Death Of The Entrepreneur

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Venkat eFarm

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Aug 6, 2012, 2:20:59 PM8/6/12
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For those who think entrepreneurship is all Fame,Fortune and Ferrari's.. a grim reminder . Lalith seth , owner of Raj travels , one of India's well known Travel and Tourism company, committed suicide in a dramatic way by jumping off the Mumbai's  scenic Bandra-Worli Sealink bridge. ( Zee news: http://bit.ly/PA6pZE, IExpress : http://bit.ly/PA6JYu)

For someone who sold 'Dream Vacations for Happy Customers to beaches and hills' , it is sad to see his life ending in a Nightmare with a jump into the Deep Ocean.

Though there is lot of speculation surrounding the reason for his sudden act , the 'debt' word is definitely floating around. Though financial crisis is not new to the Mumbai , one might expect to see shady loan sharks and d-company behind such things ... but the 'debtors/lenders/agents'  chasing him , this time are different. Prestigious banks, MNCs, legal firms ( ICICI, HDFC, TATA Finance ?) - the white collar 'loan collectors' rears its head again . Now the HNI's and Page-3's are getting same treatment ( like last year ) what the the rural poor did from some MFIs.


Though the specifics of this case is not known, but there are critical lesson for entrepreneurs, investors and people alike ... especially in this recession era.

In the eagerness to 'Please the customer' , and 'Delight the Shareholders and Investors', often the entrepreneur  is expected to  sacrifice  his/her own personal happiness and well being, taking undue risks and excesses. In business or life - when the wind is good , the ships sails are set on full speed   , but when the weather gets stormy and starts rocking the boat , the captain  is blamed and often sinks with his ship !

It is easy to 'Blame it all' on the entrepreneur , and his poor management abilities and failed business ideas ... it is also important to ask the questions ---

The bankers and VCs are professionals who are expected to perform due diligence and invest based on sound knowledge and insights . if the owners were bluffing in their statements or pitching nonviable business ideas, why did such seasoned professionals make gross errors in judgement ? Were they also following the herd , bypassing sound analysis , and just wanting to jump into the boat -  just not to miss the big party ?

Often , the signs of failure or mismanagement in business is not a sudden activity - the Board , Auditors, Investors and mentors  are supposed to act like the guardians and gate keepers to warn and shout when necessary before things go too off hand. But strangely, after the classic 'Rajat Gupta' case , 'Satyam computers fraud' , 'Barclays bank libor scandal'  even the 'gatekeepers are not trust worthy any more .... Insiders often can see and know the 'cracks' long before it becomes a gaping hole ... but often 'Greed' silences everyone .

The relationship between the entrepreneur and the investor is that of the 'race horse' and the 'gambler'. Though the horse&jockey  is making its best attempt to win the jackpot, it is against all odds that every horse will be the first to finish-line .. in fact many may never make it to the end . But at least lets not start 'killing' the horses , or there will be no more races !

It is time we do away with the 'Lehman era' legacies like  '10x , IPO exit , exponential scaling' etc., and sit eye-to-eye and start talking simple , old school metrics like TRUST, HONESTY, DEPENDABILITY, ETHICS ...  and give a deeper look at 'NEED' v/s 'GREED'.

Or we will see more entrepreneurs like this in the Press - Not in 'Page 1' but in 'Page 13' (Obituary) !






venkat efarm

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Aug 7, 2012, 3:07:54 AM8/7/12
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On 07-08-2012 09:10, vasudevanpn wrote:

 Posting response received from Mr. PN Vasudevan , MD Equitas Microfinance 

 

Hi, this is one way of looking at things … trying to pass on the blame to everyone other than the entrepreneur.   Having seen many entrepreneurs from close quarters and having seen how they negotiate tooth and claw with investors over ‘valuations’ has left me feeling, very often, deeply disturbed at the extreme  greed of the entrepreneurs.  The 10X multiple that you are talking of, it is often the entrepreneur who seeks such outrageous valuations when the going is good, in the supreme belief and confidence that he is the best in the world and so he is entitled to demand such atrocious valuations.  And having seen a few s uch deals in the markets, every entrepreneur thinks that he is the next facebook or google and demands the heavens. 

While investors can be blamed to the extent that they refuse deals at high valuations, but who is the person pushing the high valuation in the first place?  Do the investors really want to give high valuations when they  make an investment?  Never!   The 5 year projections are given by the entrepreneur and based on that, the investor determines what is the likely exit price 5 years down the line and discounts it by his expected rate of return and offers an upfront valuation.  If the entrepreneur is not too greedy and accepts this, then he is only committed to deliver his original projections.  However often, the entrepreneur demands a much higher entry valuation.  The investor then says that if he has to invest at such a high valuation, then the exit valuation needs to be higher which means the projections need to be higher and the entrepreneur changes his original projection to reflect a higher scale.  Once the investor invests on this changed projection, he naturally would like to hold the entrepreneur responsible to deliver this changed projection and if that change was done, more from getting high entry valuation than real on the ground confidence in delivering it, then the entrepreneur after sometime, would find himself in a tight corner and end up in the Arabic Sea. 

So who is to blame?  Sure, we can keep saying that when the entrepreneur demands high entry valuation and gives projections beyond reasonableness, the investor should caution the entrepreneur against such projections.  But is the entrepreneur a kid?  Is he a child to be protected against his own greed and aspirations?  Are they not expected to be mature enough to know what they are committing to? 

 

I am an entrepreneur myself and I have no pity for such ‘greedy’ and slothful entrepreneurs who are avaricious in their greed and incompetent to execute their over ambitious projects properly.  While we can go around blaming the investors, bankers, lenders, governments, regulators, public, press, friends and relatives for piling pressure on the ‘poor’ entrepreneur, the real key issue lies with the ‘poor’ entrepreneur.  For every one entrepreneur ending up in Arabic Sea, there are many entrepreneurs who have put out reasonable projections, been extremely fair and transparent to all the stakeholders involved, got reasonable valuations from their investors and who are leading very contented and satisfying entrepreneur lives and creating happiness and value for all the stakeholders involved.  Let us learn to celebrate such entrepreneurs who display the old world characters of TRUST, HONESTY, DEPENDABILITY, ETHICS and through this, creating a sustainable happiness for one and all rather than be taken in by entrepreneurs who are greedy and whose needs are beyond the realm of understanding of normal people and who bring trouble to all including themselves.

 

Regards/vasu

 

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