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Investing

How I Helped Fund The Creation of a Whole New Gift Card Genre

How I Helped Fund The Creation of a Whole New Gift Card Genre

Amit Raizada

May 6, 2020

It’s hard to understate just how drastically gift cards changed the retail industry. Portable, easy to mail, and easy to give, gift cards gave consumers an unprecedented level of flexibility. Once gift cards were introduced, shoppers no longer had to guess which shirt someone wants from Nordstrom or which handbag would be considered “perfect” from Bloomingdale’s. Gift-givers had to simply pick the store, buy the card, and voila: the perfect gift.

For consumers, it’s that simple. But for the businesses themselves, it’s a little more complicated.

When the gift card industry emerged in the early 90s, it brought a range of benefits to consumers and retailers alike: new shoppers, new marketing, flexibility, and a ton of cash. At first, customers were happy with store-specific gift cards. But like every industry, the gift card industry needed to evolve. That’s when Visa and other credit card providers jumped into the industry to provide widely accepted “gift cards” that looked like credit cards. While these cards provided the ultimate flexibility for shoppers,  they also came with a significant drawback: exorbitant fees.

Around 2003, I was approached by an entrepreneur who had a novel idea. He suggested setting up a system in which gift cards could be used at any store within a given mall. That way, a recipient could choose a store from the dozens or hundreds of stores housed within a specific mall. 

Intrigued by the entrepreneur’s Kansas City-based startup, Store Financial, I provided an early investment in the hopes of helping this start-up take-off. Quickly, an ace team of industry experts developed the necessary structure to allow individual malls to implement this kind of system, allowing individual stores to accept both their own gift cards as well as mall-specific gift cards through the same credit card processing system.  

Quickly after its launch, Store Financial became the largest mall gift-card provider in North America—eventually growing to several hundred mall locations in the United States and across Europe.  Eventually, the Store Financial model evolved into a larger general purpose reloadable (GPR) prepaid card market, considerably increasing its market reach. The company was eventually acquired by another private equity group, which brought Store Financial’s business model to a broader global audience.

As an investor, I am always focused on how my dollars can make a lasting impact and help lift emerging markets off the ground. That was undoubtedly the case with Store Financial, which provided a substantial return and revolutionized the mall gift card industry, moving well beyond the paper gift-certificates that were cumbersome for everyone involved. My experience with the gift card market illuminates two principles that I urge aspiring venture capitalists to consider.

First, invest in emerging markets. Observe the products, experiences, and venues that interest young people and discover opportunities to monetize these interests.

Second, once you identify new markets, look for peripheral opportunities within these markets. My investment with Store Financial did not directly change the basic model of gift certificates. But it provided a novel service that the gift certificate industry needed to survive and thrive. While not directly at the center of the action, peripheral investments like Store Financial can create a ripple of changes across the industry, revolutionizing an industry and providing long-term returns on a risky investment.

Young investors today should look for these qualities in new markets. A venture that sounds outlandish today may very well create a change that echoes across generations.

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Entrepreneur Investing

Learning From Failure

Learning From Failure

Amit Raizada

April 17, 2020

There hasn’t been a lot of positive economics or business news lately. Between the millions filing for unemployment and the jaw-dropping daily losses on the Dow, many of hard-working Americans are ailing.

As a venture capitalist who’s spent much of my career investing in innovative startup ventures, what pains me most about this situation is knowing that the COVID-19-born economic downturn will prove fatal to many small businesses and newly minted firms. Innovative entrepreneurs who’ve worked hard and played by the rules will fail at the hands of the epidemic and its recessionary wake.

Yet, I urge entrepreneurs not to give up hope. After two decades in the VC business, I’ve come to realize that, in the eyes of an investor, past failures act more like prerequisites than disqualifiers. While I’d never encourage entrepreneurs to take uncalculated risks, every successful businessman has failed at some point. In many ways, failure is inseparable from the process of innovation.

There are ways, however, to fail and how not to fail. Be graceful, acknowledge defeat and look toward the future. Don’t chastise business partners or burn bridges.

Here are some of my tips on how to fail right and how to parlay failure into future success.

Own it and Learn from It

People often react to failure by simply shutting down. They block it out of their heads, refusing to think about what happened or to analyze what went wrong.

But a successful entrepreneur looks for the opportunity in failure. While losing a business is always heartbreaking, stepping away and refusing to conduct a postmortem will just make the situation worse. If you’re going to fail, you might as well own it and use it as an opportunity to examine what went wrong, what you did well, and how you can adjust your model for the future.

Owning failure is also key to preserving relationships with business partners and investors. Sure, it didn’t work out this time; but that doesn’t mean you’re consigned to failure in all future ventures. Your partners today could be your partners or investors down the line. Never unnecessarily burn a bridge.

Don’t Hide it from Future Investors

Just as you should be forgiving of your current partners, you should be forthcoming about your failed venture with future investors.

The conventional wisdom is that failure is a good way to get yourself blacklisted with venture capitalists. Reality, though, couldn’t be further from the truth.

While venture capitalists always engage innovators with proven track records of success, that true innovation is a process and the best strategic partners are those who have experienced—and learned from—past failures.

Think about it this way:

All entrepreneurs have failed at some point. But if you’ve failed in the past and have learned from your mistakes, the odds are slim that you’ll repeat those same missteps should I invest in your company – which puts my mind at ease.

What you shouldn’t do is cover up your failed former venture. Just be honest. You won’t scare investors away, rather, you may just attract them.

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Entrepreneur

Warehouses: Flashy? No. Lucrative? You bet.

Warehouses: Flashy? No. Lucrative? You bet.

Amit Raizada

April 9, 2020

At first glance, warehouses aren’t as exciting as some of the companies and products in which Spectrum Business Ventures has invested. They’re not as thrilling as Terran Orbital, which launches satellites into orbit, or as delicious as Tocaya Organica, which serves healthy, fast-casual Mexican cuisine at locations across Southern California. Yet, warehouses can prove to be lucrative investments that venture capitalists should seek out in 2020.

Online retailers like Amazon, which brought in $600 billion in sales in 2019, are quickly displacing shopping malls and big-box department stores as Americans’ favorite venues for consumption. This new trend has given way to a seismic shift in the commercial real estate landscape. Once regarded as low-risk, low-reward investments, warehouse space has become a valuable commodity. According to a recent report by CNBC, demand for warehouse space – driven largely by online retailers – has outstripped supply by nearly 170 million square feet. This disconnect between supply and demand creates a lucrative opportunity for aspiring investors.

Here are five reasons that SBV sought to aggressively invest in warehouse space.  

1. Online retail is growing fast

The online retail market isn’t just a fluke. According to a report by Smart Insights, the industry is forecasted to expand by 19% in 2020, an astronomical rate of growth.

This didn’t come as a surprise to the Spectrum Business Ventures team.

Spectrum Business Ventures predicates much of its investment strategy on observing the preferences of young consumers. Millennials and Gen Z they like convenience, and as they begin to encompass a wider swath of the economy, SBV intuited that convenience-based online shopping would continue to grow.  

These online retailers need somewhere to store their inventory – and that somewhere is warehouses. As online shopping grows, so will demand for new warehouse space.

2. Online retailers need warehouses for ambitious same-day shipping programs  

Online shopping has brought about an interesting paradox: as retailers like Amazon take unprecedented steps to offer consumers faster delivery, consumers respond by simply demanding more convenience. In a bid to satisfy this desire, Amazon has begun to expand its same-day shipping offerings.

As next-day, and increasingly even same-day, shipping gradually becomes the norm, Amazon and other online retailers and fulfillers will be under immense pressure to live up to their end of this ambitious bargain. Warehouses are the keystone of this shift in business to consumer delivery.

3. The warehouse supply shock  

The rules of supply and demand are simple – when there is a limited supply of a product that is in demand, the value of that product goes up. This is very much the case with warehouses.

As CNBC reported, retailers are demanding 170 million more square feet of warehouse space than what can currently be supplied. Online sellers need this space to continue to drive their precipitous growth, and they’ll be willing to pay for it. Aspiring investors should take advantage of this disconnect between supply and demand and of the high value per square-foot that it will create.

There is some urgency, though. Supply will eventually catch up; and now is the time to get into the market.

4. Warehouse space can be innovative

Warehouse space may not seem as flashy as tech or entertainment, but the industry is still ripe for innovation.  

One way that investors can innovate is by looking for warehouse space in the immediate vicinity of major airports and transit hubs. A location where companies can easily store goods without having to incur hefty shipping costs is ideal for major online retailers.

5. Invest in the markets of the future

At Spectrum Business Ventures we strive to see the world differently, and we always look for opportunities in the markets that will define the future of consumption. Ideas, products, and firms that may seem outlandish in 2020 could be economic mainstays by 2030.

It is important that investors look for cutting-edge new markets and technologies, but that they also look for the peripheral opportunities that result from these new markets. Warehouse space is one of these peripheral markets – it’s a way that investors can get into the online shopping market without having to compete directly with Amazon.