Wealth Management

Voted #6 on Top 100 Family Business influencer on Wealth, Legacy, Finance and Investments: Jacoline Loewen My Amazon Authors' page Twitter:@ jacolineloewen Linkedin: Jacoline Loewen Profile

April 30, 2010

How to Deal with Financing


I recommend ReadWriteStart which makes book recommendations. ReadWriteStart's Chris Cameron talks about how the website, "has resources and tips for young companies looking to raise funding from venture capitals and angel investors. This week's recommendation for our Weekend Reading series, Money Magnet: How to Attract Investors to Your Business by Jacoline Loewen, is a book aimed at helping entrepreneurs learn how to deal with financing and how to make their businesses attractive to investors."
Book this week: "Author Jacoline Loewen is a Canadian business consultant and strategy writer who has aided companies seeking capital and private equity. In Money Magnet, Loewen provides valuable lessons she has learned from her career on raising capital in a style that is "informative, relaxed and easy to understand."

April 10, 2010

3 steps to take if Private Equity has not replied to your Resume

Needing a Financial Analyst number cruncher to take over a challenging role left by one of my employees who has returned home to China, I began a search. I received an overwhelming response, probably because it is spring of a terrible drought in jobs; and we are in the cutting edge industry of private equity.
Many MBA graduates also have sugar plum salaries dancing in their heads that are just not the reality on the Street.
I had the resumes for a month, I went away on vacation and thought I had got return emails covered by one of the staff. I was wrong, the emails had not been sent.
When I returned, I received a scathingly rude email from a young man incensed by my greed and how I had not replied to his request to get the job. At first I thought, "Ah, this must be a number-oriented young man who is obviously challenged in his inter-personal skills. Good point that he made about getting back to him."
I took that input, even though the reasons he gave were not my intent at all.
That young man rushed to give me his views on why I was not replying to his email. In his judgement, which he revealed in great detail in his email, I was worse than the greedy Wall Street Robber Barons. I could imaging spittle flying from his mouth as he laid out the injustice of it all to me. He would teach me a lesson that I did not know as I was blinded by greed.
Oh dear. It was just that I had bumped into one of those trade-offs in career. I had taken a long vacation with my family, and it cost me productivity in my business. If this young man had just inquired and prodded me politely, he would have found out why the silence.
Here is a great Harvard Business School tip of the day for this young man; perhaps it will help with his future job search:
Link to HBS

Silence is the worst kind of feedback — it is ambiguous and generic. When you don't know why someone hasn't called you back or responded to your email, it is all too easy to assume the worst. Here are 3 steps to take if you're getting the silent treatment:
  1. Accept that you don't know. Acknowledge that you don't know what the silence really means. Resist the temptation to fill in the blanks with your own insecurities.
  2. Ask for clarity. Reach out to the person and ask him to tell you why he's not responding.
  3. Believe the answer. Whatever the response — he was too busy, he forgot — don't read between the lines. Accept it as truth and move on.
Jacoline Loewen, Money Magnet, Attracting Investors to Your Business

April 5, 2010

Is consulting borrowing your watch to tell you the time?

Do consultants actually add to your bottom line with their additional work inside your company?
Watch video
The Lords of Strategy is a good read on whether thought leaders add value to a business and this is an interview with the author, Howard.Kiechel.
It is hard to remember a time  when business did not have strategy but it was only developed in the Seventies. It was the first time they had a systematic way to look a their customers and their processes, along with their costs.
Concepts have developed further and it is so common now for companies to have a strategy, that we overlook how powerful it can be. Michael Porter was the first to create a strategy course as part of the MBA curriculum.
Now, strategy is more specific and granular looking at specifics.
Strategic planning is now not the big plan; it is more adaptive and looks at how to change more quickly. Strategy has fought between the strategy number people and the strategy people people. Tom Peters lead the camp focussed on people and has now gained the same recognition.
Strategy has a place still. Companies have a difficult time asking and the big three strategy questions:

  1. Who is your customer?
  2. Who are your competitors and 
  3. What are your costs?

These three still stand as the big three questions that every company needs to discuss. The Big 3 Car companies in the US stopped asking on all three and look at where their results are compared to twenty years ago.
The best consultants are those that are either great on the people element or are looking for the patterns and pushing to ask the right big three questions.
http://blogs.hbr.org/video/2010/03/the-secret-origins-of-corporat.html
Jacoline Loewen, author of Money Magnet, Attracting Private Equity to your Business.

April 3, 2010

Private Equity pulling through recession in better shape


Private equity-backed companies seem to be pulling through the financial crisis in better shape than other comparable business, especially issuers of speculative grade or high-yield debt offerings, according to a study from the Private Equity Council (PEC). (Read more.)
The study measured the annualized default rate for more than 3,200 private equity-backed companies acquired between 2000 and 2009 and held through 2008 to 2009, which is where the PEC bracketed the recession. The default rate for those companies reached 2.8% in that time, compared to 6.2% for other firms.
During the recession, the majority of the transactions that eventually defaulted involved little to no leverage, according to the study.
The report challenges other studies done by Moody’s Investor Service and Standard & Poor’s (S&P) suggesting that “overleveraged” portfolio companies held default rates several times higher than their peers.
In The Buyout of America,  author Josh Kosman suggested such woes would be similar to the subprime meltdown. Kosman writes that the private-equity market would bust when more than $1trn in debt comes due between 2012 and 2015. Another study done by Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in 2008 forecasted that almost half of the world’s private equity-backed companies would default.
According to PEC, the BCG study “significantly overstated the problem,” and default rates register roughly 30% below its projections.
Ouch!

Who makes the lion's share of profits?

Having just spent time at Ivey Business School, it reminded me of my MBA days and how we all dreamed we would change the world...or at least change a business. One of the reasons I was driven to go to business school was because early on in my career, I met two Ivey MBAs who were finding tanking businesses, raising some private money from wealthy Bay Street lawyers or traders, and using the cash to get the banks off the flagging businesses' backs.
I hung on every word as these two men described how their work added jobs to businesses, revived business owners and breathed new life into products and processes. I could see their excitement and I wanted to do the same sort of work.
I was intrigued by the difference a cash injection of equity would make. Once the business owner and team  were no longer answering calls from the bank, they could get the business back to the challenge of finding and serving clients - paying clients. As the energy flowed back to marketing and service delivery, it would be like a massive log jam freeing up, suddenly returning the river to a confident flow. So many companies need that financial reprieve to gather themselves and get the business back to doing what it excels at doing--and I don't care who you are, no CEO enjoys looking for capital when the business is struggling. There's no worse confidence drainer.
Back to those 2 MBA guys I admired--it was their ethics of seeing the business owner move up the business to a new level or re-finding their edge. This joy is working as a team clearly was their magic sauce to their success. When I visit private equity firms today, I want to see that same secret sauce as they talk about current portfolio companies. I want to hear their pleasure in working as a team to take a company to a new level. It is easier to find Private Equity who can ramp up processes, but the culture and attitude is rarer.
McKinsey & Co studied the financial success of private equity firms and discovered that in fact, only the top 20% of private equity funds make the lion's share of profits. True to their style of quality research, Sacha Gaie at McKinsey dug deeper and came up with a range of activities the good Private Equity firms practiced and it did come down to strategy and other team work. The study did not have a specific measure for team work or ethics or pure good spirits in dealing with each other, but if that could be quantified, it would explain a great deal of who succeeds and who gets to go home broke.
My two Ivey MBA heroes went on to be top of the industry which is now known as private equity. I always held them up as my guide to how to work with others. I went to business school to learn more of their skils and I find it ironic that without seeking it on purpose, I am in that fantastic industry called private equity hopefully helping business owners and CEOs reach their dreams.