finished the course
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- [[./mba/ch59.org][Chapter 59. Read Financials like a book & find patterns in data]]
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- [[./mba/ch60.org][Chapter 60. How to Value Public Firms the Easy Way]]
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** seciton 12 - Initial Public Offering (IPO)
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** section 12 - Initial Public Offering (IPO)
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- [[./mba/ch64.org][Chapter 64. How an IPO works]]
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- [[./mba/ch65.org][Chapter 65. How DCF (Discount Cash Flow) analysis works]]
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- [[./mba/ch66.org][Chapter 66. Valuing a Company vs Competition]]
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** section 13 - management analytical frameworks
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- [[./mba/ch70.org][Chapter 70. What is management consulting + frameworks they use]]
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** section 14 - alternatives and turnarounds
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- [[./mba/ch75.org][Chapter 75. Financinc Alternatives + Why to avoid Debt]]
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- [[./mba/ch76.org][Chapter 76. Harvesting an Investment, Leveraged Buyouts, Troubled Ventures and Turnarounds]]
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** section 15 - leftover content / goal setting workshop
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- [[./mba/ch81.org][Chapter 81. Most important ivestment, Great marketing is crucial]]
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* Links
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- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4317556#overview][S13:L70 course video]]
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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4317496#overview][S13:L71 course video]]
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* notes
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** Management consuluting
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- assume we need help
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*** what consultants do
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- analyze problems
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- financial statement preparation
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- enviornmental preparation
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*** it consulting
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- merger
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- setting up offshore bank
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- online banking access
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*** hr staffing
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- outsource hiring
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** pro/con working in consulting
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*** positives
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- money
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- interesting
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- travel
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*** negatives
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- brutal hours
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- some clients hate you
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- long path to partner
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** resume tips
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- list of html links
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- networking is more important
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** analysis frameworks
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*** bcg matrix
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#+OPTIONS: toc:nil
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#+PROPERTY: header-args:plantuml :cache yes :results file :exports both :file bcg-matrix.png
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**** BCG Matrix Overview
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This chart maps *market share* (horizontal axis) against *market growth* (vertical axis).
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- X-axis: Low → High *Market Share*
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- Y-axis: Low → High *Market Growth*
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**** Text Diagram (quick view)
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#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
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↑ High Market Growth
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| ┌────────────────────────────┬────────────────────────────┐
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| │ Question Marks │ Stars │
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| │ (Low Share, High Growth) │ (High Share, High Growth) │
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| ├────────────────────────────┼────────────────────────────┤
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| │ Dogs │ Cash Cows │
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| │ (Low Share, Low Growth) │ (High Share, Low Growth) │
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└────┴────────────────────────────┴────────────────────────────┘
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Low Market Share High →
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#+END_EXAMPLE
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*** S.W.O.T analysis
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#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
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┌─────────────────┬─────────────┐
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│ strengths │ weaknesses │
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├─────────────────┼─────────────┤
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│ opportunities │ threats │
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┴─────────────────┴─────────────┘
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#+END_EXAMPLE
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*** product life cycle
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1. y-axis is sales profit
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2. x-axis is time
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**** along the x-axis
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1. development
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2. intro
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3. growth
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4. maturity
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5. decline
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*** porter 5 forces model
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analyze based on 5 different forces
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1. competition
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2. substitutes
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3. new entrants
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4. buyer power
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5. supplier power
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*** barriers to entry
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- patents
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- market
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- produce stuff at scale
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*** risks
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- look at sec.gov to find
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- risks
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- weakneseses
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- also you can call the company's competitor
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** quantitative stuff
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- trends in data
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- every chart tells a story
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#+title: Section 13 | Lesson 75 - financing alternatives
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#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
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#+OPTIONS: H:6
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* Links
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- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4284470#overview][S14:L75 course video]]
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* notes
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the company is mature
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but it is not growing
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** financing alternatives
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- equity investors are better for startups
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- if you are in debt and miss a payment, it is death
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- if you must take debt, do it as an LLC so they can't come after you
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*** additional sources
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- raising money is tough
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- do not pay upfront fees to consultants to raise money
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- they are fraudulant
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- you pay people AFTER THEY EARN THE CASH
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** commercial & venture bank lending
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- commerical loans are possible with a few years of operating history
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- they want to see cash flow projections based on a few years of history
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*** don't really care about assets
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- unless you are extremely liquid
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** VC vs Debt firms
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- VC love risk
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- Debt firms hate risk
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- interest on debt
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- warrants on stock options
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*** equity
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- primary for venture capital
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- secondary for debt firms
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*** timing
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- beginning venture capital
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- ending debt firm
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** reasons not to do debt financing
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- minimum 2+ years financials
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- few tangible assets
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- low revenue (tech)
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- tech firms always have this problem
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- 1-2 employees are too valuable
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** credit card debt
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- 50% of startups use this
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- if your CR rating sucks you can't raise debt
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** foreign investor funding
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- US gov lets you buy lawful permanent resident status if you invest $1mn in a startup and create or preserve 10+ jobs
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- minimum drops to 500k if in a rural or high unemployment region
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** government loans
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- native americans
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- hawaiians
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- women
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- veterans
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** vendor financing
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- "2/10 net 30"
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*** how it works
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- you buy goods on credit from a vendor
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- if you pay back before 10 days, you get discounted 2%
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- if you pay back between 10-30 days you pay the full amount
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- so always pay before the 10 days, because then you avoid an effective compound rate of over 40%
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*** example
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- you have a buyer lined up for 1000$ worth of goods, assume he pays you upfront
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- vender hands you goods, you pay vender $980 immediately due to 2% discount under 10 days
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- hand over goods to buyer
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- pocket 20$
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** vendor leasing
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- you lease equipment instead of a money loan
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- part of payment is in warrants
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** other financing
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- morgage if company owns the business
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- direct public offerings
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- you can get a loan of up to $1mn through a syndicate of many investors
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** bootstrapping
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- pay for it yourself
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- better to use Other People's Money
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- set up LLC so protect family
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#+title: Section 13 | Lesson 76 - financing alternatives
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#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
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#+OPTIONS: H:6
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* Links
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- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4301162#overview][S14:L76 course video]]
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* notes
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** Harvesting an investment
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- asset can be transferred to investors
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- company can be sold and cash distributed to investors
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- company goes public and shares are distributed 6 months post IPO lockup
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** Planning an exit strategy
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- need to explain liquidity targets to investors when you are raising capital
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- make sure you are both thinking the same way
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- have a lawyer prepare the documents
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** Buyouts
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- "leveraged buyout" LBO
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- financed using debt
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- must have great cash flows to secure loans
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*** firms
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- many public companies partner with private equity firms and go private
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- goal is to go public again at some point
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**** example firms
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- KKR
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- TPG
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*** management buyout (MBO)
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- when management buys the company
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- loans
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- investors
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- their own money
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- gains
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- independence
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- control
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*** Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
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- employees buy the company
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- all employees own it not just management
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** Initial Public Offering (IPO)
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*** what is an initial public offering
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- private company sells shares to the public through a stock exchange
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- this allows
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- company to raise capital for growth
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- early investors and employees to convert their holdings to cash
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*** shares
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**** types of shares
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***** primary
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- newly issued shares created by the company for the IPO
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- when sold to outsider investors the money goes to the company's treasury
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- used to fund expansion, pay debt, invest in new projects
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***** secondary
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- already existing shares held by people "shareholders"
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- it's the shareholders that make money when selling their shares
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- venture capital firms
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- founders or employees that want to cash out
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**** in practice
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- most IPOS are a mix
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- primary raises growth capital
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- secondary is the payout for whoever bought in early
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**** dilution
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- when primary shares are made and sold, existing shares are worth less
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- company gets money to raise to invest in projects that can increase it's overall value in cluding the diluted shares
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*** structure, underwriting and listing requirements
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- underwriting spread is fee the investment bank gets (usually up to 7%)
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**** listing requirements for NASDAQ
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- share price >= $4, at least 1M publicly held shares
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- several years of operating history and financials
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- must have a Board of Directors (BOD) with independent members
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- oversee management
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- ensure regularatory compliance
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- protect shareholders
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- maintain audient, compensation and nominating committees
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** Troubled Ventures and Turnarounds
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*** basics
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- turnarounds don't work in tech
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- very rare exceptions
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- steve jobs at apple
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- IBM
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- this is due to 'secular decline'
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- A secular decline is a persistent, structural decrease in growth, productivity, or demand that continues for many years regardless of normal economic ups and downs.
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*** corporate raiders
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- dont let sentiment cloud your judgement
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- it's a zombie. shoot it and move on.
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- liquidate
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- sell it
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*** ways to die
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- financial distress :: when cash on hand is insufficient to pay for current liabilities
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- load default :: one missed payment and it is over
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- acceleration provision :: when a firm defaults on just one payment then all future payments are due immediately
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- cross default provision :: one late payment on one loan causes all loans to go into default
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- foreclosure :: the legal process where lenders collect and take stuff from you
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- insolvent :: negative book equity
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*** reqlities
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- 25% of companies go belly up within 2 years of being founded
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- more than 50% of companies shut down within 4 years of being founded
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*** bankruptcy law
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- a legal code that has many chapters that protect you
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**** chapter types
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***** types
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- chapter 7 :: how people / firms liquidate stuff
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- chapter 9 :: how cities deal w/ bankruptcy
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- chapter 11 :: how firms deal w/ bankruptcy
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- chapter 12 :: how farms deal w/ bankruptcy
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***** general rules
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- chapters 1, 3, 5 :: general bankruptcy rules
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- chapter 15 :: trustees that help banks
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- chapter 13 :: restructuring personal debt
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***** most important
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- chapter 7 - liquidating
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- chapter 11 - restructuring
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**** chapter 7 liquidation
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- after a person / company files for bankruptcy then a court supervises the liquidation process
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**** capter 11 bankruptcy filing
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- temporarily protects a distressed firm so they can restructure or pay off debt
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***** types of restructuring
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- operations restructuring :: incraese revenue or cut expenses
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- asset restructuring :: selling assets to improve ratios
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- day sales outstanding
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- inventory conversion period
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***** this can save a company
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- 65% of companies reorganize
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- 28% liquidate
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- 7% merge with another firm
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***** steps
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1. file for chapter 11 with one of 300 bankruptcy courts
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2. a bankruptcy judge accepts or doesn't accept petition
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3. if no fraud a company has 120 days to make a plan
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4. 60 days is then given to creditors to accept the plan
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5. investors then vote
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#+title: Section 15 | Lesson 81 - Important Investment, Great Marketing
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#+HTML_HEAD: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="../_share/media/css/org-media-sass/categories/business.css" />
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#+OPTIONS: H:6
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* Links
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- [[./../mba-main.org][TOC | Business]]
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- [[https://www.udemy.com/course/an-entire-mba-in-1-courseaward-winning-business-school-prof/learn/lecture/4307066#overview][S15:L81 course video]]
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* notes
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** term sheet
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- non binding
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- basic terms
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- you can do it for free
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** chat explanation
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*** Purpose
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- Non-binding summary of key terms before drafting full legal contracts.
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- Serves as a blueprint for the final agreement.
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*** Common Use Cases
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- Startup investments (VC/angel funding)
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- Mergers and acquisitions (M&A)
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- Partnerships and joint ventures
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- Large financing deals
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- Real estate or major service agreements
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*** Key Sections in a Term Sheet
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**** Valuation & Investment
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- Company valuation
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- Amount to be invested
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- Price per share / equity percentage
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**** Rights & Governance
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- Board seats
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- Voting rights
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- Investor protections or veto rights
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**** Founder & Team Provisions
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- Vesting schedule
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- Roles and responsibilities
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- Restrictions (e.g., non-compete, full-time requirement)
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**** Financial Terms
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- Liquidation preference
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- Dividends (if any)
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- Anti-dilution protections
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**** Exit & Transfer Terms
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- Rules for selling the company
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- Buyout scenarios
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- Rights of first refusal / co-sale rights
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**** Legal & Administrative Terms
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- Closing conditions
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- Due diligence requirements
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- Timelines for completing the deal
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*** Binding vs Non-Binding
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- Most of the document is *non-binding*
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- Binding parts typically include:
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- Confidentiality
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- Exclusivity / no-shop clause
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- Dispute resolution
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*** Why a Term Sheet Matters
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- Aligns expectations early
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- Reduces legal costs
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- Prevents misunderstandings
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- Speeds up negotiation and contract drafting
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** minimal structure for a term sheet
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1. Parties
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2. Purpose of agreement
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3. Investment amount / contribution
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4. Ownership or percentage rights
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5. Governance (decision-making, voting)
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6. Financial terms (profit split, dividends)
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7. Restrictions (non-compete, full time, IP ownership)
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8. Exit terms (what happens if someone leaves)
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9. Timeline / closing conditions
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10. Binding clauses (confidentiality, exclusivity)
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