difficult for others in its industry, you’ll get an extensive advice-laden interview with an entrepreneur who used scarcity to his benefit, and we’ll travel to India to explore today’s funding environment there. Let’s go!
Week 7
Module 7: Putting a customer-funded model to work in your business
Welcome to Module 6! In this module, we’re going to hear from an entrepreneur who started with nothing in 2003 and sold his business less than 8 years later for nearly $100 million. We’ll also hear from his partner, whose entry into the business midway into its journey raised its sights, and from a growth capital investor who backed the business in its later days without actually putting any capital into the business. Why? The customer-funded business didn’t need their money! The three sides of a deal - a very special story that will surely inspire you. Here we go!
FAQ
When will I have access to the lectures and assignments?
Access to lectures and assignments depends on your type of enrollment. If you take a course in audit mode, you will be able to see most course materials for free. To access graded assignments and to earn a Certificate, you will need to purchase the Certificate experience, during or after your audit. If you don't see the audit option:
What will I get if I purchase the Certificate?
When you purchase a Certificate you get access to all course materials, including graded assignments. Upon completing the course, your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile. If you only want to read and view the course content, you can audit the course for free.
Is financial aid available?
Yes. In select learning programs, you can apply for financial aid or a scholarship if you can’t afford the enrollment fee. If fin aid or scholarship is available for your learning program selection, you’ll find a link to apply on the description page.
Reviews
This is a fabulous course, a must take for aspiring and practicing entrepreneurs. Guides you how to survive and swim along the sharks.
I have learned a lot from this course. I think i have been changed after completing it. New ideas and better understanding for business.
Fantastic course, very precious advice. Gives fantastic perspectives on how to execute any entrepreneurial projects by focusing on generating cash and profitability from day 1.
I found this course quite interesting, it made be consider I perspective I previously hadn't. The only drawback is that it is rather slow in places.
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