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XHow to Startup: Mission Acquisition
Spencer Rascoff
Spencer Rascoff serves as executive chairman of dot.LA. He is an entrepreneur and company leader who co-founded Zillow, Hotwire, dot.LA, Pacaso and Supernova, and who served as Zillow's CEO for a decade. During Spencer's time as CEO, Zillow won dozens of "best places to work" awards as it grew to over 4,500 employees, $3 billion in revenue, and $10 billion in market capitalization. Prior to Zillow, Spencer co-founded and was VP Corporate Development of Hotwire, which was sold to Expedia for $685 million in 2003. Through his startup studio and venture capital firm, 75 & Sunny, Spencer is an active angel investor in over 100 companies and is incubating several more.
Numbers don’t lie, but often they don’t tell the whole story. If you look at the facts and figures alone, launching a startup seems like a daunting enterprise. It seems like a miracle anyone makes it out the other side.
- 90% of startups around the world fail.
- On average, it takes startups 2-3 years to turn a profit. (Venture funded startups take far longer.)
- Post-seed round, fewer than 10% of startups go on to successfully raise a Series A investment.
- Less than 1% of startups go public.
- A startup only has a .00006% chance of becoming a unicorn.
Ouch.
If your goal is to reach billion-dollar valuation and be publicly traded, the odds will never be in your favor. It does happen, of course, but it’s an exceedingly rare outcome for even the best startups. Holding on too tightly to that hypothetical can actually work against you, blinding you to the importance of planning for a different kind of exit.
It’s been said before, but it bears repeating—companies are bought, not sold. Better exits happen when someone sees the value your startup can bring to their business and is actively trying to purchase it, rather than you having to convince prospective buyers of what your services or products can bring to the table. In the latter scenario, your footing is much less secure and your odds of a successful transaction are inherently lower. You have much more power and are in a much better position when buyers are actively pursuing you.
Getting acquired may not feel like the fairy tale ending your startup deserves, but it’s more than just a back up plan—and it doesn’t happen by accident. Beginning to build the infrastructure today can give you much more control of what happens to your company in the future.
Here’s my advice to startup founders who want to be savvy about their acquisition strategy:
- Make a Buyer List: If your startup has successfully reached Series A or B funding, it’s time to put pen to paper and make a list of your top potential acquirers. Doing so does not indicate failure, just prudence. Who is in your space and could benefit from your company? What company would you like to be a part of? Who shares your mission? Questions like these can help guide you. Aim for having between 10 and 25 potential acquirers in mind.
- Make Connections: Now that you have your short list of companies, be intentional about reaching out and forging relationships with their leadership team. Shoot for the top—a CEO-level contact is ideal. Also consider speaking with people at Corporate Development, but don’t forget another key area of focus—the operating level.
Say, for example, you’re a rental software startup that serves the multifamily sector. Zillow would be a natural fit for your M&A list. Instead of just going after the Corp Dev contact, get to know the person at Zillow who runs the rental business. M&A deals need executive sponsors from the operating unit. Understanding what they do and how they do it is a big advantage when envisioning how your start up can fit into their ecosystem. - Make Those Connections Count: After you’ve connected with the right people at your potential acquirers, make sure you keep them in the loop. Every quarter or six months, reach out to them directly to keep them apprised of what’s going on in your business areas. Tell them what you’re working on. Share your big wins. Ask about potential business development partnerships. See how you might be able to sync up and compare notes.
If you go into these conversations in the name of collegial collaboration, you can form meaningful business relationships that can lead to the best possible outcome for both parties: your startup getting acquired and their company gaining new value.
We acquired 16 companies during my decade as CEO of Zillow. I estimate that the median length of time from the first time I met each of those 16 founders to when the acquisitions were completed was three years. It takes a long time to build relationships with strategic acquirers. Get started now.
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Spencer Rascoff
Spencer Rascoff serves as executive chairman of dot.LA. He is an entrepreneur and company leader who co-founded Zillow, Hotwire, dot.LA, Pacaso and Supernova, and who served as Zillow's CEO for a decade. During Spencer's time as CEO, Zillow won dozens of "best places to work" awards as it grew to over 4,500 employees, $3 billion in revenue, and $10 billion in market capitalization. Prior to Zillow, Spencer co-founded and was VP Corporate Development of Hotwire, which was sold to Expedia for $685 million in 2003. Through his startup studio and venture capital firm, 75 & Sunny, Spencer is an active angel investor in over 100 companies and is incubating several more.
https://twitter.com/spencerrascoff
https://www.linkedin.com/in/spencerrascoff/
admin@dot.la
LIVELY CEO Michelle Cordeiro Grant on Recognizing Opportunity and Building a Brand
04:13 PM | March 29, 2021
On today's episode of Behind Her Empire podcast, meet Michelle Cordeiro Grant, the founder and CEO of LIVELY, a direct-to-consumer company that makes lingerie and more with a focus on style and comfort.
Grant grew up with immigrant parents, thinking she wanted to become a doctor or a lawyer, but her true passion lay in working with products and building brands. At the end of a long and extremely successful career at brands including Victoria's Secret, Grant came to the realization that the $13 billion lingerie category was being dominated by a single brand and had a very narrow point of view.
This led her to go out on her own and create LIVELY, with the goal of building a brand that strived to reflect real, authentic, everyday women like herself. Grant watched the women walking down 5th Avenue in NYC, "and you could just see the confidence oozing when they had this handbag or the shoes."
She said she wanted to bring that kind of confidence, coupled with comfort to women. In 2016, she launched LIVELY,, which now has four stores and fosters a network of over 140,000 brand ambassadors whose online content embodied, "passion, purpose and competence."
She grew the business from its concept stage to a recent $100 million acquisition in just three years, beating the odds that many female-founded companies face.
On this episode, you'll hear from Grant as she describes the tactical steps she took to leave her career and build a company that she was passionate about, what it takes to build a brand from concept to acquisition and how she built a community of 140,000 ambassadors.
Michelle Cordeiro Grant is the founder and CEO of LIVELY. Previously, she was VP of merchandising at Thrillist and director/ senior merchant at Victoria's Secret.
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Yasmin Nouri
Yasmin is the host of the "Behind Her Empire" podcast, focused on highlighting self-made women leaders and entrepreneurs and how they tackle their career, money, family and life.
Each episode covers their unique hero's journey and what it really takes to build an empire with key lessons learned along the way. The goal of the series is to empower you to see what's possible & inspire you to create financial freedom in your own life.
ABL Space Hits Unicorn Status, Scores National Space Agency Contract
04:58 PM | March 25, 2021
Rocket launcher ABL Space Systems has achieved unicorn status, announcing a close of a $170 million Series B round, bringing the company's total valuation to $1.3 billion.
The funds come four years after ABL's founding and before its first planned launch into space in the second quarter of this year.
The El Segundo-based company said it's lined up 10 new customers, including the National Space Agency and U.S. Defense Department, for its launch vehicle called the RS1. Five of those new clients are commercial. They're on top of L2 Aerospace, ABL's first customer.
The rocket is able to be transported in shipping containers and can be sent from anywhere around the globe. It will launch two of L2 Aerospace's spacecraft into orbit.
ABL Space is competing against a few other private companies developing rockets. Virgin Orbit launched its LauncherOne rocket into orbit earlier this year. Relativity Space and Firefly Aerospace have launches scheduled for this year as well.
ABL chief executive Harry O'Hanley told CNBC that the additional funds will allow the company to scale up their launch cadence for future demand.
"It will also let us carefully start exploring more opportunities both in space tech and other domains," O'Hanley told CNBC.
T. Rowe Price Associates led the round, and Fidelity Management & Research and an unnamed global investment management firm joined as new investors.
Prior to this announcement, ABL had raised $49 million, with investors Venrock, New Science Ventures, Lynett Capital and Lockheed Martin Ventures. It also raised $44.5 million through contracts awarded by the Air Force Research Laboratory and AFWERX, with participation from the Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center.
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Breanna De Vera
Breanna de Vera is dot.LA's editorial intern. She is currently a senior at the University of Southern California, studying journalism and English literature. She previously reported for the campus publications The Daily Trojan and Annenberg Media.
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