The Idiocy of Investing “Everything” in a New Business
Prosperous entrepreneurs are very much like farmers in that they plant and sow seeds for a lucrative harvest. So what constitutes a successful harvest? And what is the right amount of savings to plant in a new business?
When I first started conducting entrepreneurship workshops, I was surprised by the number of questions entrepreneurs asked whenever I talked about the investment performance of small businesses. Audience members would call out “talk slower,” “talk louder,” or “say that again.” And even though these workshops were primarily focused on other subjects, any reference to protecting the investment value of a founder’s cash contributions to a new business would send the workshop discussion seriously off track.
Eventually I realized that startup entrepreneurs, especially first-time entrepreneurs, don’t think of themselves as “investors.” Because I come from a Wall Street background, it’s natural for me to think about any kind of business funding in terms of future investment value. But that’s not natural for most first-time entrepreneurs. They could put all their savings into a startup enterprise and still not think much about generating a positive financial return on their invested cash.
Why not?
One entrepreneur helped me appreciate that the investment decisions of first-time entrepreneurs are driven by their passion and sense of commitment to their company. The distinctions are subtle but meaningful. He said that up until my workshop, he always thought that investors were “other people.” If a neighbor put $50,000 into his new tech company, the neighbor was an investor. If he put the same amount of money into his company, then he was just “doing what had to be done.”
When I asked the technologist how he determined the right amount of money to put into his startup, he said that he always assumed that he would fund his company for as much as he was able. Whether or not the added cash contribution was a “wise investment” was not ever, as he said, “on his radar screen.” His funding decisions were based entirely on one simple factor. He said, “If my company needs it, then I will supply it—whatever it takes.”
Aha! “Whatever it takes!”
Who would think that this phrase would be the source of so much pain and money loss in the small business community! On the surface, the expression represents the single-minded determination of startup entrepreneurs to follow through on their ideas and do something really special in the marketplace. But over time, and as entrepreneurs invest more of their heart, soul and savings in their young companies, their passion to do “whatever it takes” can cause them to “over-invest” in their companies. The insanity stops only when they run out of cash, credit lines, or supportive family members.
No business owner should ever say “I put everything into my company.” It’s how business owners lose their homes, their savings, and their self-worth all because they continued to invest beyond what they can afford to lose. It doesn’t have to be.
You don’t need a college education or an MBA from a prestigious university to invest your savings with purpose. From the moment you transfer funds from a personal bank account into a business bank account you are a business investor.
When you start to think and act more like a business investor, you’ll find that your actions become more thoughtful, strategic, and smart. Fewer situations will scare you and you will be empowered to solve problems with less angst and mind-numbing indecision.
And I bet you will stand taller as you talk about your company’s prospects to lenders and investors all because you understand the fine points of earning a positive financial return on your invested time and savings.
Owners of privately-held companies don’t have to achieve the same home run financial returns as venture capitalists. But for new business owners across America, I recommend that they develop a business plan to create a business that is worth three to four times invested cash, with base salary not included in the calculation.
This means if you invest $20,000 in a business, seek to build the salable value of that business to $60,000 to $80,000. Otherwise, your savings are likely to be better off in the Vanguard S&P 500 index fund. And if your particular new business is not likely to grow in value, bootstrap it.