Advice On Partnering With The Big and Powerful: Don\'t

October 7, 2008, 9:09 am ()

11

brstyle type="text/css" body { border-style: none; background: Window; color: WindowText; } #ljcutbegin { width: 100%; height: 1px; border: 1px dashed black; } #ljcutend { width: 100%; height: 1px; border: 1px dashed gray; } blockquote { border-left: 3px solid silver; padding-left: 10px; margin-left: 10px; } .bjspell { border-bottom: 1px dotted red; } } /stylepThe topic of partnerships comes up relatively frequently in startup circles.nbsp; The common question entrepreneurs have about partnerships with Some Big Powerful Company (SBPC)nbsp;can be reduced down to something like this:nbsp; img src="http://onstartups.com/Portals/150/images%5C/giant.jpg" mce_src="http://onstartups.com/Portals/150/images\/giant.jpg" alt="" title="" style="" align="right" border="" hspace="" vspace=""/p pbQ:nbsp; /b“My startup hasnbsp;the opportunity tonbsp;explore a partnership withnbsp;a Big, Powerful company.nbsp; What should I do?”/p pb(Short) Answer:nbsp; /bDon’t./p pOf course, there are exceptions, but on average, not knowing anything about you, your startup, the big company you are dealing with or the terms of the deal, I think this is good advice almost all of thenbsp;the time.nbsp; /p pLet’s dig a bit deeper into some of the analyis that I’d put into making the decision.nbsp; One warning/disclaimer:nbsp; I’m not a lawyer and don’t play one on TV.nbsp; This is not legal advice.nbsp; If you’re signing a deal, make sure to get competent counsel./p pbThoughts On Partnerships With Some Big Powerful Company/b/p p1.nbsp; bBewarenbsp;The Distraction:nbsp; /bBig companies have something you don’t.nbsp; Time.nbsp; They can commit one or more people to the ongoing task of “exploring partnership opportunities”.nbsp; You probably can’t.nbsp; You have a day job (and probably a night job too).nbsp; As such, the mere act of continued conversations with a big company to expore a partnership can be a major distraction for a startup.nbsp; Even if it leads to something (which it usually doesn’t), it takes anbsp;bunch of time and energy.nbsp; Beware this distraction risk.nbsp; You were warned./p p2.nbsp; bPR Glow Lasts A Day, Lock-In Lasts Longer:nbsp; /bOne of the reasons big partnerships are so tempting for a startup is you envision the positive press.nbsp; It adds legitimacy.nbsp; It makes your startup feel more “real”.nbsp; You can almost feel the warmth and glow that comes along with signing a partnership with a big, powerful company.nbsp; But, this glow is short-lived.nbsp; On the other hand, even after the PR glow fades, the terms of your deal don’t.nbsp; There are a number of tricky deal terms that could be prolematic later./p p3.nbsp; bThe True Cost of “Right of First Refusal”:nbsp; /bLet’s say Some Big, Powerful Company (SBPC) is interested in partnering with you.nbsp; One of the likely reasons is that you’re doing something innovative, and they “believe in innovation”.nbsp; Heck, they believe in it so much, the’re considering investing in you or buying you.nbsp; But, it’s a bit early for that.nbsp; So, as part of the partnership discussion, they ask for a seemingly innocuous deal term like “right of first refusal” on a sale.nbsp; Here’s how it works.nbsp; A few years down the road, you find some other company (SOC) that wants to buy you for $50 million.nbsp; Per the terms of your deal with SBPC, ibefore/i you can sell to SOC, SBPC would have the right to look at the deal, and the ioption/i to buy you for $50 million.nbsp; Now, at first glance, this doesn’t seem like that bad of a thing.nbsp; What’s the downside?nbsp; Wouldn’t you iwant/i to bring SBPC into the negotiations and hopefully drive the price even higher?nbsp; Since they’re not getting a discount, and are willing to pay up, what’s the problem?nbsp; The problem is that when you have a “right of first refusal” with SBPC, folks like SOC are less willing to enter into discussions.nbsp; From a game theoretic perspective, SOC knows that regardless of what they do, SBPC is going to have the opportunity to evaluate the deal and take it away (exercise their right of first refusal).nbsp; So, SOC thinks “I can’t win this game…someone else has the advantage.nbsp; The deck is stacked against me.nbsp; I’m not going to play.”nbsp; This is a very specific example, and it’s a nuanced issue, but hopefully you get the idea.nbsp; When you provide special rights to someone, you’re reducing the incentive of someone else to get into the game.nbsp; /p p4.nbsp; bWhat Do They Have To Lose?nbsp; What About You?nbsp; /bAs you overcome your initial excitement about all the opportunities that a partnership with SBPC would bring, it’s iextremeley /iimportant to try and think through the downside scenario.nbsp; What’s even more important is ensuring you have some way “out” in the event that things don’t work out the way everyone had hoped.nbsp; For example, let’s say you sign a distribution partnership with SBPC.nbsp; They volunteer to use their powerful sales resources to help sell what you have into their market.nbsp; It could be game-changing!nbsp; All they ask in return is that you exclusively work withnbsp;them.nbsp; So, in this kind of situation, the question to ask yourself is:nbsp; “What if they don’t sell?”nbsp; Could be intentional, could be uninentional, but the result is the same.nbsp; Dollars are not coming in your door.nbsp; And, unless you planned for this contingency, you’re sort of “stuck” into an exclusive arrangement where you can’t change your strategy to something that will deliver sales.nbsp; One simple answer might be to trigger any lock-in provisions to actual sales results.nbsp; So, if things are panning out, great.nbsp; You hold up your end of the deal.nbsp; If not, your hands are untied and you can do what you need to do./p p5.nbsp; bHow Are Incentives Likely To Change?nbsp; /bLets say for a second that the partnership works out and delivers real value beyond your wildest dreams (that’s highly unlikely, but it’s fun to dream sometimes).nbsp; What then?nbsp; How do the incentives of the parties (particularly them) change?nbsp; If things are going swimmingly well, is SBPC going to be happy?nbsp; Or, are they going to thinK:nbsp; “Hey, we’re delivering all this value through the partnership, and we’ve got this big Ramp;D team over here, wouldn’t it be in the best interests of iour/i customers if we provide a scalable, integrated, enterprise solution?”nbsp; This is a long-winded of saying that after you’ve demonstrated that there’s a market for your startup’s offering, and they’ve demonstrated that they can sell it into their customer-base, they may decide that they’d be much better at serviing this market than you are.nbsp; So, even when things work out well (which once again, is rare), it creates its own set of challenges.nbsp; /p p6.nbsp; bHave they succeeded with partnerships before?nbsp; /bNot all partnerships are created equal (or is that equally, I can never remember), and there are many different types of partnerships.nbsp; Technology partnerships.nbsp; Distribution partnerships.nbsp; Reseller partnerships.nbsp; All sorts of stuff.nbsp; When exploring a partnership with Some Big Powerful Company, one of the key things to figure out is if they’ve succeeded with iprior/i partnerships they’ve done.nbsp; If they haven’t done these kinds of things before, and you’re one of the first, you’re in for some pain.nbsp; In theory, big companies see the value in injecting some innovation into their market through partnerships with startups.nbsp; In practice, they usually don’t.nbsp; It’s just hard to get them to imove/i.nbsp; If SBPC has done partnerships before, how did they go?nbsp; Was there any value delivered to either side other than the press release and announcement?nbsp; /p pThat’s all I have for now.nbsp; It’s a complicated topic and one that (thankfully) I don’t have to deal a lot with right now in my current startup.nbsp; For those of you that made it this far, you mightnbsp;be tempted to write me an email describing your specific situation to get my thoughts.nbsp; Resist the temptation.nbsp; Although I’mnbsp;a startup junkie, looking at individual startups and individual cases just doesn’t “scale”.nbsp; Leave a comment andnbsp;tap the OnStartups community.nbsp; They’re much smarter folks anyways./p pAlso, if you’ve had experiences with partnerships with big, powerful companies (negative or positive), please share them.nbsp; I’m an entrepreneur, just like you, so I have a limited set of data points.nbsp; Share your wisdom, particularly if it was painful to acquire. br/p hr pLooking for other startup fanatics?nbsp; Request access to the a href="http://linkedin.onstartups.com/" mce_href="http://linkedin.onstartups.com"OnStartups LinkedIn Group/a.nbsp; 13,000+ members and growing daily./ppYou can also find a href="http://www.twitter.com/OnStartups" mce_href="http://www.twitter.com/OnStartups"OnStartups on Twitter/a. br/p pa href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/onstartups?a=osbXJD"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~a/onstartups?i=osbXJD" border="0"/img/a/pdiv class="feedflare" a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?a=22JmM"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?i=22JmM" border="0"/img/a a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?a=RT7Km"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?i=RT7Km" border="0"/img/a a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?a=M0wMm"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?i=M0wMm" border="0"/img/a a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?a=fxsvm"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?i=fxsvm" border="0"/img/a a href="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?a=JCJbm"img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~f/onstartups?i=JCJbm" border="0"/img/a /divimg src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/onstartups/~4/413998976" height="1" width="1"/

 

Tags: http, partnerships, feedburner, your, //feeds

  launch permalink  share  

Recommended News Content

Recommended Groups

nascar merchandise  4 members

Celebrity Gossip  16 members

Gabbr - General Discussion  119 members

Recommended Bookmarks

Pre Approved Car Finance  0 comments

Secured Car Loans  0 comments

Upside Down Car Loans  0 comments

Platform Beds & Modern Platform Bed Frames  0 comments

K20a.us  0 comments

Comments

No comments. Be the first to comment.

 

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Learn More
About Gabbr

Pixelate Project

Learn more about the Pixelate Project

Questions?
Contact Us

Community

Get acquainted with some of our most recent members.