4. Who we are
• An innovation agency - not just consultants, we
advise and bring whatever extra resources are
needed alongside organisations to make things
happen
• For creative businesses and cultural organisations
and the parts of the public, education and not-for-
profit sector that work with them
5. Who we work for, with, funded by
http://www.golantmediaventures.com/projects
6. Agenda
09:00 Registration/coffee
09:30 Welcome
09:35 Overview public/private/hybrid models in context of public and private financing
09:45 Intellectual Property as a driver of high growth
10:00 European funding opportunities
10:15 GrowthAccelerator and the Business Support Service
10:30 Innovation funding for Creative, Digital and Design Companies
10:45 Case Studies: Cinegi and Miracle Theatre/Live & Digital
11:05 Private finance: structures to support, hybrid with public
11:15 Understanding the private investment in innovation market
11:30 Coffee & networking
12:00 End
7. Funding landscape
• UK & EU
• Public & private
• R&D, enterprise support, equity investment,
debt finance…
8. What innovation funding needs
• Compelling market opportunity
– Market dynamics, focus, segmentation
– Sizing, growth justification
– Competitor analysis and positioning
• Clear portfolio of products, services, experiences…
• Identifiable and defensible IP (and other intangibles)
• Business models
– Revenue models, pricing, profitability
– Delivery models, partnering, costs
– Channel/distribution strategy
11. Creative Europe
2014-2020 programme has a budget of €1.46 billion.
Media
At least 56% of this budget will be allocated to the MEDIA sub-programme, supporting
training, project development, and the distribution and promotion of European audiovisual
works
Culture
Around 31% of the budget will go towards the Culture sub-programme for performing and
visual arts, with a further13% allocated to a new cross-sectoral strand.
Creative Europe Desk UK
http://www.mediadeskuk.eu/about-us/about-us/
12. Upcoming calls
Media
• TV Programming 28/05/15
• Video games 26/03/15
• Audience development 26/03/15
• Co-production 12/03/15
• Distribution automatic scheme 30/04/15
• Distribution selective scheme 02/07/15
Culture
• Platforms 25/02/15
• European networks 05/10/16
13. EU Horizon 2020
• Horizon 2020 - 10 year economic strategy for growth
• Part of Innovation Union - creating an innovation friendly environment
• Relevant strands
– Industrial leadership - 6 areas including ICT
– Better society - societal challenges
• Each funding call may fund
– Research innovation actions - R&D creating new knowledge or testing feasibility
– Innovation actions - new or improved products, processes or services, including
testing pilots etc.
14. EU Horizon 2020: SME Instrument
• For single or groups of highly innovative SMEs with international ambitions
• Phase I (proof-of-concept): Scientific/technical feasibility & commercial potential
– Activities: risk assessment, market study, user involvement, partner search, IP management
– Output: feasibility report, with more detailed business plan
– Around 6 months
– €50,000
• Phase II (development & demonstration): Make business idea market-ready
– Activities: demonstration, testing, prototyping, piloting, scaling-up, design, market replication
– 12-24 months
– €500,000-2.5m
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/docs/h2020-funding-guide/cross-cutting-
issues/sme_en.htm
15. EU Horizon 2020: SME Instrument
• SME Business Model Innovation - calls close March, June,
September, Dec 2015
• Cultural heritage, creative industries, tourism
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/desktop/
en/opportunities/h2020/topics/2569-inso-10-2015.html
16. EU Horizon 2020: Reflective 6 (2015)
• Innovation ecosystems of digital cultural assets
• Actions should support and promote access to and reuse of cultural heritage
resources as part of research and innovation.
• Projects should enable new models and demonstrations of the analysis,
interpretation and understanding of Europe's cultural and intellectual history
and bring cultural content to new audiences in novel ways, through the
development of new environments, applications, tools, and services for digital
cultural resources in scientific collections, archives, museums, libraries and
cultural heritage sites.
• https://connect.innovateuk.org/documents/3220887/3676376/CI%20Horizon%
202020%20Briefing%20Pack
17. EU Horizon 2020: Reflective 6 (2015)
• Reflective societies: cultural heritage and European identities
• Innovation actions are eligible under this call. These require participation by at
least three independent legal entities, each established in a different member
state or associated country. All H2020 funding calls allow the participation in
consortia of third country partners who secure their own funding.
• The indicative budget for this call in 2015 is €10 million.
• Each successful proposal is expected to receive between €2m and €4m,
although proposals for other amounts will also be considered.
• Closing Date: 28 May 2015
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/desktop/en/opportunities/h
2020/topics/2104-reflective-6-2015.html
18. EU Horizon 2020 ICT 19 (2015)
• Transforming creative and media businesses through new forms of
content and user engagement
• New ways of content creation, access, retrieval and interaction
• Closing Date: 14 April 2015
• http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/desktop/en/opportuniti
es/h2020/topics/2104-reflective-6-2015.html
22. What is the Business Growth Service?
Business Growth Service
23. Business Eligibility & Suitability
SMEs
< 250
employees
< £40m turnover
Any sector
Any age
Registered in
UK
Based in
England
Eligibility
24. What SMEs say
We've got loads
of ideas about
how to grow but
don't seem to
find the time to
do anything
about them.
What keeps
me awake at
night is cash
flow.
I can't grow the
organisation without
hiring more people,
but I can't afford to
hire anyone until we
make more money.
28. Measures of Success
How will the Business Growth Service be measured?
• Gross Value Added (GVA)
• Jobs Created
• Participant Satisfaction
• Stakeholder Recommendation
30. Access to Finance
• Coaching to get you investor-ready
• 3 full day finance specific masterclasses
• Introductions to appropriate funders
31. Funding Insights on GrowthAccelerator companies
65%
Equity
32%
Debt
3%
Grants
£766k
Average equity cheque
£374k
Average debt cheque
£262k
Average grant cheque
32. All service streams
• Invitation to join our Growth Community
• Access to matched funding for Leadership and
Management Training
33. Participant Feedback so far
98% report that they are
on track to achieve the key
milestones set out in their
action plan
97% believe that
GrowthAccelerator has been
'important' in increasing their ability
to achieve these milestones
91.2%
94.2%
90.2%
95.3%
Understanding of your business
Business experience
Technical Skills
Credibility
Participant Satisfaction with Coach Qualities
34. What is your contribution?
Package of Support valued at £3,500 + VAT
Includes coaching, Workshops or Masterclasses, Growth Community and
access to Leadership & Management training
To access the service, you pay:
£600 + £700 VAT 1-4 employees
government's contribution: £2,900
£1500 + £700 VAT 5-49 employees
government's contribution: £2,000
£3000 + £700 VAT 50-249 employees
government's contribution: £500
35. Two routes to GrowthAccelerator
We want leadership and
management training for
senior managers.
We want coaching
and workshops
36. Growth Impact Pilot
Matched-funding of up to £2,000 per senior
manager for L&M training
Available exclusively to businesses with a
turnover between £250,000 to £2m.
NO JOINING FEE!
37. Thank you
Sue Fraser, Business Growth Manager
Business Growth Service
Sue.L.Fraser@uk.gt.com
Mobile: 07557 848 525
40. What is this briefing?
• A digest of useful information for UK creative industries
businesses seeking funding,financing and business
development support, updated every month
• Brought to you by the following organisations:
41. Contents
• Public funding calls
• Other public funding
• Private financing
• Other financing mechanisms
• Support resources
• February events
• Other information
• Create UK
42. Public funding calls
Building whole-life performance
Key feature: Investment for collaborative R&D projects that can lead to
improve the whole-life performance of buildings. Proposals should involve
research into new knowledge for developing products, processes or services
intended for deployment during any stage of a building’s lifecycle.
Scale:
• Up to £4m
Programme: collaborative R&D between business and academia
Closes: This is a two-stage competition that opens for applicants on 23
February 2015. The deadline for registration is at noon on 1 April 2015 and
the deadline for expressions of interest is at noon on 8 April 2015.
Details of how to register for UK brokerage events available here.
Further competition info at innovateuk.org
43. Public funding calls
Childcare provision for parents
Key feature: DfE is seeking the development of a new, engaging and
innovative solution which provides accurate information about childcare
provision for parents. DfE, supported by Innovate UK is using Phase 2 of the
SBRI process to support the prototype development of selected proposed
solutions.
Scale:
• Up to £200K
Programme: Small Business Research Initiative (SBRI) – relevant for SMEs
Timeline: competition opens 2nd Feb 2015; registration closes 25th March
2015; competition closes March 2015.
More info at innovateuk.org including details of how to register for a briefing
Event, March 13th
44. Public funding calls
Circular economy: business models
Key feature: Investment in feasibility studies into the business case for
retaining value in durable goods through reuse, remanufacture or
leasing/maintenance.
Scale:
• Up to £800K
Programme: Feasibility Studies – must be collaborative and business-led,
open to companies of any size
Closes: registration closes Wednesday 11th March 2015; deadline for
applications Wednesday 18th March 2015.
Details of how to register for a competition workshop on March 3rd at Resource
2015 available here.
More info at innovateuk.org
45. Public funding calls
Solving urban challenges with data – Feasibility study
Key feature: Investment for feasibility studies projects for innovative,
commercial solutions to increase the resilience, quality of life or economic
performance of urban areas by integrating environmental, social and/or
economic data with data from other sources.
Scale:
• Up to £2.5m
Programme: Feasibility Studies – must be collaborative and business led,
open to companies of any size
Closes: registration closes Wednesday 11th March 2015; deadline for
applications Wednesday 18th March 2015.
More info at innovateuk.org
46. Public funding calls
Better interactions between people and machines –
Knowledge Transfer Partnerships
Key feature: Investment in Knowledge Transfer Partnerships (KTPs) in the
area of user experience (UX) to encourage new, enhanced forms of
interaction between computing systems and the people who use them. This
KTP competition also runs in parallel with a competition for feasibility studies
(see following slide).
Scale: up to £1m available
Programme: KTPs – opportunity for businesses of any size to work with
academic institutions.
Competition opened 7th November 2014, and the deadline for applications
is noon on the 15th April 2015.
More info at innovateuk.org.
47. Public funding calls
Better interactions between people and machines –
Feasibility Studies
Key feature: Investment in feasibility studies in the area of user experience
(UX). The aim is to encourage new and improved ways for machines, their
computing systems and people to interact.
Scale: up to £500K available. Small businesses could receive up to 70% of
their eligible project costs and medium-sized businesses up to 60%.
Projects are expected to have total costs of up to £50K.
Programme: Feasibility Studies – must be collaborative and business-led,
open to companies of any size
Competition opens 16th February 2015, registration closes 25th March and
the deadline for applications is 1st April 2015. More info available at
innovateuk.org.
48. Public funding calls
Wearable Technologies Innovation Contest
Key feature: The IC tomorrow Wearable Technologies Innovation contest is
aimed at encouraging innovation in wearable technology across the themes
of hospitality, accessibility, entertainment, design, sport and wellbeing, health
and safety.
Scale: this contest will offer 6 businesses up to £35K each
Programme: IC tomorrow - connecting start-ups and SMEs with leading
commercial partners and investors.
More info available at innovateuk.org
49. BFI Film Fund
Each year the BFI Film Fund invests over £26m of Lottery funds to support film
development, production and distribution activity in the UK and the budget is set to
rise to £30m by 2017.
• Applications are welcomed for film projects in all genres, and we are committed
to promoting diversity in the filmmakers we support, the stories they tell and the
audiences they reach.
• The fund also supports: a) independent UK distributors to help ensure that the
best British and specialised films connect with a wide range of audiences
across a range of platforms b) sales companies that are launching new UK films
at key international film festivals and markets.
Applications can be made to the Film Fund at any time, and you should expect to
receive an initial response within six to eight weeks. Full application guidelines
available here.
Public funding calls
50. Creative England film production funding
Key feature: Creative England now offers two strands of film production funding
for both feature and high-end TV drama.
• Lottery-based Production Fund: this is targeted at feature films with budgets of
up to £2m and looking to experiment with innovative approaches; the fund has
doubled from £500K to £1m for 2014/2015.
• West Midlands Production Fund: invests in the production of feature films and
high-end TV drama from companies based in the West Midlands as well as
from producers looking to establish a base to film in the region. Circa £4m
funding available for 2015, with a maximum investment of £1m per project. .
More info at creativeengland.co.uk
Public funding calls
51. Public funding calls
Creative Industry Finance
Key Feature: This is an Arts Council England initiative offering business
development support and access to finance to a wide range of creative and
cultural enterprises, from micro-businesses through to major institutions.
Scale: will consider applications for loans from as little as £2,500 up to £15m
Closes: there is no deadline for applying to Creative Industry Finance
More info on creativeindustryfinance.org.uk
52. Public funding calls
Nesta Impact Investment
Key feature: An equity investment fund investing in social ventures with
innovative products or services that are addressing some of the UK’s most
pressing challenges. Investments are made in areas that tackle:
• the health and wellbeing of an ageing population
• the educational attainment and employability of children and young people
• the social and environmental sustainability of communities.
Scale: between £150k - £1m
Closes: ongoing
More info on Nesta Investments
53. Public funding calls
Open Project Funding
Key feature: This fund supports the arts, screen and creative industries, with
projects that help them explore, realise and develop their creative potential,
widen access to their work, and enrich Scotland’s reputation as a distinctive
creative nation connected to the world.
Scale:
• For applications up to £15K - decisions will take up to 8 weeks from the date
application form received.
• For applications over £15K – decisions will take up to 12 weeks.
• For applications over £100K (up to a maximum of £150K) - prior approval
required from Creative Scotland before applying.
Opens: all applications accepted from 31st October 2014
More info at creativescotland.com
54. Public funding calls
Horizon 2020 ICT-19-2015
Key feature: R&D funding of new or emerging technologies (e.g. 3D and
augmented reality technologies) for digital content creation to support the
creative and media industries and for unlocking complex information and media
and interacting with them.
Scale: €561,000,000
Closes: 14th April 2015
Click here for a complete briefing on Horizon 2020.
Further info: Horizon 2020 website, UK list of National Contact Points for Horizon
2020 and the Enterprise Europe Networks
55. Public funding calls
Horizon 2020 ICT-20-2015
Key feature: This challenge encourages public procurement of innovative
solutions to address the needs of the digital learning ecosystem in making better
use of educational cloud solutions, mobile technology, learning analytics and big
data, and to facilitate the use, re-use and creation of learning material and new
ways to educate and learn online.
Scale: €561,000,000
Closes: 14th April 2015
Click here for a complete briefing on Horizon 2020.
Further info: Horizon 2020 website, UK list of National Contact Points for Horizon
2020 and the Enterprise Europe Networks
56. Other public funding
• Arts & Humanities Research Council – the AHRC offers postgraduate and
research funding opportunities which include opportunities in knowledge
exchange and partnerships and international research.
• Creative Europe - here you can find relevant information concerning
funding opportunities within the Creative Europe programme. .
• Arts Council of Wales – offer a selection of arts grants for creative
professionals and organisations.
• Screen Yorkshire – Yorkshire Content Fund – production finance
available; can invest £1m+ in individual film or TV dramas that will be in
production by December 2015.
57. Private financing
• Better Business Finance is an excellent tool for identifying the right type of
finance at all stages of a business as well as identifying providers who
can help. This section provides a searchable directory of information
about the members of the UK Business Angels Association, what services
they provide and how to contact them.
• British Private Equity and Venture Capital Association provides an
explanation of different types of financing and other resources for
entrepreneurs.
• The UK Business Angels Association is the national trade association
representing angel and early-stage investment in the UK.
58. Other financing mechanisms
• Crowdfunder.co.uk – UK’s largest crowdfunding network having
launched 1000’s of projects and raised over £2m, platform launched by
KEO digital and partners include NESTA and Plymouth University
• Funding Circle – an online marketplace which allows savers to lend
money directly to SMEs; the first site to use peer-to-peer lending for
business funding in the UK; as of February 2014 Funding Circle has
facilitated £223 in loans to SMEs
• Kickstarter.com – a global crowdfunding platform based in the United
States; the company’s stated mission is to help to bring creative projects
to life; since launching in 2009, 7m people have pledged $1bn, funding
70,000 creative projects
59. Support resources for businesses
• AIM Start Up Loans - Government supported start-up loans for the
Creative Industries.
• Creative skillset – supports businesses within the Creative Industries to
develop skills and talent
• East London Small Business Centre - ELSBC is a not for profit
organisation dedicated to helping businesses reach their entrepreneurial
potential through one to one business support and loan funding.
• Growth Accelerator – works with businesses from a diverse range of
sectors; key eligibility criteria include fewer than 250 employees and
annual turnover under £40m.
60. Support resources for businesses
• NESTA’s Creative Business Mentor Network - offers ambitious creative
companies one-to-one mentoring with some of the creative sectors most
successful business leaders.
• Seedcamp - a London based accelerator that provides startups with seed
money, mentorship, office space, support over a year long programme.
• School for Creative Start-ups - delivers programmes that teach people
how to start and run better businesses.
61. February Events
Digital Bristol Week – Bristol, 2nd -8th February
Skills empowerment workshop for women working in the games industry –
London, 2nd February
Animex Festival at Teeside University – Middlesbrough, 9th-13th February
Arts Council of Wales’ annual conference ‘Risking Delight: The Arts as a
Resource for Hope’ – Cardiff, 12th February
Digital Innovation The Shed Launch Event – Manchester, 12th February
Innovate UK Creative and Digital Meet-up Event – Liverpool, 12th February
Funding for innovation in the creative industries – organised by Golant Media
Ventures & Digital Catapult Centre, London 16th February
New Social Media & Streaming in Music & Media – London, 24th February
62. Other Information
• The Creative England 50 – from filmmakers to animators, app makers to
scriptwriters, this study showcases companies across England that have
turned a bright idea into commercial success.
• ‘The geography of the UK’s creative and high–tech economies’ – this Nesta
report is the first systematic analysis of employment in the UK’s creative and
high-tech economies. It analyses their size, growth and distribution across the
country
• Scotland’s Cultural Enterprise Office maintain a comprehensive list of
organisations and websites providing support to creatives working in Scotland
• GP Bullhound is a leading investment bank providing advice on M&A and
institutional capital-raising to growth companies in the technology sector. Its
‘Technology Predictions 2015’ publication offers an informed overview of key
trends currently driving innovation across the creative industries.
63. Other Information
• The Copyright Hub provides: copyright information/education to a wide
audience; and access for users to simpler licensing, with much lower
transaction costs, via websites connected to the Copyright Hub
• International Broadcasting Convention(IBC) 2015 Innovation Awards - Call for
Entries – There are three core IBC Innovation Awards: for the most innovative
projects in Content Creation, Content Management and Content Delivery. The
deadline to apply is 21st February.
• The Business Finance Guide – a journey from start-up to growth is a joint
publication by the ICAEW Corporate Finance Faculty and the British Business
Bank. The guide sets key things to consider and outlines sources of finance
available to businesses – ranging from start-ups to SMEs and growing mid-
sized companies.
• A Short Guide For Innovate UK Competition Applicants - The Knowledge
Transfer Network (KTN) has produced this short guide to help make clear
what an assessor for Innovate UK competitions is looking for.
64. • Key findings from the DCMS Creative Industries Economic Estimates report
published last month include: the GVA of the creative industries is now worth
£76.9bn per year to the UK economy which equates to £8.8m per hour; in 2012 the
creative economy provided 2.6m jobs (1 in 12 UK jobs).
• Click here to read Creative Industries Council’s strategy, Create UK
• Go to www.thecreativeindustries.co.uk website for sector specific data and
information
• Visit https://app.hiive.co.uk/talent/ to find employees or join the workforce
• Read Innovate UK’s Creative Industries Strategy 2013-2016 highlighting
convergence, data and transactions as key pillars of innovation
65. Something else we've missed?
Please let us know, plus sign up for monthly updates at:
creativeindustries@ktn-uk.org
70. The Live & Digital R&D project explored the
questions – can digital technology be used to:
• capture and distribute small-scale
theatre productions economically and
effectively to reach new audiences?
• retain the unique intimacy, engaging
quality and ‘liveness’ of performances?
• facilitate a viable and sustainable
business model around this?
71. Recording
partners
Marketing
partners
Sponsors
Distributors
Sales agents
Production/
post prod
Exploitation/
sales
IP framework
Distribution
network
Original
production
New content
for venues
Additional
ways to see
production
Access for
remote
audiences
B2B B2CDirect
and indirect
relationships
Public screenings
– digital and
satellite
Home ent DVDs
etc
End Audiences
List from ACE
segmentation
Cinemas
community,
cultural and
commercial
non cinema
venues
Capture - filming and post production
Additional performance costs –
actors, venue etc Rightsholders fee
from distributors
and sales agents
DVD sales
Touring Theatre company
72. Business model chart of accounts
• Profit and loss AND balance sheet structure reflects that this is
venture requiring risk capital and planned to make a profit
• Exploitation of film across multiple platforms & windows – and
ancillary rights (eg soundtrack) and spin-off products (merchandise)
• What the original producer(s) of the performance take as a fee can
significantly effect the profit of the film
• The costs of ‘producing’ – management, executives, commercial
negotiations, business affairs (legal) – need to be factored in
• There will usually be multiple investors – and multiple other
rightsholders with a share of profits – rights/profit share require
administration
73. Learnings
• ‘Alternative content’ screening - high-growth sector but
business/delivery models in flux
• New distribution models can learn from touring theatre’s
management of relationships with venues and promoters
• There is an audience for this – it can bring new audiences rather
than cannibalise existing ones
• But to reach these audiences requires new kinds of partners –with
new kinds of deal structures
• Think about each filmed performance as a ‘mini venture’ – not a
funded ‘project’ aiming to break even
75. DIGITAL FILM DISTRIBUTION SERVICE
ANY VENUE CAN BE A ‘CINEMA’
MANDY BERRY, CHIEF EXECUTIVE
A SPIN OUT FROM
76. WHAT CINEGI DOES
Filmed media rights management
Acquire rights to a range of filmed media
Rights management and exploitation that is auditable
Secure content distribution on our own platform
Industrial strength Digital Rights Management
Downloaded over the public Internet and standard broadband
Marketing for venues
Marketing collateral and materials for content marketing
Guidance, tools and support for event promotion and audience development
Better than DVD
Played out from standard computer and ‘prosumer’ projector and sound equipment
Screening in Full HD
80. DEVELOPMENT & FUNDING JOURNEY
Public funding & corporate support 2011-12
VC Investment April 2014
- Research into audiences and alternative
venues
- Business modelling for alternative content
Public funding 2013
- Gap finance
- Market analysis, product strategy, business
planning
- Management & administration resources
- Platform & player built
- Team in place
- Initial content secured
- Private beta in South West
- Funding from public funders and commercial
partners (no equity/rights taken)
- Proof of concept – created technical,
commercial & legal blueprint
Innovation support all stages 2010-14
Digital R&D Fund for the Arts
81. • Keep it simple
• Be open
• Partnerships
• Tenacity
81
KEY SUCCESS FACTORS
86. No 1 source of Finance…
@capenterprise 86
Your Money, the money you can borrow, your family
and friends money…
87. Sound advice is…
Don’t Raise… …unless
• Can’t launch a product into
market without external
funds..
• Need to get big fast to
compete.
@capenterprise 87
88. “There is an opportunity gap when the scope
for growing income at a very fast rate is
limited for those who have too little to invest ,
but expands dramatically for those who can
invest a bit more.”- i.e. to win requires scale
Banjaree &Duflo- Poor Economics
@capenterprise 88
..only raise to SCALE..
91. ..So a Start-up in want of
investment needs..
• Team, Tech & resources that is
FIT for the task of creating an
awesome company
• Product that is the best
solution FIT for the target
customers problems.
• Business Model that is FIT to
be scaled.
• Smart Ass Team
• with a Kick Ass Product
• With a Business model that
can “capture” a Big Ass Market
( Jeff Clavier 3 Ass-es rule)
+ Capital Efficient to create a
repeatable and scalable business.
@capenterprise 91
94. Funding Product Development & BETA Testing
Grants & Awards General
• Technology Strategy Board ( R&D Funding) - http://www.innovateuk.org -
http://www.innovateuk.org/content/competition/grant-for-rd-single-business.ashx
• Knowledge Transfer Networks- www.innovateuk.org
• IC Tomorrow- https://connect.innovateuk.org/web/ictomorrow
• NESTA- http://www.nesta.org.uk/
• London European Enterprise Network- http://www.een-london.co.uk
• EU Funding for SME R&D - http://www.eurostars-eureka.eu/what.do
• EU Funding for R&D collaborations:
http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/portal/page/calls
• Knowledge Transfer Partnerships funding support-
http://www.ktponline.org.uk/ktp-what-will-it-cost-my-business
• J4B- Portal for grant finding http://www.j4b.co.uk
@capenterprise 94
95. Crowdfunding (Reward)
Crowd funding Platforms-
Reward based Crowdfunding platforms will help you
to raise funding to build a proto-type and market
test a great idea or product. Great for pre-selling
cool tech hardware.
• www.kickstarter.com
• www.indiegogo.com
• www.hubbub.com
• www.crowdfunder.co.uk
• http://spacehive.com
• http://crowdshed.com
• https://www.banktothefuture.com
@capenterprise 95
96. Funding the Runway…?
• How much/ little money is
needed to build and test MVP/
demonstrate viability. ?
• Usually required to fund co-
founder “Ramen” salary
• Going to need a Budget, Cashflow
forecast and “burn rate”
96@capenterprise
97. @capenterprise
Need less than £10K to get to Build and test MVP?
- Sources of Grants- www.j4b.co.uk
- Competition funding £1000 issued to 10+ businesses per month- http://www.shell-livewire.org
- Princes Trust http://www.princes-trust.org.uk/need_help/enterprise_programme.aspx
- £1000- £20,000 Enterprise Loans for Under 25’s- www.startuploanslondon.co.uk or www.startuploans.com
- New Enterprise Allowance Scheme – Check who delivers the scheme in London by e-mailing Capital Enterprise.
- Community Development Finance Associations- http://www.cdfa.org.uk - Also check out North London Community Finance
- ELSBC Access to Finance – Business Plan support for those looking to raise up to £10K
• Soft loans for Creative Businesses- http://www.creativeindustryfinance.org.uk/
Need Less than
£10K to Launch a
business
No Funds
Grant-
www.j4b.co.uk
Unemployed?
New Enterprise
Allowance Scheme
Self Fund
Borrow
Write a simple
Business Plan & 12
month cashflow
Community
Development
Finance Institution
Start-Up Loan Bank
97
101. @capenterprise 101
1
Idea
Stage
2
Commitment
Stage- Secure
Co-Founders
3
FFF funding
round –Build &
Beta Test
Minimum Viable
Product
4
Seed Investment
Round (Angels +
Early VC’s)
- Prove Business
model & acquire
metrics to prove
scalability
5
Series A Round
(Angels, VC’s &
Strategic Investors)
– Go for scale, build
out team,
technology-
EXECUTE
6
Exit
(Average 7 years
and after many
rounds) – Trade
Sale or IPO
££££££££££££££
How Start-Up Funding Works
Why 100% of Nothing is worth Less than 10% of something big
102. Investment Essentials
@capenterprise 102
Round Amount Purpose London Pre-Money
Valuation Guideline
Source of Investment What investors
like to see
Pre Seed £25K-£150K
(SEIS eligible)
Assemble Team/ Build & Test
MVP/ Proof of Concept R&D
Zero- £500K Own Money/ FFF/
Crowdfunding/ SEIS Funds/
TSB
Unfair Advantages
Seed £150-£350K BETA Test/ Launch into
Beachhead/ Proof of Product
Solution Fit
£500K-£1.5m Business Angels/
Crowdfunders/Seed VC's/
Co-Investment Funds
SMART Team- Early
Evidence of Product/
Solution Fit- Validating
customers/ users
Super Seed
(Bridging
round)
£500K- £1m Working Business
Model/Proof of Product/
Market Fit/ Demonstration of
Growth
£1.5M-£4m Super Angels/ Seed VC's Product Solution FIT
Proved- Early
Indications of Product-
Market Fit ( i.e.
revenues)
Series A £2m-£15M+ Scale £8m- £50m VC's/ Family offices and
Corporate Ventures
Revenues & METRICS
proving scalability.
103. Importance of Tax breaks
• EIS
• SEIS
• ECF’s
• Co-Investment Programmes
@capenterprise 103
104. @capenterprise
Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme-SEIS is a tax break launched in April 2012 for UK
tax payers to encourage them to buy shares in start-up companies registered in the
UK
The Facts:
• SEIS investors can input £100,000 in a single tax year rising to a maximum £150,000 over two
or more tax years in to a single company
• Investors cannot control the company receiving their capital
• Investors pick up 50% tax relief in the tax year the investment is made, regardless of their
marginal rate.
• In the 2013-14 tax year, tax payers can roll 50% of a chargeable gain in the tax year in to a
SEIS with a full capital gains tax exemption (another 14%)
• The business must be a start-up company -registered in the UK within 2 years of claim.
• The company must not employ more than 25 workers.
• The company must have assets of less than £200,000.
• The company has to trade in an approved sector – generally not in finance or investment, for
example, a property company raise capital as a SEIS.
SEIS is…… “a game changer”?
104
105. Proof of Product-Solution Fit
@capenterprise 105
Does the
tech work/
product
deliver?
Does it
create value
for the
customer?
Can You
Capture
some of that
Value? £££
Product
Solution Fit
106. P/S Fit for Creative/ Content based
start-ups…
@capenterprise 106
Am I
talented?
Have I
achieved
“Critical”
acclaim?
Do I create
value for
my
customers?
Product
Solution Fit
107. Proof of Product-Market Fit
@capenterprise 107
• Team/
Resources/Plan
• Business Model
• Market• Technical
Does it work
Does it create
Value for the
customer?
Is the Team fit
and able to
deliver
Can you make
money/
repeat &
scale.
108. POC P/S Fit P/M Fit
SEIS LCIF VC
What stage is your
business at?
FF
Investors tend to invest for
transitions…
109. Capital List –
The Minimum Viable Introducer
“ Showcasing and connecting
Entrepreneurs to champions and
investors”
beta.capitallist.co
@capenterprise 109
110. Send a slide deck and get introduced
http://www.slideshare.net/slidesthatrock/how-to-pitch-a-vc-redesigned
110
Ten slides. Ten is the optimal number of slides in a PowerPoint
presentation because a normal human being cannot comprehend
more than ten concepts in a meeting—and business angels are very
normal. If you must use more than ten slides to explain your
business, you probably don’t have a business. The ten topics that an
investors cares about are:
1. Summary and call to action/ what do you want?
2. Problem
3. Your solution
4. Business model
5. Underlying magic/technology
6. Marketing and sales
7. Competition
8. Team
9. Projections and milestones
10. Status and timeline
@capenterprise
Send to : magdalena@capitallist.co
111. 7 Types of Early Stage Investors in
London Market
1. Crowdfunders/ Platforms
2. Tax Relieve Seeking SEIS/EIS Funds
3. Government Backed ECF’s
4. Traditional Angel Syndicates
5. Super Angels
6. VC’s
7. Strategic Investors ( Corporate Venture)
@capenterprise 111
113. “Pay to Play” Funds.
Top SEIS Funding Syndicates
1. Jenson Solutions-
www.jensonsolutions.com
2. Ingenious Media-
www.ingeniousmedia.co.uk
3. Ascension Ventures-
http://www.ascensionmedia.
com/ascension-ventures.php
4. Start-up Funding Club-
http://www.startupfundingcl
ub.com/
5. Ascot SEIS –
www.ascotwm.com
Top Traditional Angel Syndicates
1. London Business Angels:
http://www.lbangels.co.uk/
2. E100 (LBS)
3. Oxford Angels:
http://www.oxei.co.uk
4. Cambridge:
http://cambridgeangels.com
5. Envestors- www.envestors.co.uk
6. Angels Den- www.angelsden.com
@capenterprise 113
114. Super Seed Investors
• Playfair Capital- http://playfaircapital.com
• Angel Lab- http://angellab.co.uk/
• Firestartr- www.firestartr.com
• Kima Ventures- http://www.kimaventures.com
• Boundary Capital - www.boundarycapital.com
• Venerex ( Fashion Tech- see Capital List)
• Jam Jar Investments-
http://jamjarinvestments.com
• No 1 Seed - www.number1seed.co.uk
• Angel List Syndicates – www.angel.co
@capenterprise 114
115. Enterprise Capital Funds.
ECF’s
• Notion Capital – SAAS specialist- See portfolio here
• Passion Capital: Early Stage, see their portfolio here.
• Sussex Place Ventures- Early stage ( linked to LBS)
• Amadeus Capital: Early and mid-stage- just launched new fund.
• Episode1: Early Stage Software Companies
• Longwall – Oxford Based – Science backed Start-ups focus
• Dawn Capital - Fintech and SAAS
• IQ Capital – Seed and Series A
@capenterprise 115
116. Active Seed VC’s in London.
Big 7
Accel Partners: Stage agnostic, see their portfolio
here.
Balderton- Stage Agnostic- See there portfolio here
Index Ventures: Stage agnostic, see their portfolio
here.
Wellington Partners: Stage Agnostic, see there
portfolio here
Octopus Ventures: Early to mid-stage, see their
portfolio here.
DN Capital : Early and mid-stage, see their portfolio
here
DFJ Esprit: Early to mid-stage, see their portfolio
here.
Cool Cats
• Profounders: Early and mid-stage, see their
portfolio here.
• MMC Ventures - Series A Fund- Co-Investment
fund with Mayor of London
• Piton Capital: Early and mid-stage specialize in
market places.
• White Star Capital- Early stage – See portfolio
here
• EC1 Capital: Early stage, see their portfolio here
• Connect Ventures- Early stage and very cool.
• Hoxton Ventures – New and focus on seed with
next move to USA.
@capenterprise 116
117. Specialist Funds
Social/ Tech for Good
- NESTA - www.nesta.org.uk/investments
- Unltd – www.ubltd.org.uk
- Big Society Capital- http://www.bigsocietycapital.com
- Sources of Social Finance- http://www.bigsocietycapital.com/finding-the-right-investment
- Bridges Venture Fund http://www.bridgesventures.com/social-entrepreneurs-fund
- Big Issue Investment- http://www.bigissueinvest.com
- Social Finance- http://www.socialfinance.org.uk
- Social Investment Fund- http://www.thesocialinvestmentbusiness.org
Women
- Stargate Capital- Trapezia- http://www.stargatecapital.co.uk/trapezia_1.aspx
- FSE-- http://thefsegroup.com/investors/business-angels/incito-ventures/
- Aspire Fund - http://www.capitalforenterprise.gov.uk/files/Aspire%20Information%20Leaflet%20(v%202)%20Flyer%20brochure.pdf
Green
- Bridges Sustainable Fund- http://www.bridgesventures.com/sustainable-growth-funds
- Ingenious Media- Cleantech Fund http://www.ingeniousmedia.co.uk/investments/investment-
opportunities/clean-energy
- Carbon Trust- http://www.carbontrust.com/about-us/our-investments
- Low Carbon Accelerator- http://www.lowcarbonaccelerator.com
- CT Investment Partners- http://www.ctip.co.uk
- Wellington Partners- http://www.wellington-partners.com/wp/index.html
@capenterprise 117
122. Get in touch!
Building resilience and agility
• Innovation and realising opportunities from digital
• Making new revenues, reaching new customers
• Distribution strategy and organisational change
Designing new products and services
• Realising the full value of content & data
• Devising new entertainment, cultural & information propositions
• Developing creative, technical and business solutions
Public funding and private financing
• Securing funding from a mix of funders
• Being investment ready – proposition & business model
Patrick Towell patrick.towell@golantmediaventures
www.golantmediaventures.com @golantmedia
Not any innovation funding from ACE, BFI at the moment
Move to more investment-based rather than just grant aid
Looking to fund business growth and genuine sustainability – tax revenues, GVA, employment
Focus on research and development – although public funders struggle to fund very near-market because of state aid rules – private funders want traction – so there’s a gap
You need to know what business you want to run and what the underlying business model and value proposition – and not change this to suit others (don’t chase the money)
It’s possible to slant your funding proposition towards different funders’ world views – technology innovation, content/information distribution, social impact
It’s possible to package up different projects and different business units into discrete value propositions or discrete funded R&D portions
Which all encourages and is enabled by thinking about what are your intangible assets, what are the valuable ideas and relationships, how are they defensible – which is IP and how protect
Increasingly you need to combine public and private money – not just in creative and cultural sectors – leveraging one with the other
Private investors getting more savvy about public money (enterprise support & R&D not grant aid focused on commercial enterprise)
Public money getting more savvy about private money – London Co-Investment Fund, Growth Accelerator – dwindling public money, needs to leverage private investment
Crowd funding creative cultural sector crowd reward-based – move to equity based Seedrs, Crowdcube
Lots of different routes – difficult to know which way to go, what are the right routes different effort/risk/competencies/reward, quick/slow, which can you combine
GrowthAccelerator is a national (England-wide) service that focuses on providing coaching, training and leadership development to support ambitious enterprises. It's the government's way of making the kind of things that big companies get affordable for you, putting coaching in reach of SMEs. The government puts in a substantial CONTRIBUTION, you make a small contribution, and I'll come to the costs at the end.
Formally launched as GrowthAccelerator May 2012
Initially offered until 31 March 2015, now extended until 2017 as part of the Business Growth Service.
Previous contract £200m, new contract similar amount
Arts and culture contributed £5.9 billion in gross value added to the UK economy in 2011 according to the ONS Annual Business Survey 2008‐11, (office for national statistics)
CREATIVE INDUSTRY IS IMPORTANT TO THE UK ECONOMY
SMES ARE GROWTH ENGINE OF THE UK
GrowthAccelerator, Manufacturing Advisory Service (MAS), Intellectual Property Audits and Design Mentoring will integrate to become the Business Growth Service.
The service will continue to provide tailored business support to small and medium sized firms with the ambition and potential to grow.
This service will bring growth businesses closer to existing Government services including:
- UK Trade & Investment
- UK Export Finance
- Innovate UK (formerly Technology Strategy Board)
- Local Growth Hubs
Eligibility: easy
Suitability: in depth conversation with your Business Growth Manager to look at the opportunities for growth.
Then we discuss the barriers to growth. What's holding you back?
That will decide which stream of GrowthAccelerator to go down – Business Development or Access to Finance.
80 % of hypergrowth businesses say they are comfortable taking calculated risks and regularly do so.
20% say risk is essential to achieving growth
Bravest descisions hypergrowth leaders say they’ve made:
People (recruitment, retention and performance management)
Starting up or taking over the business
Expanding the business to a new site
Sticking to the business plan
Entering new markets or launching new products
Large investment in infrastructure
Collection 26 – high end events in Saudi
Charcoal Blue – theatre
Exposure Films
Backgrounds Prop hire
Alexandra Palace
It’s all Sorted Productions - photography
Blue Box Entertainment – provide theatre in schools from west end actors
Five Foot Six – creative media
Golant Media Ventures
Strategy
Funding
GrowthAccelerator KPIs over next two years:
£2.8 billion GVA (£108k GVA per participant)
70,000 new jobs (2.7 new jobs per participant)
Target to recruit 26,000 participants nationally
£200 million of finance to be raised
Coaching is often on:
Business planning
Strategic planning
Marketing strategy
Organisational change
Improving performance and efficiencies
Recruitment and people management
Bespoke support through the finance raising process
Access to specialist finance coach to support investment readiness
Assistance with funding options including debt and/or equity funding
Introduction to appropriate funders
Access to GrowthAccelerator's Investor Relations team
A coach will help you find the right mix of funding. You don't have to choose one out of the three options
You will learn how to pitch yourself and your organisation
You will learn how to use the right language that will catch the interest of the funding provider. You've all seen dragon's den – if it's equity you're after, we will prepare you.
Statutory/operational training not eligible - must be focused on improving leadership and management skills
Coaching is to help improve the business
Training is to improve the skillset of the people running the business
Up to 2,000 per senior manager
Maximum number of L&M participants :
Max 2 senior managers, for companies with 1-4 FTEs
Max 3 senior managers, for companies with 5-9 FTEs
Max 4 senior managers, for companies with 10-19 FTEs
Max 5 senior managers or 10% of total staff, for companies 20+ FTEs; at the discretion of the L&M specialist.
More than 20,000 participants
Independent external research company
Phone and email
Anonymous
Coaching is to help improve the business
Training is to improve the skillset of the people running the business
Growth Impact Pilot:
Available exclusively to businesses with a turnover between £250,000 to £2,000,000.
In addition, a selection of participants will be chosen to receive additional coaching support, where the cost of joining GrowthAccelerator will be waived.
Benefits to the business
Double your management training budget
Receive up to £2,000 per senior manager
Improve management team capability
Access additional business coaching
NOTE TO NINA – these slides keep a distinctive Miracle design/layout
New ways to generate revenues out of their creative assets – the core theatre productions
R&D funded by ACE NESTA AHRC that kind of funding not around for arts/culture from UK arts/culture funders – EU money or with enterprise support or more tech
Unusual in the way that it had a business model innovation output
How a small NPO can be very innovative – move beyond the traditional live performance, to new ways of reaching audiences and earning revenues
Theatre company that does theatre not in theatres – film not in cinemas?
New ways to generate revenues out of their creative assets – the core theatre productions
R&D funded by ACE NESTA AHRC that kind of funding not around for arts/culture from UK arts/culture funders – EU money or with enterprise support or more tech
Unusual in the way that it had a business model innovation output
How a small NPO can be very innovative – move beyond the traditional live performance, to new ways of reaching audiences and earning revenues
Theatre company that does theatre not in theatres – film not in cinemas
Arts organisation using tools usually used in creative industries -
Don’t think need this slide
Creative idea Founders passion in public benefit and commercial model
Publicly funded project within a innovation agency
Spun out – attracts private finance