Here's a very interesting list of the top 20 worst VC investments of all time. My favorites include Pets.com, CueCat, and Procket.
Really, makes you think when's a good time to sell off one's firm if the valuations can go up and down so dramatically. Also, with Sabeer Bhatia back in the news it makes you think whether the $400 million he sold Hotmail for was the right price, considering its worth a few $billions now. But in a recent interview he said something very straightforward, "When you've got $5000 in the bank, and someone offers you $400 million, the choice is pretty simple". Especially, when the first offer he got from Microsoft was a measly $160 million.
About Me
- Kanwal K Mookhey
- Mumbai, India
- I run an IT Security consulting firm based out of India. We started off from scratch in 2001 when I was 21, and have offices in Mumbai, Bahrain, and UAE. The idea behind the blog is to share the stories of how we run the business, the deals we make, the deals that break, the heartburn, and the sheer joy.
The Ultimate Startup Guide
The Ultimate Startup Guide is an e-book that provides answers to all your questions related to starting and growing a business in India. Everything you wanted to know about entrepreneurship in India from ideation to registration to marketing to hiring. The book contains a large number of practical examples, anecdotes, interviews, and motivational material to help you get started, and to grow rapidly in a booming Indian economy. If you've got the idea, this book will help you through with the execution and realize your dreams.
Here are some of the key questions you will find answered in this book:
Details of the book are: Title: The Ultimate Startup Guide Author: Kanwal Mookhey Pages: 150 Additional: Companion CD contains numerous templates for building your business plan, calculating cashflow, preparing profit and loss, and balance sheets, preparing invoices, your resume and profile, marketing material, websites, contracts, and many other useful and motivational material. |
Monday, December 03, 2007
Worst VC Investments
Posted by Kanwal K Mookhey at 11:27 PM 3 comments
Friday, August 24, 2007
Running/starting a business - frequently asked questions
Q. What will be the tax structure for a sole proprietorship?
A. As a proprietor, you will create a profit-and-loss account of your business. Here you have the advantage of putting in a lot of your business/personal expenses into the P&L account. This should ideally be avoided as you grow, but initially you can reduce your tax burden with this. The tax you will end up paying is only on the *profit* of your business, and not on all the income. If you accept income directly on your name, you will have to end up paying tax on all the income. So proprietorship is the smarter choice.
The other tax component you need to be aware of is Service Tax. If your revenues exceed Rs. 8 lakhs per year, you are liable to pay Service Tax every quarter at the rate of 12.36% on the income. For this you will need to obtain a Service Tax number by registering yourself at the local excise office. This is for services. If you are going to be selling products, you need to register for Sales Tax or VAT (depends on the rules in your particular state). For this as well you need to check with your local excise officer. More information on Service/Sales tax is available here
http://cexmumbai3.gov.in/
Q. How do I start from scratch?
A. Good to hear that you're looking at becoming an entrepreneur. There are basically two approaches to starting your company:
1. You could plan, map your strengths, product offering, and then see whether there is a market need for it, what resources you would need, how much funding you would need, and then build all of this into a business plan.
2. You could jump right into the deep end of the pool, and follow a 'shoot-from-the-hip' kind of cowboy style of doing things
I adopted approach #2, but wouldn't always advise it. The important common points in either approach are:
1. You have to offer something that the market will pay you for
2. It has to be something you would love doing irrespective of how much you get paid for it
The current economic and business situation is such that you could start off on an experimental basis while you are still working. And then you could quit and begin full time. I was slightly advantaged because I started at 20-21 and didn't have a family to support. Those sorts of things add responsibilities and must be duly addressed.
I started my company with a Rs. 2 lakh capital, and built it into a 100 times that in about 6 years. My blog does contain posts on how to start your business from scratch. Take a look and see if it helps.
Q. Can you tell me if VAT and Service Tax are applicable for freelance software solutions provided locally and for abroad?
A. Service Tax, yes, only if your annual turnover exceeds Rs. 8 lakhs
VAT would be applicable only if you resell other software products, or you have built your own products.
Q. Do I need a PAN card for a proprietorship firm?
A. No, you can use your personal PAN number. A separate PAN will be required only if you have incorporate it as a Pvt. Ltd. firm. Approach the nearest Income Tax office and get in touch with the PRO (Public Relations Officer) for details.
Q. Do I need to register for Service Tax or VAT?
A. Service Tax, yes, only if your annual turnover exceeds Rs. 8 lakhs
VAT would be applicable only if you resell other software products, or you have built your own products.
Q. Where do I get my seed capital from?
A. As to your funding requirement, I suggest you first list out exactly how much money you need, for how many months, how you intend to earn revenues, how much revenues you are targeting on a monthly basis vs. your monthly expenses to run the company. Basically, try and build a rudimentary profit-and-loss sheet, and see where your break-even point is. How do you intend to pay back the entity who loans you the money.
Taking money from friends/relatives may sound easy, but it isn't always so. What if your venture doesn't succeed as much you had planned. You will damage the relationships also. But if it is a small sum, and you are confident of returning it, then this is the best option. Banks will ask for collateral to give you a loan, and this might be difficult, unless you mortgage some family property or other assets you have.
But first come up with the exact amount of money you need and then try and figure out your sources of funding.
Q. I am currently working at a Pvt Ltd Co. and am starting my own propreitorship firm from my home. Its a services business where I would be launching my first portal soon. I have acquired a gumaste license. Kindly inform me about the other requirements specially relating to taxes. Do I need a seperate pancard for the firm and besides registering for the service tax which other taxes do i have to pay?
A. If you are running it as a sole proprietorship, you can continue using your personal PAN number. For purposes of tax calculation, you need to prepare a profit-and-loss account for the proprietorship firm, and then include only the profit (if any) into your total taxable income computation. But if you incorporate it as a Pvt. Ltd. firm then you need an additional PAN card.
Besides service tax, if you have employees you would have to pay Fringe Benefit Tax on the benefits you provide to your employees (such as travel, food, conveyance, entertainment, petrol diesel, etc.). You also need to register for Professional Tax for your proprietorship firm. If you sell or resell any products, you would also need to register for VAT or Sales Tax. If you have employees, you need to deduct tax at source, and for this you need to register for a TAN number.
Please check with a professional CA and CS (Company Secretary) for the latest laws and regulations in this regard.
Q. Can I have a current account (as the sole Prop) in my name but have an operational business name for website/visiting cards etc. Is it mandatory to have the name registered?
A. Your clients will know you by the name being used on your website and visiting cards. But then when you bill them or ask them to make a payment, it will be a different name. This will create a slightly negative impression in their minds. It is best to focus on brand-building right from the start.
Posted by Kanwal K Mookhey at 4:32 AM 7 comments
Thursday, August 02, 2007
How to register for Sales Tax / VAT in India
Recently, we got into reselling products in line with our consulting work, and also developed a couple of new products. But in order to sell products within India, we need to register for a Sales Tax or VAT (Value-Added Tax) number. This process is pretty straightforward:
- Locate the office of the Central Sales Tax Office in your city. Being in Mumbai, a simple Google search turned up the location of the office at Mazgaon - http://salestax.maharashtra.gov.in/communicationcenter/contactusShow.php
- Approach either the Public Relations Officer's desk there, or go directly to the Registration Department and collect the forms.
- We needed the following supporting documentation along with the form:
- Company's PAN Card
- Director's PAN Card copy
- Two proofs of Director's residence - I used my passport and a phone bill
- Two proofs of place of business - we used our Leave & License agreement, and the electricity bill
- The form is pretty straightforward to fill, and you need to ask for the one related to Voluntary Registration (VRS). You will need a Sales Tax Professional to sign on the form, and the Mazgaon building also houses the central office of the Association of Sales Tax Professionals, so finding one shouldn't be all that difficult.
- It cost us Rs. 5000 as fees for VRS, and nothing under-the-table
- The Sales Tax or VAT number is sent across by post in about a week's time
Posted by Kanwal K Mookhey at 1:44 AM 30 comments
Saturday, June 23, 2007
10 ways to get business when bootstrapping
Some of these headlines are beginning to read like the advertising gimmicks from fly-by-night online operators. But when you're bootstrapping your business, and don't have much in the way of funding. And possibly no sales or marketing staff, here're some ideas on how you could get leads. Caveat: this would work best probably only for consulting companies, but then again, it just might work for anyone. Here goes:
- Subscribe and post to mailing lists: In our line of work, there are a number of mailing lists. Some of these have subscriptions of over 1 million members (Bugtraq). When people send in queries, and if you have sensible answers to give, it helps to put your name out there. If I read someone's reply to a query, which I find useful, I will often check up on that person's website, and see if there is any business potential. Similarly, if you post answers and put your contact information in your signature, it helps to put your name out there.
- Write articles: Often, when we don't have business in a particular segment of our work, say SAP Security, we'll go ahead and write up on it. If an online or offline journal publishes the article, that's great. If not, we put it up on our website, and sooner or later the search engines will pick it up and send inquiries your way.
- Speak at conferences - big or small: Within your area of business, there would be a number of professional societies. These would normally meet weekly or monthly, and quite often they invite guest speakers. If you take membership of these societies and take an active role, you're very likely to get noticed. They are also often short of good speakers, so if you can play it to your strength then you would again be able to put your name out there.
- Write a blog (not an anonymous one!): If you post good stuff on your blog, especially directly related to your area of expertise, business is quite likely to come your way. Of course, anonymously blogging like here doesn't help much in the way of getting business, but then again that was not really my objective :)
- Call up the bigger fish: In any line of work, there are bound to be the big guys who would be more than willing to send business your way, especially if you specialize in a niche area. For us, initially our area of expertise was (and hopefully still is) penetration testing. The big consulting firms were more interested in large audit projects, and were more than willing to offload the smaller ones to us.
- Call up existing clients: Asking for referrals is one of the best ways to get business. In fact, why just clients. You could call up everyone you know - vendors, suppliers, friends, ex-employers, etc. It doesn't hurt, and most of our large deals have landed up in the most unexpected fashion.
- Get your website listed: Build a cool-looking website and get it listed in a number of online directories which may be specific to business in your area. Both Yahoo! and Google have directories and you could try and get it listed there. There are also online Yellow Pages-style sites and you could try getting listed there
- Drop flyers in your office complex: This might be a slightly desperate measure, but what the heck. Get one-page flyers printed and post them around your office complex or in buildings next to the one you work in.
- Put up hoardings if possible: Where we work, the law of the land allows us to put up a hoarding outside our office. And thankfully for us our location is right on one of the busiest roads in town. So everyday thousands of people see the hoarding. Not that we've gotten a lot of direct business from it, but every now and then we meet someone who's seen it and it helps create recall value.
- Do work gratis: This is probably the last resort, but if a large client is willing to give you a letter of appreciation or recommendation for some free work, then you might as well do it. When starting out, we did a few free assignments, but this must be avoided to the extent possible.
Posted by Kanwal K Mookhey at 3:49 PM 5 comments