It's been a while since my last post and it appears I missed the entire month of March. Not to worry, I was busy working on closing the Series B financing for iControl Networks. We ended up raising $15.5M, led by John Doerr of Kleiner Perkins.
This got me thinking about my role in helping companies grow up. I started working with the founders of iControl at the concept stage, prior to the first $100K of angel financing. For a while, it seemed like we were constantly walking along the edge of a cliff and had several near death experiences. In fact, for a good laugh, I just went back and checked our accounting system, and at the end of one quarter in 2005, we were down to $143 cash on the balance sheet. The CEO and I ended up funding the company ourselves until we were able to scrape together a larger angel round.
Now, the company is poised to change the home security industry, one that is in dire need of change. However, my role changes and I am moving from CFO and member of the executive team to cheerleader and advisor. It is not unlike watching your children grow up. With two teenage daughters, I am becoming quite familiar with the changes as your babies become toddlers, pre-schoolers, enter kindergarten, middle and high school. My oldest won't be off to college for a few years, but will probably happen in a blink of an eye.
At times, I do miss being part of a team that takes a company from infancy all the way to IPO and beyond. I have been tempted at various times to join one of my companies as full time CFO, but have decided that is not in the best interest of either party (me or the company). As the company grows, it is more important to have a CFO that is both strategic and skilled in process, rather than a "seat of the pants" entrepreneurial CFO. I personally enjoy the earliest stages and building a portfolio of start-ups and entrepreneurial teams.This got me thinking about my role in helping companies grow up. I started working with the founders of iControl at the concept stage, prior to the first $100K of angel financing. For a while, it seemed like we were constantly walking along the edge of a cliff and had several near death experiences. In fact, for a good laugh, I just went back and checked our accounting system, and at the end of one quarter in 2005, we were down to $143 cash on the balance sheet. The CEO and I ended up funding the company ourselves until we were able to scrape together a larger angel round.
Now, the company is poised to change the home security industry, one that is in dire need of change. However, my role changes and I am moving from CFO and member of the executive team to cheerleader and advisor. It is not unlike watching your children grow up. With two teenage daughters, I am becoming quite familiar with the changes as your babies become toddlers, pre-schoolers, enter kindergarten, middle and high school. My oldest won't be off to college for a few years, but will probably happen in a blink of an eye.
The cheerleader role isn't all bad. Anonymizer, a company where I was an early investor, advisor and board member, just got acquired by Abraxas Corporation for a very nice multiple. Rather than home security, these guys are helping with our nation's security. Anonymizer raised a small amount of equity and was able to build a business that became very profitable. It took almost a decade from the initial investment, but in the end, worked out well for all involved. Come to think of it, this will help pay for those college tuition bills that will be coming....
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