Building A New-Venture Team: Bruce R. Barringer R. Duane Ireland

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Chapter 9

Building a New-
Venture Team
Bruce R. Barringer
R. Duane Ireland

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-1


Chapter Objectives
1 of 2

1. Identify the primary elements of a new-venture team.


2. Explain the term liabilities of newness.
3. Discuss the difference between heterogeneous and
homogenous founding teams.
4. Identify the personal attributes that strengthen a
founder's chances of successfully launching an
entrepreneurial venture.
5. Describe how to construct a “skills profile,” and
explain how it helps a start-up identify gaps in its new-
venture team.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-2


Chapter Objectives
2 of 2

6. Describe a board of directors and explain the


difference between inside directors and outside
directors.
7. Identify the two primary ways in which the
nonemployee members of a start-up’s new-venture
team help the firm.
8. Describe the concept of signaling and explain why
it’s important.
9. Discuss the purpose of forming an advisory board.
10. Explain why new venture firms use consultants for
help and advice.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-3
New-Venture Team

• New-Venture Team
– Is the group of founders, key employees, and advisors that
move a new venture from an idea to a fully functioning
firm.
– Usually, the team doesn’t come together all at once.
Instead, it is built as the new firm can afford to hire
additional personnel.
– The team also involves more than paid employees.
• Many firms have boards of directors, boards of advisors, and
professionals on whom they rely for direction and advice.

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Liabilities of Newness

• New ventures have a high propensity to


fail.
• The high failure rate is due in part to
Liabilities of liabilities of newness, which refers to the
Newness fact that new companies often falter
because the people involved can’t adjust
fast enough to their new roles and because
the firm lacks a track record of success.
• Assembling a talented and experienced
management team is one path that firms
can take to overcome these limitations.
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Separate Elements of a New-Venture Team

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The Founder or Founders
• If a founder sets up a company with other people, they are both a
founder and a co-founder.
• So Larry Page is not only Google's founder, but also a co-founder
with Sergey Brin.
• Co-founder is a term that exists to give equal credit to multiple
people who start a business together
• the term founder is used to describe the creator's relationship to the
business's history.
• The term CEO, on the other hand, is all about the position of the
person in the current hierarchy of the organization.
• The founders will always be the organization's founders.

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• A founder is someone who is
founder automatically gives a clear
indication that you were directly involved in
the creation of the company..
• This means he has a team working under him on
salary and no one shares the equity.
•  A co-founder is someone who is part of the
founding team. He/she can be an investor and a
co-founder or a skilled person working as a co-
founder
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The Founder or Founders

• Founder or Founders
– The characteristics of the founder or founders of a firm and
their early decisions have a significant impact on the
manner in which the new-venture team takes shape.
• Size of the Founding Team
– Studies have shown that 50% to 70% of all new ventures
are started by more than one individual.
– Experts disagree about whether new ventures started by a
team have an advantage over those started by a sole
entrepreneur.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-9


Advantages and Disadvantages of Starting
a Venture as a Team
1 of 2

• Advantages
– Teams bring more talent, resources, and ideas to a new
venture.
– Teams bring a broader and deeper network of social and
professional contacts to a new business.
– The psychological support that the cofounders of a
business can offer one another can be an important element
of a new venture’s success.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-10


Advantages and Disadvantages of Starting
a Venture as a Team
2 of 2

• Disadvantages
– Team members may not get along.
– If two or more people start a firm as “equals,” conflicts can
arise when the firm needs to establish a formal structure
and designate one person as the CEO.
– If the founders have similar areas of expertise, they may
duplicate rather than complement one another.
– Team members can easily disagree in terms of work habits,
tolerances for risk, levels of passion for the business, ideas
on how the business should be run, and similar key issues.

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Key Element of a Successful Founding
Team
• Heterogeneous rather
than
homogenous teams tend
to be more effective.
• This team is starting an
educational software
company.
• The woman on the left is
a former teacher, the
woman in the middle is a
software engineer, and the
man on the right has a
business background.
Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-12
Preferred Attributes of Sole Entrepreneurs
and Members of a New-Venture Team
• Higher Education
– Evidence suggest that important entrepreneurial skills are
enhanced through higher education
• Prior Entrepreneurial Experience
– Founders familiar with the entrepreneurial process are more
likely to avoid costly mistakes than founders without similar
experience.

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Factors that Contribute to a Founder or
Founders’ Success
• Relevant Industry Experience
– Founders with relevant industry experience are more likely
to have:
• Better established professional networks
• More applicable marketing and management skills
• Broad Social and Professional Network
– Founders with broad social and professional networks have
potential access to additional know-how, capital, and
customer referrals.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-14


Recruiting and Selecting Key Employees

• Recruiting Key Employees


– Start-ups vary in terms of how quickly they need to add
personnel.
– In some instances, the founders will work alone for a
period of time. In other instances, employees are hired
immediately.
– A skills profile is a chart that depicts the most important
skills that are needed and where skills gaps exist in a new
firm.

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Skills Profile for New Venture Fitness Drinks

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The Roles of the Board of the Directors
1 of 2

• Board of Directors
– If a new venture organizes as a corporation, it is legally
required to have a board of directors.
– A board of directors is a panel of individuals who are
elected by a corporation’s shareholders to oversee the
management of the firm.
– A board is typically made up of both inside directors and
outside directors.
• An inside director is a person who is also an officer of the firm.
• An outside director is someone who is not employed by the firm.

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The Roles of the Board of the Directors
2 of 2

• Formal Responsibility of the Board


– A board of directors has three formal responsibilities.
• Appoint the officers of the firm.
• Declare dividends.
• Oversee the affairs of the corporation.
• Frequency of Meetings and Compensation
– Most boards of directors meet three to four times a year.
– New ventures are more likely to pay their board members
in company stock or ask them to serve on a voluntary basis
rather than pay a cash honorarium.

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What a Board of Directors Can Do to Help
a Start-Up Get Off to a Good Start

Function Importance of Function

Although a board of directors has formal


Provide governance responsibilities, its most useful role is
Guidance to provide guidance and support to the firm’s
managers.

Another function of a board of directors is to lend


Lend legitimacy to a firm. Well-known and respected
Legitimacy board members bring instant credibility to a firm.

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Rounding out the Team: The Role of
Professional Advisors

Board of Advisors

Lenders and Investors Other Professionals

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Board of Advisors
1 of 3

• Board of Advisors
– A board of advisors is a panel of experts who are asked by
a firm’s managers to provide counsel and advice on an
ongoing basis.
– Unlike a board of directors, an advisory board possesses no
legal responsibility for the firm and gives nonbinding
advice.
– An advisory board can be established for general purposes
or can be set up to address a specific issue or need.

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Board of Advisors
2 of 3

• Board of Advisors (continued)


– Many people are more willing to serve on a company’s
board of advisors than its board of directors because it
requires less time and there is no potential legal liability
involved.
– Like the members of a board of directors, the members of a
company’s board of advisors provide guidance and lend
credibility to the firm.

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Board of Advisors
3 of 3

• Guidelines to Organizing a Board of Advisors


– Advisors will become disillusioned if they don’t play a
meaningful role in the firm’s development and growth.
– A firm should look for board members who are compatible
and complement one another in terms of experience and
expertise.
– When inviting people to serve on its board of advisors, a
company should carefully spell out to the individuals
involved the rules in terms of access to confidential
information.

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Lenders and Investors

• Lenders and Investors


– Lenders and investors have a vested interest in the
companies they finance, often causing them to become
very involved in helping the firms they fund.
– Like the other non-employee members of a firm’s new-
venture team, lenders and investors help new firms by
providing guidance and lending advice.
– In addition, a firm’s lenders and investors assume the
natural role of providing financial oversight.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-24


Ways Lenders and Investors Add Value to
an Entrepreneurial Firm
1 of 2

Provide insight into the


Help identify and recruit key
markets that the new venture
management personnel
plans to enter

Help the venture fine-tune its Serve as a sounding board


business model for new ideas

Serve on the new venture’s


Provide introductions to board of directors or board of
additional sources of capital advisors

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Ways Lenders and Investors Add Value to
an Entrepreneurial Firm
2 of 2

Help to arrange business


Recruit customers partnerships

Serve on the board of Provide a sense of stability


directors or board of advisors and calm

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Other Professionals

• Other Professionals
– The other professionals that make up a firm’s new-venture
team include attorneys, accountants, and business
consultants.
• Business Consultants
– A business consultant is an individual who gives
professional or expert advice.
– Business consultants fall into two categories: paid
consultants and consultants who are available for free or at
a reduced rate through a nonprofit or governmental agency.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-27


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means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise,
without the prior written permission of the publisher. Printed in the
United States of America.

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


publishing as Prentice Hall

Copyright ©2012 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall 9-28

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