Looking for the right exit? Driven founders first must know their startup’s destination

February 7, 2024  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Phil Reynolds, DevStride, right, speaks alongside angel investor Robert Zhou during a UMKC Technology Venture Studio Sound Byte panel on preparing for mergers and acquisitions at Husch Blackwell; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Setting an exit goal early is crucial when founding a startup, shared Robert Zhou, a Kansas City serial entrepreneur-turned-angel investor.

Robert Zhou shares insight from his startup’s exit during a UMKC Technology Venture Studio Sound Byte panel on preparing for mergers and acquisitions at Husch Blackwell; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

“Every startup I mentor, I ask the founder this from Day 1: ‘What’s your goal?’” he explained. “‘Are you trying to build a business that you ultimately sell for $10 million? Is it $1 million? Is it $100 million?’ So the answer that the founder gives is really, really critical. Because if you think about the strategy of building a $500 million company versus $50 million versus $5 million, it’s a completely different landscape, completely different approach.” 

“The strategy and approach of your whole entire life cycle really depends on this key question of where you want to exit,” he added.

Zhou — who has navigated multiple successful exits, including those of Red Nova Labs and Legalfit, which had a combined enterprise value of over $100 million — offered his insight Tuesday during a UMKC Technology Venture Studio Sound Byte panel on preparing for mergers and acquisitions at Husch Blackwell’s local headquarters on the Country Club Plaza. 

From the archives: Kansas legal tech startup’s exit unlocks opportunity to accelerate innovation, founder says

Tuesday’s conversation also included Phil Reynolds, co-founder and CEO of DevStride, and Paige Reese and Gabriel Riekhof, both associates at Husch Blackwell, a startup-friendly law firm with offices in Kansas City.

Chris Rehkamp, Tech Venture Studio, moderates a panel conversation alongside Gabriel Riekhof and Paige Reese, both of Husch Blackwell; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

“I agree very much that your exit horizon matters a great deal,” noted Reynolds, who navigated an exit with his previous startup BriteCore. “If you’ve accepted capital from an outside firm, their exit horizon matters more than yours. They get to tell you when you exit, so you need to understand that.”

Planning that “ending” is just one of several steps a founder should take early in the life of their startup to prepare for an exit, according to the panelists. It’s important for founders to begin shaping the narrative of what they are hoping to accomplish, Reynolds said.

“The people who are likely to acquire you are going to be following along,” he explained. “Probably the biggest mistake I see early founders make on this front is changing their story as the reality of the ground changes. It undermines their credibility.”

From the archives: DevStride founder finds himself ‘locking arms with frontline customers’ in bid to catch their mistakes early 

Phil Reynolds, DevStride, center, speaks alongside angel investor Robert Zhou during a UMKC Technology Venture Studio Sound Byte panel on preparing for mergers and acquisitions at Husch Blackwell; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

It’s also crucial to begin building relationships early with private equity firms, investment bankers, and attorneys, Zhou said.

“It’s not something you can wait until, ‘Hey, I’m ready to sell; OK I gotta go do all this work,’” he continued. “The work needs to happen very early.”

Building connections with other players in the legal tech space — before it was time to sell, Zhou noted, was key to Legalfit’s acquisition by Centerbase.

“The reason we were able to get multiple buyers to compete was because a lot of those relationships were built many, many years before we were selling the company,” he added.

It’s also important to be tracking the startup’s key performance indicators — like revenue, growth, net dollar retention, revenue retention — early and often and adjusting where needed. 

“All these key factors should really be visible — and not only visible — it should be something that you’re constantly checking against,” he explained. “At Legalfit, we took all our KPIs and we made them into these digital dashboards; they were in real time. We had them all over the office and for all sorts of different departments. So that made it extremely easy when we were ready to sell the company.”

“Getting your business ready to sell is exactly the same as growing your business over time,” he added.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2024 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Tech pioneer Don Peterson to guide new LaunchKC-Nueterra health accelerator

    By Tommy Felts | June 29, 2019

    Leading the new LaunchKC Health Accelerator is Don Peterson’s way of giving back to a community that opened its arms to his family nearly 30 years ago, he said.  “I’m proof that we can accomplish the entrepreneurial dream right here in KC and feel like it’s my duty to pay that forward,” said Peterson, a…

    Andrew Ellis and Matt Blake, Gaudete Development, MoCannaHub

    MoCannaHub lights up information prohibition; launches cannabis resource-finding app

    By Tommy Felts | June 28, 2019

    Rolled in entrepreneurial opportunity, tech companies shouldn’t be afraid to take a hit of the growing marketplace that is cannabis, said Andrew Ellis, explaining the methodology behind MoCannaHub — the app that connects curious consumers with experts and information of various strains.  “Some of the platforms out there are banning cannabis-related content,” explained Ellis, president…

    Lauren Conaway, InnovateHER KC

    InnovateHER KC founder leaving KCSF as womxn’s community-building startup scales

    By Tommy Felts | June 28, 2019

    It’s time to set InnovateHER KC on the path to long-term growth, said Lauren Conaway, announcing her plans to leave the Kansas City Startup Foundation in early July to lead the womxn-focused startup full-time. “InnovateHER KC’s No. 1 priority right now is building out our community with intention,” said Conaway, founder of InnovateHER KC and…

    Sprint Accelerator Demo Day

    Photos: Sprint Accelerator leaders salute former managing director at demo day

    By Tommy Felts | June 27, 2019

    Gratitude powered down the sixth cohort of the Sprint and Dairy Farmers of America-backed Corporate Accelerator Thursday. “I do have one more person that I need to acknowledge and that person is Doug Dresslear,” Tina Peterson, manager of the Sprint Accelerator, told a packed crowd at the National World War 1 museum’s J.C. Nichols Auditorium. …