March
20, 2002

Look
Who's Getting Funded
Mark
W. Vigoroso, www.EcommerceTimes.com
Raising
money from venture capital (VC) firms has proven especially difficult
for high-technology startups in recent months.
But
well-run companies that bring unique value propositions to large
markets have continued to acquire capital during the economic
downturn.
"The
companies that are getting funding today are top-quality companies,"
National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) vice president of
business development Jeanne Metzger told the E-Commerce Times.
"They
have had to meet higher standards than those companies that received
financing during the boom period of the late 1990s," Metzger
said.
All
told, investment rates have held steady at US $6 billion to $7
billion per quarter, similar to the boom times of late 1998 and
early 1999, the NVCA said.
Size
Matters
Large
markets that complement e-commerce products and services already
in place -- including Web Services, electronic bill payment, supply
chain collaboration and business intelligence -- have attracted
the most capital recently, according to financiers.
And
analysts and entrepreneurs said today's investors have become
astute market-sizers after watching recent years' investments
evaporate in undersized markets.
"Companies
must show that their market is real and big, not a niche market,"
US Bancorp Piper Jaffray analyst Safa Rashtchy told the E-Commerce
Times.
Growth
Potential
In
January, Cambridge, Massachusetts-based Celarix
closed a $17 million funding round led by Austin Ventures. The
company successfully found funding largely because it serves the
massive supply chain event management market.
An
early entrant in a market valued at $1.1 billion by AMR Research,
Celarix provides software and services that rapidly
disseminate data throughout the supply chain.
Similarly,
ample market opportunity drew investors to electronic bill payment
company Avolent.
"The
electronic bill and invoice payment market has tremendous potential,"
Avolent vice president of marketing Brian Valente told the E-Commerce
Times. "U.S. companies spend $120 billion per year sending
invoices to consumers and businesses."
The
San Francisco-based firm secured $40 million in November 2001
in a successful fifth financing round.
True
Value
In
addition to addressing sizable markets, would-be fundraisers must
demonstrate a unique value proposition that offers significant
improvements in productivity and cost savings, analysts said.
"In
the past, VCs were willing to throw money at business models that
simply took a traditional business and 'Web-ified' it, like Pets.com,"
Morningstar.com analyst George Nichols told the E-Commerce Times.
"But
investors are now looking for ventures that change the way business
is done," Nichols added.
Execution
Day
A
long-time backer of such change agents, Waltham, Massachusetts-based
Charles River Ventures, participated in Celarix's
latest round.
"We
look for big and unique ideas that serve a huge market,"
Charles River spokesperson Meg O'Leary told the E-Commerce Times.
"Celarix takes a unique approach to [supply
chain automation] with a network-based solution."
Indeed,
Celarix executives -- who have landed more than
$75 million since the firm's 1998 inception -- attributed their
ability to raise their most recent round in just 90 days to the
soundness of their business model.
"You
cannot blame investors if your business model does not hold water,"
Celarix CEO Jim Daniell told the E-Commerce Times.
Talkin'
'Bout a Revolution
Likewise,
early-stage firm Netezza is tackling the multibillion-dollar business
intelligence arena with a patent-pending technology product that
will begin shipping in the second quarter 2002.
"Our
business plan leverages partnerships with integrators and independent
software vendors that can help market Netezza's solutions and
open doors quickly," Netezza co-founder and CEO Jit Saxena
told the E-Commerce Times.
In
March 2002, the Framingham, Massachusetts-based company closed
a Battery Ventures-led funding round worth $20 million, its second
round overall.
"The
value proposition must be significant," NVCA's Metzger said.
"VCs are looking for technologies and companies that can
potentially revolutionize the status quo."
Follow
the Leader
Venture
capital firms look for seasoned managers to lead their portfolio
companies and execute business plans, analysts agreed.
"We
look for startups to be run by an experienced -- preferably serial
-- entrepreneur who has a track record of success," Charles
River's O'Leary said.
Led
by Internet veteran Douglas Thompson, Avolent's management team
wields deep industry knowledge, which lured lead investors Constellation
Ventures and Rho Ventures.
"VCs
are looking for strong market opportunity and a core product,
but also a team that can exploit both of those opportunities,"
Avolent chief financial officer Stephen Ghiglieri told the E-Commerce
Times.
For
its part, Celarix boasts a management team comprised of 60 percent
supply chain experts and 40 percent software experts, Daniell
said.
Show
Me the Money
And
a clear path to profitability is now a requisite for obtaining
venture capital, according to analysts.
"We
are seeing a reversion to historical norms, where successful businesses
generally hit the IPO launchpad three to eight years after starting
up," Morningstar's Nichols said. "VCs want to see a
company generate cash in a similar time frame."
Celarix's
Daniell and Avolent's Ghiglieri said their firms will fit into
this time frame if their profitability forecasts -- for next quarter
and next year, respectively -- prove accurate.