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Venture Capital Articles

This is a collection of venture capital articles, most of them are from the now defunct American Venture Magazine.

I tried to get most of them in a collection here because most of the subjects here are very usefull and hard to find in other places.

 If you want to submit an article, please contact The Venture Guy (theventureguy AT unestilo DOT com). 



Recession Pricing Do's and Don'ts

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By: Reed Holden, DBA, and Mark Burton 

Pricing during an economic downturn or recession is tricky. Too often, companies simply cut prices to attract more sales. The right pricing, however, can help a company compete and even thrive during difficult economic times. Here are some pricing do's and don'ts for a recession:


DO:

* Define the value you offer to your customers. Any knowledge of the value you deliver to your customers gives you greater control over, and confidence in, your pricing. Interview your customers to find out how they view your products and services.

* Create a range of low- to high-value offerings. Bundle your products and services--and establish price accordingly--which enables you to appease both cost-conscious and value-conscious customers without cutting prices.

* Control company costs and reduce inefficiencies. Streamlining your company's processes and expenses is good for business in any economy. Reducing prices to generate more sales will not improve your business in the long term.

* Invest in innovation to offer something unique. Funnel funds into R&D so you have new products and services that give you negotiating flexibility with customers and sales growth. Innovation gives you an edge when customers are seeking something new to lift up their own financial prospects during an economic downturn or when coming out of one.

DON'T:

* Discount your products or services in order to compete. Getting into a price war with your competitors--without adjusting the value of the product or service--will just send you and your competition swirling into a downward pricing death spiral where no one wins.

* Reduce prices on your high-value products and services. During a recession, a better strategy is to keep high-value products priced appropriately, but focus on selling more low-value products and services.

* Play poker with price-driven customers. When cost-driven customers threaten to take their business elsewhere, either: (1) confidently point out the unique value your product and service offers, which justifies the price you charge, or (2) let the customer take his business and badgering to your competitor instead.

About the Authors:

 Reed Holden, DBA, and Mark Burton are leading pricing gurus and cofounders of Holden Advisors (holdenadvisors.com), a consultancy that works with business-to-business firms to design and implement value-driven pricing strategies that increase profitability in highly competitive markets. They are coauthors of Pricing with Confidence: 10 Ways to Stop Leaving Money on the Table (John Wiley & Sons, 2008).

 

Guy Kawasaki of Garage Tech Ventures

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Your background is with Apple Computers. How does your experience at a big corporation aid in development of early stage companies?

Apple was a large corporation divided into several little divisions. Each separate division acted as its own little company. My badge number at Apple was 5041, so I was there fairly early, but not employee number 3 by any means.

How long were you with Apple?

I stayed there 7 years, concentrating mostly on software and new product launches.

Read more...
 

Early Stage Employment Concerns

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By: Mark Howitson

Employee vs. Independent Contractor

Whether a person is an employee or independent contractor is determined by law, and the law often disregards what the parties actually call their relationship.  Emerging growth companies are tempted to call someone an independent contractor rather than employee because independent contractors do not receive benefits and do not need to be paid minimum wage.  Also, sometimes an individual wants to be considered an independent contractor for any number of personal reasons.

Read more...
 

Behind the Money Curtain

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by: Vince Occhipiniti

At Woodside Fund, we believe it shouldn't be a mystery. Understanding due diligence improves the information flow between venture funds and potential entrepreneurs. Better information leads to better investment decisions and better long term partnerships. In my opinion,

Due diligence is:

Last Updated ( Friday, 17 October 2008 08:45 ) Read more...
 

Book review: eBoys

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By Randall E. Stross - Crown Publishers

It's called the first inside account to the world of venture capital, but after reading this book three years ago and picking it up again, it is the inside world of making a business happen - fast.

Last Updated ( Friday, 17 October 2008 08:42 ) Read more...
 
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