Is This Startup Ready For Investment?

Since 2005 startup accelerators have provided cohorts of startups with mentoring, pitch practice and product focus. However, accelerator Demo Days are a combination of graduation ceremony and pitch contest, with the uncomfortable feel of a swimsuit competition. Other than “I’ll know it when I see it”, there’s no formal way for an investor attending Demo Day to assess project maturity or quantify risks. Other than measuring engineering progress, there’s no standard language to communicate progress.

Corporations running internal incubators face many of the same selection issues as startup investors, plus they must grapple with the issues of integrating new ideas into existing P&L-driven functions or business units.

What’s been missing for everyone is:

  • a common language for investors to communicate objectives to startups
  • a language corporate innovation groups can use to communicate to business units and finance
  • data that investors, accelerators and incubators can use to inform selection

While it doesn’t eliminate great investor judgment, pattern recognition skills and mentoring, we’ve developed an Investment Readiness Level tool that fills in these missing pieces.

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Investment Readiness Level (IRL) for Corporations and Investors
The startups in our Lean LaunchPad classes and the NSF I-Corps incubator use LaunchPad Central to collect a continuous stream of data across all the teams. Over 10 weeks each team gets out of the building talking to 100 customers to test their hypotheses across all 9 boxes in the business model canvas.

We track each team’s progress as they test their business model hypotheses. We collect the complete narrative of what they discovered talking to customers as well as aggregate interviews, hypotheses to test, invalidated hypotheses and mentor and instructor engagements. This data gives innovation managers and investors a feel for the evidence and trajectory of the cohort as a whole and a top-level view of each teams progress. The software rolls all the data into an Investment Readiness Level score.

(Take a quick read of the post on the Investment Readiness Level – it’s short. Or watch the video here.)

The Power of the Investment Readiness Level: Different Metrics for Different Industry Segments
Recently we ran a Lean LaunchPad for Life Sciences class with 26 teams of clinicians and researchers at UCSF.  The teams developed businesses in 4 different areas– therapeutics, diagnostics, medical devices and digital health.  To understand the power of this tool, look at how the VC overseeing each market segment modified the Investment Readiness Level so that it reflected metrics relevant to their particular industry.

Medical Devices
Allan May of Life Science Angels modified the standard Investment Readiness Level to include metrics that were specific for medical device startups. These included; identification of a compelling clinical need, large enough market, intellectual property, regulatory issues, and reimbursement, and whether there was a plausible exit.

In the pictures below, note that all the thermometers are visual proxies for the more detailed evaluation criteria that lie behind them.

Device IRL

Investment Readiness Level for Medical Devices

You can watch the entire presentation here

Therapeutics
Karl Handelsman of CMEA Capital modified the standard Investment Readiness Level (IRL) for teams developing therapeutics to include identifying clinical problems, and agreeing on a timeline to pre-clinical and clinical data, cost and value of data points, what quality data to deliver to a company, and building a Key Opinion Leader (KOL) network. The heart of the therapeutics IRL also required “Proof of relevance” – was there a path to revenues fully articulated, an operational plan defined. Finally, did the team understand the key therapeutic liabilities, have data proving on-target activity and evidence of a therapeutic effect.

Therapeutics IRL

You can see the entire presentation here

Digital Health
For teams developing Digital Health solutions, Abhas Gupta of MDV noted that the Investment Readiness Level was closest to the standard web/mobile/cloud model with the addition of reimbursement and technical validation.

Digital Health

Diagnostics
Todd Morrill wanted teams developing Diagnostics to have a reimbursement strategy fully documented, the necessary IP in place, regulation and technical validation (clinical trial) regime understood and described and the cost structure and financing needs well documented.

Diagnostics IRL

You can see the entire presentation here

For their final presentations, each team explained how they tested and validated their business model (value proposition, customer segment, channel, customer relationships, revenue, costs, activities, resources and partners.) But they also scored themselves using the Investment Readiness Level criteria for their  market. After the teams reported the results of their self-evaluation, the  VC’s then told them how they actually scored.  We were fascinated to see that the team scores and the VC scores were almost the same.

Lessons Learned

  • The Investment Readiness Level provides a “how are we doing” set of metrics
  • It also creates a common language and metrics that investors, corporate innovation groups and entrepreneurs can share
  • It’s flexible enough to be modified for industry-specific business models
  • It’s part of a much larger suite of tools for those who manage corporate innovation, accelerators and incubators

Listen to the blog post here [audio http://traffic.libsyn.com/albedrio/steveblank_hplewis_140225_FULL.mp3]

Download the podcast here

9 Responses

  1. Speaking as an entrepreneur who serves consumers directly, (and also very light business-to-business dealings with small business owners,) it fascinates me just how many layers of complexity there are in the validation process for complex and expensive services. Personally, I’m used to doing a couple quick dry tests to confirm demand, then round of price testing and then go to market! Thank you for going in depth into the more complex business-to-business arena.

  2. This is a helpful measuring stick Steve. But, do you think this criteria applies at every stage (Angel, Seed, A?)

    For example, in the case of therapeutics w/CMEA Capital, the sample venture would need funding to even get to the IP review/recruitment stage.

    • Great question.
      If VC’s would share their criteria – i.e. “if you haven’t gotten to Step 3 – explain to us why we should meet” or “we tend to do Series A funding after startups have gotten to Step 6” then startups would at least understand where the canonical goalposts were. (Of course smart VC’s will see things outside a rigid set of metrics.)

  3. What is needed is an early stage marketplace where the criteria for investment level is set by a partner or a funder. Place technology and talent at the center of the early stage and corporate partners, government partners and funders will find what they need. IRL is a nice metric – but it is limited to a specific level of early stage company trying to appeal to a specific type of funder or partner.

    The solution is in a global marketplace – the Early Stage Marketplace.

    The ESM video is at – http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZNZdutnGdc

    The AngelList vs. ESM comparison post = http://wp.me/P2dAHW-F

  4. Hi Steve and Associates, The link to the Medical Devices Presentation on Vimeo is not working — no file is found. Thanks for all the great insights — keep them coming! Best, Jim McGoughCo-FounderEdgeOne Medical

    Date: Tue, 25 Feb 2014 14:01:55 +0000 To: jjmcgough@hotmail.com

  5. […] will realize that a company needs innovation KPI’s, policies, processes and incentives. (Our Investment Readiness Level is just one of those metrics.) These enable innovation to occur as an integral and parallel […]

  6. Great post Steve, I am happy to see the communication establishing between VCs and Startups. My hypothesis: it is more important to have that communication established than to get buyin into the methodology you do.

    One question:
    – is it a consequence to fall down IRL levels in case of pivoting?

    (Example: no product/market fit possible due to e.g. too high costs, but with a similar solution another problem/solution fit possible)

    – if so, what consequences does this have on the “governance” on a longer time period?

  7. Milestones where project investment decisions are made, described by Steve as IRLs, carry the same definition as Phase Gates in traditional H1/2 development (both are investment milestones). Apply learning metrics and Lean Start Up principles, along with a healthy dose of cultural change, and you can scale your innovation approach to H3. Easier said than done but there are clear similarities at play. Do you agree?

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