Venture capital is a method of financing a business start-up in exchange for an equity stake in the firm. The risk of investment loss and the potential for future payout are both very high. As a shareholder, the venture capitalist's return is dependent on the growth and profitability of the business. Return is earned when the business is sold to another owner or it "goes public" with an initial public offering (IPO). The venture capitalist can then "exit" by selling his shareholdings in the company.
Venture capital funds revolutionary social networking services
Facebook is one example of a entrepreneurial idea that benefited from venture capital financing. The Menlo Park-based firm has seen immense success since their launch in 2004. Unfortunately for Facebook's venture capitalist investors (Accel Partners, Greylock Partners and Meritech Capital), the IPO has not performed as well as expected.
Due to their risky nature, most venture capital investments are done with pooled investment vehicles. Investors combine their financial contributions into one fund, which is then used to invest in a number of companies. This way, investors are diversifying their portfolio and spreading out risk. Venture capitalists are gambling that returns from successful investments will outweigh investments lost in failed ventures. Venture capitalists are selective in their investments. Innovative technology, growth potential and a well-developed business model are among the qualities they look for. Growth potential is the most important quality, given the high risk a VC firm assumes by investing. The priority for VC firms is high financial return and a successful exit within three to seven years.Venture funding is most suitable for businesses having large up-front capital requirements that cannot be financed by debt or other alternatives. These characteristics usually best fit companies in high-tech industries, which explains the venture capital boom of the late 1990s. The technology firms of Silicon Valley and Menlo Park were primarily funded by venture capital. These industries saw a surge in public interest that eventually generated large returns for VC firms.
A VC firm's contributions often extend beyond financial funding. To increase the likelihood of high returns, it is in the venture capitalists' interests to nurture their investments. Any guidance and expertise venture capitalists offer to start-up firms can be instrumental to success.