Site icon Re-Imagining Corporate Innovation with a Silicon Valley Perspective

Corporate Venture Capital’s Role in Innovation Part 3: Setting Up a CVC Organization

In the first part of the series on corporate venture capital I explored how the disruption of institutional VCs (IVCs) and the imperative for corporations to innovate provide an opportunity to corporate VCs (CVCs) to make their mark in the startup ecosystem and be viewed as viable and valuable financing sources to private companies. In the second part I provided more context on CVCs by presenting a brief history of corporate venture capital, and detailing the characteristics of CVCs during the dot-com period and today. In this blog I discuss when corporations should be establishing venture funds, I introduce a framework for creating venture funds and discuss two of the dimensions in this framework.

Three questions to ask before starting a corporate venture group

Over the last year several corporations have asked me for advice on the venture groups they plan to form. These days corporate venture funds are announced on a weekly basis (and here). Before providing my advice I ask three questions.

First, whether the CEO is ready to lead the corporation’s innovation goals, and see the venture group as one of the means for achieving these objectives rather than the panacea. I have already discussed the CEO’s role in establishing the company’s innovation culture. The CEO’s tenure, contract, and staying power with the corporation are two additional important factors for the success of these initiatives. Based on my experience, a new CEO who has signed a multi-year employment contract with the company, or an existing CEO in the beginning of renewed contract, typically approaches the creation of a venture group very differently from an existing CEO at the end of her employment contract. Several partners of newly established CVCs have also admitted that CEO tenure is one of their major concerns regarding the long term prospects of their venture groups, their investment efforts and the commitments they make to their portfolio companies.

The CEO’s staying power with the corporation is also very important.  Innovations, particularly disruptive innovations, may take several years to achieve.  Think of how long it has taken Amazon to develop AWS, or Apple to develop the iPhone and how these innovations benefited from the staying power of Bezos and Jobs.  HP, on the other hand, had six CEOs over the past 15 years; something that hasn’t helped it recapturing its innovation roots.  The CEO must be able to continue supporting the innovation initiatives regardless of the pressure she may be receiving from the markets and shareholders for short term financial performance.  This is also why in the second post of this series I spoke about timelines and how institutional VCs investing in early stage companies think in terms of 7-10 year horizons for a startup to reach maturity.  Innovative companies are led by CEOs with long tenure and staying power.

Second, I ask why the corporation wants to start a venture group and what will be the mission of the group. Typically corporations create venture groups because they believe they provide the best way to invest in the startup ecosystem instead of providing them with financial returns. I have found that corporations invest in the startup ecosystem for the following reasons:

  1. Create an acquisition pipeline including identifying opportunities for the acquisition of talent.
  2. Support existing or prospective partners, including accelerating the creation of a partner ecosystem around a particular product, e.g., IBM’s Watson Fund that supports the Watson cognitive computing platform, SAP’s HANA Fund that supports the HANA big data platform, and Microsoft’s Azure Fund that supports the Azure cloud computing platform.
  3. Understand a sector and the associated market with its dynamics.
  4. Provide over the horizon view of new technologies and business models.

It is important to understand which of these reasons are important to the corporation and how they relate to its innovation goals. Depending on how a corporation prioritizes among the four investment reasons provided above, conflicting behaviors that diffuse the effectiveness of the corporate venture group could arise. For example, business units within the same corporation may not share the same over the horizon perspective about a particular technology. Moreover, central R&D organizations always believe they have the best and most updated perspective on a technology. Therefore, before creating a corporate venture group the list of reasons provided above not only has to be created but it has to be prioritized.

Third, I ask whether the corporation has considered other options instead of forming a venture group. Corporations have four investment options. They can invest:

  1. Off the corporate balance sheet. For example, Intel’s $740M investment in Cloudera.
  2. Directly from a business unit. For example, Cisco’s investment in Mavenir Systems, and Cisco’s and VMWare’s investment in Hytrust.
  3. In an institutional venture firm. For example, 10 corporations had invested in the Java fund that was managed by Kleiner Perkins and many other corporations have invested in the institutional venture funds.
  4. Through their corporate venture arm. For example, Intel Capital’s big data investments, e.g., Guavus, MongoDB, etc.

I have the following recommendations for when to create a corporate venture group:

  1. If creating an acquisition pipeline, or supporting partners are of high priority, then the corporation needs to establish a venture group. Moreover, if the creation of acquisition pipeline is of particularly high priority, then the corporation should consider establishing a venture fund and investing in IVCs whose focus is consistent with the corporation’s acquisition interests.
  2. If understanding sectors in breadth is very important, then the corporation needs to establish a venture group and invest as an LP in IVCs whose investment theses are consistent with those of the corporation.
  3. If understanding markets and geographies where the corporation doesn’t have direct access, and providing over the horizon views are of high priority, then instead of creating its own fund the corporation should consider investing in several top tier IVCs as a regular LP, again paying attention to the compatibility of each IVC’s investment theses and portolio. This may be a more economical and effective way to proceed. To understand why consider two notable examples: Kodak Ventures and Intel Capital. Kodak pioneered digital photography and photo sharing, and even though it established a corporate ventures group in 2000, squandered its lead in these sector and we know the rest. Intel made big bets on Wi-Fi first with the Centrino chip, later with Intel Capital’s investments in WiMax. Yet, despite its lead in the Wi-Fi sector, the corporation has missed the mobility revolution and to date remains a small player.
  4. Finally, I recommend that the CVCs of corporations in industries with long innovation cycles, e.g., agriculture, oil and gas, etc. CVCs should always be actively collaborating with IVCs.

The five dimensions to employ while setting up a corporate venture group

When considering the creation of a venture group I use five dimensions of a framework I have developed (Figure 1):

  1. Strategy.
  2. People.
  3. Incentives.
  4. Deal flow.
  5. Governance.

Figure 1: The dimensions corporations must consider for their venture group

Strategy

The corporation must establish a long-term strategy for the venture group. This means that the corporation should be thinking of multiple funds over which to execute this strategy, rather than a single fund, as well as the optimal size of each fund. In this way while starting to invest fund 1, the corporation and its venture group are already thinking about funds 2, 3, and 4. The components of the strategy include:

Many corporations these days are committing $100M for their inaugural venture fund. The corporation must think why $100M is the right amount for accomplishing the venture group’s objectives. For this reason it is instructive to look at institutional venture firms and their funds.

Institutional venture funds have a 10-year life. New investments are made during the first five years of the fund, and most typically during the first three. If the fund invests in early stage companies then an amount equal to 100% of each initial investment is allocated for follow on investments to these companies, implying that approximately 50-60% of the fund will need to be allocated for follow on investments to the most promising of the portfolio companies. At least 30% of the allocated follow on amount is invested during the first five years of the fund’s life to these companies. This is because early stage companies typically raise money more frequently in the beginning of their lifecycle as they build their solution, recruit their initial customers and try to establish themselves in their target market. If the IVC decides not to continue investing in a particular portfolio company then the amount reserved becomes available for new investments.

If we assume that the CVC follows a similar pattern to invest a $100M fund, i.e., 3-4 years, then we can expect an investment pace of $25-35M/year, since there is no management fee. Most CVC groups, particularly the newly formed ones, typically have 2-3 investing partners. This means that each investing partner is expected to invest on the average $8-15M/year between new and follow on investments. Assuming the CVC invests $1-3M in each early stage company, regardless of whether the CVC leads the round or is just part of an investment syndicate, and expects to make follow on investments to 40% of this portfolio, then creating a portfolio of 25-30 investments over the life of the fund is possible, implying 8 or so investments per year. Finally, assuming that the group invests in 1-2% of the business plans it considers, and with the above analysis in mind, it is likely that a $100M fund will only enable the corporation to use the CVC group only along a specific investment thesis, such as Nokia’s Connected Car FundAccel’s Big Data Fund, and DCM’s Android Fund, rather than along multiple markets.

If the corporation wants to focus its venture fund on late stage investments, then $100M allocation implies a small number of meaningful investments (8-12) with $8-10M per investment.   This is the main reason the amount has to be large enough as a percentage of the total amount invested in the company so that the corporation can have information rights as a result of the investment which will enable it to learn through its association with the private company.

Adopting a particular strategy has implications on investment timelines. For example, for investments that support existing business lines and models, it would make sense to expect returns within 3-4 years after the initial investment is made. For investments targeting new but market-validated models, expect returns within 4-6 years after the initial investment is made. Finally, for investments targeting disruptive technologies and business models, expect returns within 7-10 years after the initial investment is made.

My recommendations regarding strategy include:

  1. Focus in the same areas where the parent is working. Successful CVCs, e.g., Johnson and Johnson Development Corporation, Comcast Ventures, tend to do exactly that.
  2. Funds of $100M should be pursuing a single stage investment strategy. Larger funds, e.g., $300-500M, may consider pursuing a multi-stage strategy.
  3. For funds pursuing a single stage strategy around early stage investments, a potential fund allocation could be 30% of the investments to support existing business models, 50% towards new but market-tested models, and 20% towards disruptive models, thinking that 20% disruption may lead to 80% value for the corporation.
People

Venture capital is a peoples business. Therefore, very much like is the case with startups, the quality of the people associated with the corporate venture capital group are a good indication of its success prospects. In my framework I call for six teams that need to be associated with the corporate venture group.

The size and composition of the investment team are particularly important. The team needs to be large enough for deploying each fund and to consist of more than investing partners. The partners themselves should be experienced enough investors a) for the entrepreneur to want to collaborate with them, b) to quickly filter out inappropriate investment opportunities, but pick out the right opportunities. As a VC I have always learned that it is easy to reject an investment opportunity. Picking the right opportunity to invest and generate financial returns is much harder as the fund performance shown in Figure 2 demonstrates.

Figure 2: US Venture Fund Returns 2004-2013

As Figure 2 shows few institutional venture funds achieve even a 1.5-2x ROI, i.e., at that ROI a corporation may double its investment on the venture fund. But some rejections prove to be very expensive, as do many selections (see the list of funds with low ROI).

  1. Access to business and process knowledge, as well knowledge of specific geographies that can be invaluable as the startup considers international expansion.
  2. Sales, marketing and recruiting mentorship and execution from corporate executives.

I recommend that the members of this team can come from the corporation’s business units.

In the next post we will continue presenting this framework by discussing incentives for the people in the corporate venture group, deal flow generation and governance issues.

© 2015-2020 Evangelos Simoudis

Exit mobile version