Venture Capital Test
Does a venture capital exit have any negative impact on the original founders of the company?
How are the investments in a venture capital firm structured typically?
How long does the initial due diligence process last?
How much in funding, in general, will an investor want to invest?
How often do venture capital firms change the investments within their portfolios, on an average?
What are the "conversion rights", typically stated on a term sheet?
What are the typical returns a venture capital firm expects when exiting from a successful investment?
What do veto rights allow the venture capitalist to do?
What does "deal syndication" on the term sheet address?
What does a venture capitalist look like to its investors, based on the way it operates?
What does an exit effectively do?
What has been the largest area which venture capitalists have been actively investing in for the last decade?
What is a "first round" investment?
What is a sweeper clause?
What is a Term Sheet?
What is meant by "exit strategy"?
What is meant by "screening" in the investment process?
What is meant by Post-money valuation?
What is meant by the "anti-dilution rights", often found on a term sheet?
What is meant by the right to "observer rights"?
What is meant when a venture capitalist talks about the "burn rate"?
What is the approximate size of the venture capital industry in 2009?
What is the attraction of convertible debt to a venture capitalist?
What is the average size of a venture capitalist's investment in a target company?
What is the first step in the process between the target company and the venture capitalist?
What is the importance of the intellectual property (IP) which venture capitalists focus heavily on?
What is the main difference between equity and debt?
What is the main reason why a venture capitalist does its own evaluation of a target company's projected financials?
What is the minimum that a venture capitalist would expect at the monthly board meeting?
What is the overall venture capital portfolio expectation?
What is the primary source of a venture capital firm's funding?
What is the purpose of having portfolios?
What is the term sheet used for once it is agreed upon and signed?
What is the typical process overview?
What level of involvement will a venture capital firm typically have?
What options does a venture capitalist have when holding convertible debt?
What protection do investors in a venture capital fund have?
What purpose do milestones serve in the term sheet?
What role do committees play?
What role do the investors play in a venture capital firm?
What role does "valuation" play in selecting the most appropriate investment areas?
What would be the attraction of offering a debt round to a target company?
When does the target company actually receive the investment?
When investigating the target market of the potential investment, what will the venture capitalists focus on specifically?
When is the due diligence process done?
When was the largest burst of activity in the venture capital industry witnessed?
When will the venture capitalist show the most active involvement with the company post funding?
Which of the following would be a possible portfolio for a venture capital firm?
Which of the following would be a red flag for a venture capitalist?
Which of the following would be considered an exit strategy?
Which of the following would be done in the final stage of the due diligence process, once the company has passed the first round of due diligence?
Which of the following would be done in the preliminary due diligence?
Which of the following would be encouraging for a venture capitalist to see when screening a company?
Which of the following would be the top priority for a venture capitalist in a target company?
Who is in charge of the investment process?
Who ultimately decides to progress through the evaluation process?
Who would be a possible investor in a venture capital firm?
Why are share transfers tightly restricted by the venture capitalist?
Why do few target companies make it past the initial screening?
Why do venture capital firms focus on three to five industry sectors in their portfolios?
Why do venture capitalists invest in multiple industries instead of focusing on one specific industry?
Why do venture capitalists tend to focus on riskier investments?
Why do venture capitalists typically involve themselves in an equity base rather than debt?
Why do venture capitalists typically not sign "non disclosure agreements" which protect the target companies from the venture capitalists stealing their idea?
Why does a venture capital firm require a substantial amount of equity for the investment?
Why does corporate structure matter when the investment is for equity?
Why don't the investors in venture capital firms invest directly in the target companies rather than investing in a venture capital firm as an intermediary?
Why is an experienced management team critical for a new company?
Why is personal rapport important?
Why is Pre-money value important to a venture capitalist?
Why is the corporate structure important to the venture capital firm and part of the due diligence process?
Why is the venture capitalist in charge of the drawing up of the term sheet and not the target company?
Why would a merger with another company also be considered an investment exit?
Why would a teachers' pension fund, a seemingly conservative pool of capital, invest in a venture capital firm?
Why would a venture capital firm require they be on the board of directors if they choose to invest in a target company?
Why would a venture capitalist prefer equity to debt?
Why would a venture capitalist want to exit a growing company?
Why would specialized consultants be hired for the final stage of the due diligence process?
Would a venture capitalist want to have majority control of the board even without majority stock ownership?