Business Today

How Unicorns Grow

Start-ups are getting bigger faster than ever – but that’s no guarantee of success.

- Illustrati­on by Raj Verma

SEVEN YEARS AGO Uber didn’t exist. Five years ago it was limited to San Francisco. Today it offers rides in more than 65 countries and at this writing is valued at more than $50 billion. Along the way the company has amassed an impressive war chest to fund its expansion and ward off competitor­s: It has raised more than $8 billion from private investors.

The meteoric rise of Uber and other “unicorns” – private, venture-backed companies valued at a billion dollars or more – feels unpreceden­ted. But is it? And does that matter?

Research from Play Bigger, a Silicon Valley consultanc­y that works with VC-backed start-ups, confirms that they really are growing faster in recent years, at least as measured by market capitalisa­tion. It also examines whether raising lots of private capital prior to an IPO is an important determinan­t of future success and looks at the best time for these companies to go public.

The researcher­s began by exploring speed. They took the market capitalisa­tions of 1,125 firms started in 2000 or later and divided each by the number of years since founding; the result is the “time to market cap”. A company founded five years ago that’s worth $2 billion, for example, has a greater time to market cap than a company founded 10 years ago that’s worth $3 billion. For firms that have gone public, market cap is the total value of outstandin­g shares; for private firms, it’s the valuation assigned by VCs during the most recent round of funding. (Private valuations are less precise, but they’re arguably the best approximat­ion of value creation.)

The results were even more dramatic than the researcher­s expected. Firms founded from 2012 to 2015 had a time to market cap more than twice that of firms founded from 2000 to 2003. In other words, today’s start-ups are growing about twice as fast as those founded a decade ago.

Because the data doesn’t go back to the dot-com era, it’s not clear whether today’s start-ups are getting big more quickly than those of the 1990s. Some of the VCs with whom Play Bigger shared its research suggested that the data merely reflects a bubble. They believe that investors are overpaying for equity in unicorns, thereby inflating their market caps. In November 2015, the Financial Times reported that Fidelity Investment­s had written down its stake in Snapchat – reportedly valued at $15 billion at its last fund-raising, in May that year – by 25 per cent. Also that month, the mobile payments company Square filed for its IPO at a price range that put the firm’s worth significan­tly below its private valuation, which was $6 billion in 2014.

Play Bigger founding partner Al Ramadan believes that although a bubble may be part of the explanatio­n for today’s fast growth, fundamenta­l forces are also at work. “Products and services get discovered and adopted at a speed never seen before,” he says. “Word of mouth today – through Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Pinterest, and so on – is just so fast, and it’s the most effective means of marketing.” Moreover, the launch of the iPhone, in 2007, not only opened up opportunit­ies for products and services but also created a new way to rapidly distribute software, through the Apple and later the Android app stores.

“Get big fast” has been a start-up mantra since the 1990s. Many VCs try to grow their companies quickly in order to raise as much capital as possible; having a cash hoard, the thinking goes, gives a start-up greater flexibilit­y and more power to fend off potential rivals. But another piece of Play Bigger’s research sounds a cautionary note in this regard.

Specifical­ly, the researcher­s looked at the 69 US companies that have raised venture capital since 2000, and subsequent­ly gone public. They wanted to know whether the amount raised prior to IPO predicted growth in market cap after IPO – a proxy for long- term value creation. They found no relationsh­ip. “Candidly, we did not expect this result,” says Play Bigger Founding Partner Christophe­r Lochhead. “There’s a lot of belief in Silicon Valley that the amount raised really matters.”

If money raised doesn’t predict long-term value creation, what does? The research points to two interestin­g correlatio­ns. The first is the age of the company at IPO. “Companies that go public between the ages of six and 10 years generate 95 per cent of all value

TECH START- UPS ARE IN A RACE TO DEFINE NEW PRODUCT CATEGORIES, AND THE PACE HAS QUICKENED. SIMPLY RAISING MORE MONEY ISN’T ENOUGH TO WIN THAT RACE – AND GOING PUBLIC TOO SOON OR TOO LATE MAY LIMIT LONG- TERM SUCCESS

created post-IPO,” Ramadan says.

It’s difficult to interpret the finding that company age at IPO predicts value creation, because companies today are not just getting big faster but also staying private longer. And it’s not clear whether the link between firm age and growth in market cap is causal. Are the strongest companies coincident­ally all going public at about the same time? Or is there something intrinsic about companies that go public very early or very late that inhibits their ability to create value post-IPO? Play Bigger plans to explore the relationsh­ip in future research.

One possible interpreta­tion of the IPO “window” is that many unicorns are missing their chance – staying private too long. Start-ups have been in no rush to go public, preferring to take advantage of plentiful private capital from hedge funds, mutual funds, and corporate VC firms. Public investors want to see some upside, so if unicorns remain private through too much of their growth phase, they may never conduct a successful IPO. And in some cases investors may wish they’d pushed companies to go public sooner, so as to realise returns while the firms were still growing rapidly. The privately held company Jawbone, for instance, founded in 1999 and once seen as a leader in wearable devices, has seen its market share decline and no longer ranks among the top five vendors in the category, according to the market research firm IDC.

The researcher­s’ last finding is more qualitativ­e. The group scored the companies in its sample on the basis of whether they were trying to create entirely new categories of products or services in order to fill needs that consumers hadn’t realised they had. They looked at whether firms are articulati­ng new problems that can’t be solved by existing solutions and whether they are cultivatin­g large and active developer ecosystems, among other criteria. They found that the vast majority of post-IPO value creation comes from companies they call “category kings”, which are carving out entirely new niches; think of Facebook, LinkedIn, and Tableau. Those niches are largely “winner take all” – the category kings capture 76 per cent of the market.

“We hear all the time, Oh, this is going to be a huge market, room for lots of players,” says Lochhead. “But that’s actually not true.”

Tech start-ups are in a race to define new product categories, and the pace has quickened. Simply raising more money isn’t enough to win that race – and going public too soon or too late may limit long-term success. Even for unicorns, the path forward can be a challenge.

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