Posts tagged as:

venture capital compensation

VC and private equity compensation is typically paid out using a 2 percent annual management fee on capital committed to the fund and 20 percent of the profits each time a portfolio company is sold. It is known as the 2 and 20 model. According to National Venture Capital Association, 2-and-20 has indeed stood the test of time and seems to be the right mix for the majority of firms and LPs.

There is a problem in the intersection of the 2 percent part of that equation and large venture funds, however. For example, a fund with $1 billion in capital can generate $20 million in annual management fees to a venture firm, completely independent of the quality of investments in the fund.

Kauffman Foundation Report

Kauffman Foundation published a report in May 2012, titled “We Have Met the Enemy….And He Is Us” on the state of the Venture Capital market with a focus on the GP-LP relationship. This analytical report highlights a series of lessons from 20-years of venture investing by the Foundation. The report received a lot of coverage in the media and should be required reading for those interested in the venture ecosystem.

One of the major conclusions from the report is that the 2-and-20 compensation structure for venture capital funds is a one-size-fits-all approach that mis-aligns incentives and can help VCs to get paid handsomely while their funds perform abysmally.

Some of the respondents interviewed for the report said they’d be amenable to changing how they’re compensated, and there’s even some realization within the industry that 2-and-20 has created bad incentives.

Possible new compensation structure

For high-demand funds, a new compensation structure could actually help them generate even more profits. For example, a top fund could hold an auction that initiates a bidding war between would-be investors, perhaps generating a 30 percent cut of profits on exits instead of 20. That would then potentially enable the fund to decrease the 2 part of the equation and better align its own priorities with those of its investors.

According to the report, the industry may move toward a ‘budget-based’ replacement for the 2 percent management fee. Under this scenario, Venture Capitalists would agree to manage a fund for a fixed cost that covers salaries, rent and other overhead items, which would remove much of the incentive to raise larger and larger funds.

As for the 20 percent payout, a better structure would pay VCs a percentage of profits only after the fund’s returns exceed an agreed-upon public markets benchmark. In this model, a fund that generates returns 3 percent greater than a public benchmark could take a 20 percent cut of profits for itself. If returns exceed public markets by 6 percent, for instance, the fund could take a 25 percent cut of profit.

However, investors in venture funds are afraid that if they become vocal about changing VCs’ compensation structure, they’ll get frozen out of the best funds. Negotiating a departure from 2-and-20 with one venture investment may invite questions as to why LPs didn’t negotiate similar deals with all the venture funds they plow cash into.

The commitment to 2-and-20 remains, and unless there’s an outcry from LPs, there’s little reason to think it will change.

 

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

No less than the president and the CEO of the noted Kaufman Foundation, the $1.8 billion endowment fund that promotes entrepreneurship, are saying that the current venture capital compensation model is broken.

In an article in Business Week, Carl Schramm and Harold Bradley say the prominence of American venture capital has taken a tumble from its heyday in 2000. The industry that spawned such successes as Apple, Cisco, Google and Microsoft, only invested $4.8 billion into 637 companies in 2009 (and that’s down 33 percent from 2008).

Schramm and Bradley believe the “2 and 20” formula (2 percent of annual management fees and 20 percent of profits on exit) is to blame. The formula worked well two decades ago, when most VC investors were wealthy individuals with “patient capital,” who were willing to wait 10 years for a start-up to blossom. But in the past decade, more and more institutional money has flooded into the VC industry. These big corporate and public pension fund investors are willing to commit huge chunks of money on the same 2 and 20 terms. But the higher capital volumes generate sizeable management fees for VC funds, which encourages VCs to focus more on raising funds than on nurturing start-ups along the long road to success.

And since institutional investors are under pressure to show short-term returns, VC funds started “flipping” their start-ups after just a few years, to create quick payoffs.

Schramm and Bradley believe that forcing VC funds to hold onto their best portfolio companies longer … and forcing them to put more of their own “skin” in the game, in terms of partnership money, would help. The full article is worth reading at BusinessWeek.

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

If you are fortunate enough to receive an offer for a private equity or venture capital job, never accept it on the spot. Instead, politely thank them for the offer, express your enthusiasm for the job and their firm, and ask to think it over for a few days. Try to buy at least a week to evaluate the offer and build your case for more.

This gives you time to build a case for your compensation package. You might mention specific skills that you’ve acquired, high profile or unusual deals you’ve worked on (M&A, IPOs, Convertibles, etc.), and the key skills you gained working on these deals (such as modeling, valuation, and others). In the case of a venture capital job, you need to demonstrate your ability to contribute to the firm, your passion for a particular industry, or the entrepreneurial culture overall. If you’ve started a business, worked on any deals, even part-time, or done any research for a local start-up or angel investor, you can build a strong case for a higher salary range.

Remember, a good firm is seeking high quality professionals who are able to deliver value. Never be afraid to ask for something. Employers are prepared to negotiate, and often feel more comfortable hiring someone who knows his or her professional worth. If you are as good as you say, they expect you to negotiate and are waiting for your counteroffers.

It also helps to negotiate from a position of strength. Knowledge about the market and compensation for similar jobs is one way. If you have more than one offer at the same time this obviously gives you a better bargaining position. You are able to mention that you are comparing compensation plans from both. Of course, this must be done diplomatically. You may want to indicate that you would prefer to work for their firm if they could match the compensation offer provided by another.

Finally, get the final arrangement in writing. Follow up your meeting with a letter thanking them again for the offer, mention when you’ll be starting, and outline both the salary and other compensation details that you have ironed out verbally.

Negotiating your complete compensation package sets the tone for your relationship with the company for years to come. How you handle this delicate task establishes how much respect they have for your abilities now, and the next time a compensation discussion comes up in the not-too-distant future.

References:

www.computerworld.com

www.bankrate.com

{ Comments on this entry are closed }

MBAs in Private Equity Jobs Earn $16,000 More

January 26, 2009

Now you can practically calculate the ROI for that advanced degree. MBAs in private equity on average were earning $16,000 more than non-MBA’s, according to the 2008 Job Search Digest Private Equity Compensation Survey. Although an MBA is not always required in private equity and VC careers, over half of the respondents have an MBA […]

Read the full article →

The Highest Private Equity Job Earnings by Title

January 12, 2009

The highest private equity earnings by title include CFO, Partner or Principal, Managing Director, and Vice President. That’s according to the 2008 Private Equity Jobs Digest Compensation Survey conducted in Fall, 2008, by JobSearchDigest.com. The survey includes private equity compensation data directly from hundreds of private equity and venture capital partners and employees from firms, […]

Read the full article →
Real Time Web Analytics