Wednesday 5 March 2014

Seven top tips from investment experts

Frontier, in partnership with private equity firm, Jacana Partners, brings you expert advice to help get your business off the ground and ready for investment.

Building a business in Africa is not easy. It takes years of practice, not to mention a certain amount of trial and error. SME-focused private equity firm, Jacana Partners, canvassed its experienced senior team members to provide you with valuable tips that can help to build your business and get you ready for investment.
This article is part of a series, which Frontier will bring to you over the next couple of weeks, in partnership with Jacana Partners. 

Setting up a business

Business plan ownership - Barnaby Terry, investment director, West Africa
Write the business plan yourself; don’t get advisers to do it – and make sure the senior team contributes and takes ownership of the document. The business plan is not just a document that private equity groups like to read, it’s the vision, the business case and action plan for your company. It’s an important exercise in determining the future direction of the business and ensuring the whole team is behind it.
Size matters
Is the market you are addressing large enough? And are you targeting a niche within that market? Become a market leader in your niche and progress from there. Remember that as a private equity investor, we eventually need to exit our investment in your company, so size of market is important to ensure you are of interest to an investor in the future. As a general rule, we would expect the company’s revenue to be at least five times the size of our investment in four years – so think big!
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Know your audience - Anthony Gichini, Partner, East Africa
The first thing you need to understand when starting a business is your customer market. What is their problem and what is your solution to that problem? It is a proven fact that people will pay a premium for a unique offering which makes their life simpler.
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Revenue counts most - Stephen Dawson, chairman and investment director, East Africa
In business plans the revenue number is the hardest to get right but by far the most important; spend 90% of your effort on the aspects that lead to the revenue number: market size and growth, competitor offerings and your competitive advantage,  pricing, marketing, converting prospects into customers, routes to market etc.
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Start-ups: simplicity is key - Christian Opoku Biney, Partner
When planning your new business, you need to focus on a simple product or service that has a clear value proposition and business model.
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Validation - Barnaby Terry, investment director, West Africa
To be successful, you must validate your offering with real customers before launch. This is an iterative process that takes time, and cash preservation is key during this phase.
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Don’t try and do everything yourself - Paul Fitzsimons, investment director, West Africa
Surround yourself with people with experience of the industry you are focussed on – you don’t have to agree with them but they can often have helpful insights or contacts, which could grow your business more rapidly than you can. You can also learn from their past mistakes, as opposed to finding out for yourself.
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Frontier Success Story

Africa has many indigenous and successful companies that have international reach. Download a complimentary eBook on the success story of Zambeef Group, and learn how your company can attain the kind of success groups such as MTN, Imara Group, Dangote Group, and Shoprite Holdings are enjoying on the continent.

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