Gain Access to Capital Markets

Join us for our next CEO Workshop

“How to Gain Access to Capital Markets”

Thursday, Nov 17, 2011 from 7:30am to 9:30am

Register Today!

According to our recent Annual CEO Survey, the biggest challenge for CEOs is getting access to capital markets and how to maintain liquidity in a volatile economy.

In response to this urgent challenge, the upcoming workshop will explore two areas:

  1. How to organically manage your cash flow
  2. Hear first hand from Key Lenders how to access capital

The exceptional line up of Key Lenders will share how to optimally pursue debt and/or equity financing in a fragile economy.

Learn from these Key Lenders:

  • Who is lending?
  • What industries and why?
  • How can you make your company more attractive to lenders?
  • What NOT to do and why?

Join us for this important panel to discuss the current credit market climate for early stage, growth and middle market companies.

Learn what Experts say in How to Build and Retain Value for your Company

Important lessons shared by the Panel of Experts at the NSS CEO Workshop, Sept 28, 2011.

Many CEOs are so busy right now working in the business, that they lose sight of the longer term goals. Our panel of experts proposes ways to take a longer view and maximize the impact value drivers can have in achieving success.

The uncertain economy demands disruptive innovation, yet that implies risk that is harder to achieve. Agility is more important than ever. The 6 Value Drivers below show you how to incorporate hidden values into your strategy and how to achieve value short-term and for the future health of your company.

Carol Kunik, Vistage | Value Driver 1:

Culture and Communications are often overlooked and viewed as a soft skill.  In your work with CEOs, where do you see the pitfalls and breakdowns in communications of the mission, goals and objectives and why is it so important?

The CEO/leader is the creator of the culture. He creates dedication to a “noble cause” by winning the team’s commitment to the cause, communicating that “we are in this together” and developing a compelling saga in language that inspires passion for strategic results. This becomes the Mission of the company. High passion companies out maneuver the demoralized competition. The leader also stands for what is not tolerated on his/her watch in terms of ethics, relationships and work.

In the book “Better Under Pressure” by Justin Menkens the research indicates that great leaders strive relentlessly to maximize their own potential – as well as stoke people’s innate thirst for their own triumphs. He says they all exhibit three essential attributes (that are rare, but can be learned) realistic optimism, subservience to purpose and finding order in chaos. It is up to us to create the environment we want to work in.

Steve Wishner added that leaders must have ‘town meetings’ and execute against goals.  Everybody needs to focus on mission and goals.

We spent some time going around the room to share our Mission Statements and how to think about crafting one:

  • What drives you?
  • How are you uniquely successful?
  • Why does it matter?
  • Re-communicate to highlight mission and goals

Dan Adams, NENS | Value Driver 2:

Technology is ubiquitous these days yet widely under leveraged.   What are some of the key aspects to consider ensuring our investments in technology will create value for our businesses?

Technology is a value driver if it is truly understood.  Most companies are winging it when it comes to a solid IT strategy.  There are two key areas we see companies lose control, efficiency and money.  The first is creating a real IT strategy and the second to understand the resources required for efficient technology usage.

IT strategy needs to include your business objective and goals, an accountability chart, a budget including human capital, timeline, operational support, cultural integration and metrics to measure outcomes.   This plan is a map to follow, to hold IT accountable for the targets you desire to hit.

Different skill sets are required to accomplish the tasks all businesses have.  Think of it as a transmission on a car.  You have different gears to enable different driving requirements.  In IT there are 5 basic levels which are help desk, network administration, specialized engineering, operational practices, and CIO skills.

Technology is a value driver if it is truly understood.  Most companies are winging it when it comes to a solid IT strategy.  You want to have a clear strategy and also a multiple gear box which refers more to the different levels of IT expertise you want to consider and don’t forget the roadmap.

Ron Adams, Capstone Partners | Value Driver 3:

A strong Brand with product and services visibility is an important value driver for a business.  How can a business enhance their valuation through brand recognition?

Brand recognition is an important value driver. Make your brand visible, recognizable and tie it to your mission statement. Brand awareness is a key intangible that is reflected in your workforce, customer relationship and distribution of products.

How does one quantify a brand, a CEO asked?  You can analyze the average lifetime of a customer, customer retention from the history of your client list. You then want to figure out what it costs to acquire one client.  Looking at loyalties of other brands will give you ideas, based on your sales, 3-4%should be spent on branding.

If you find your brand diminishing, identify the problem, develop an action plan and ask yourself if you are still accountable for your value you bring to your customers.

Beth Arnold, Foley Hoag | Value Driver 4:

Intellectual property in form of patents and trademarks are essential in managing competitive risk. How should a business look at its IP Portfolio today and have you seen companies benefit from repurposing IP?

Companies should do all that they can to strengthen the value of their IP- always.  Patenting, in particular, can be very expensive.  So you have to ask, do you really need a patent?  Patents are critical for technologies that require long and costly development and/or that require regulatory approval.  Example include drugs, medical devices and medical diagnostics.  Patents may not be important for technologies that will continue to be improved and can be maintained as a trade secret- software, for example.

If you are planning to obtain financing from an angel or VC investors, it is important to understand what they think of patenting for your particular product/technology.

In the current economy, it has become increasingly important to be strategic about patenting in order to minimize costs.   You may apply for patents in fewer countries, you may avail yourselves of international and regional filing systems.  You may file provisional patent applications.  However, it is critically important to spend the time and money upfront to fully develop the invention, make sure it is adequately described in the patent application and that the  broadest claims available are supported and pursued.

Trademarks, names of your product, logos, tag lines, slogans are important intellectual property.  Trademarks may be federally registered and it is not as complex to do that as it is to get a patent.  Also state law provides certain trademark protections based solely on use.

As for repurposing IP, that is a tricky thing, since a patent is only as important as what it is protecting.  For telecommunications and other technologies, what a patent actually covers may not always be clear.  This is why some companies with money buy up all relevant patents.  If someone sues them for patent infringement they hopefully have at least one patent that they can assert back.

Ben Weller, Next Stage Solutions | Value Driver 5:

We know that processes and methodologies are important to bring efficiencies and higher productivity for the business. How much impact do such value drivers have in a business and can you give us an example?

An often overlooked value driver is the process flow analysis.  Find your bottlenecks or silos and figure out how to resolve them. Make people in your firm accountable for what they do. The value creation comes from the top down by setting business cultures where all employees are encouraged to problem solve at the grassroots level. Allowing everyone to contribute will enhance your bottom line.

Rolling Forecasts is another tool that helps businesses stay agile and forward looking at the same time.  When a business develops a budget, typically once a year, there is a tendency to work towards that budget, a static document at best. This process is not innovation enhancing, whereas with a Rolling Forecast, the CEO   each quarter looks one quarter back and two ahead and makes changes and adjustments accordingly.

If for some reason projected quotas are not met, the rolling forecast model forces you to identify the reasons and either fix the problems or recalculate the projections.  We love this model because it helps businesses stay nimble and encourages them to embrace ongoing changes in the business.

Steve Wishner, Corporate Advisor and Managing Director, Exigent, LLC | Value Driver 6:

Focusing on the right value drivers can prove critical in an environment such as this. Steve, could you address some of the value drivers that you believe are most important for CEO’s to focus on in this economy?

In a slow recovery it is especially important to maintain positive cash flow? How do you accomplish this? Firstly, size the business to realistic revenue expectations.  If revenue is declining and you generate revenue below the capacity of the workforce you have hired, looking at layoffs may be inevitable.  Think hard, act decisively, do it ONCE and get it over with quickly. Importantly, communicate right away with the survivors and assure them  that the trauma is over and that they are the critical workforce  that the Company will now be depending on as it moves forward.

Another aspect of keeping cash flow positive is to understand and analyze your variable and fixed costs. Move as many costs as possible from fixed to variable. Evaluate what is your core competency and outsource most non-competencies.

What does your web presence look like?  Can you use it better and provide services online?

What does your collection rate look like and can you discuss with your customers how to  speed up payments?  How about on the accounts payable side?  Be careful, but have a conversation with your vendors as well.  Vendors and suppliers do understand the current economic situation and you can get almost always some better terms with the proper dialogue.

Analyze your inventory and make sure what you have is not obsolete and overstated in your books. Can you eliminate or lower inventory levels on lower turning sku’s?

Lastly, increase customer service, give your customers extra attention and demonstrate how you can be of increased value to them in multiple ways.

The session ended with additional Q&A from the enthusiastic CEOs in the room and hand outs appropriate to the topic.

Please join us for our next CEO Workshop, Thursday, Nov 17 at the Foley Hoag Emerging Enterprise Center on the topic of “How to Gain Access to Capital Markets“.

Already Have a Buyer – What Next?

In this month’s “Viewpoint” a periodic newsletter published by Mirus Capital Advisors, the topic of how ready you should be when a buyer knocks at the door is discussed.  Laura Kevghas and David Hoffer, partners at Mirus Capital Advisors, Inc., write about the importance an investment banker plays in one of your biggest transaction of your life.

The article reaches out to a group of experts, including Rudi Scheiber-Kurtz, CEO of Next Stage Solutions. NSS works closely with Investment Bankers and M&A Advisors representing the business as CFO or Internal Financial Advisor during this transaction.

The article includes many excellent tips.  To read the full article, click on the link MirusCapitalViewpointSept2011

Build and Retain Value for your Company in a Slow Recovery!

NSS Workshop Series for CEOs and Business Owners

How to Build and Retain Value for Your Company in a Slow Recovery!

Wednesday, Sept 28 2011 | 7:30am-9:30am

Host Place: NENS, New England Networking Solutions, 1 Presidential Way, Suite 104 B, Woburn, MA 01801

Click here to register!

Moderator: Carol Kunik, Vistage Expert

Speakers:

Host: NENS, New England Networking Solutions,  1 Presidential Way, Suite 104B, Woburn, MA 01801

Sponsor: Next Stage Solutions, Inc.

Value Creation Topics:

  • The Role your Company Culture plays
  • Identify Your Value Drivers
  • Balance Variable and Fixed Costs
  • Leverage Technology for Scalability
  • Continuous Improvement Methodologies
  • Leverage IP for new Revenue streams
  • Assess Competitive Risk

Join our Panel of Experts in an interactive discussion how to build and retain value creation in uncertain times.  What is value creation and why should you care?  Value creation is achieved by positively affecting the valuation of your business and is an ongoing process.

Many CEOs are so busy right now working in the business, that they lose sight of the longer term goals. The workshop intends to lead you back to a longer term view focusing on value creation inside and outside your business. Our panel of experts will propose ways to maximize the impact value drivers can have in realizing success.

The uncertain economy demands disruptive innovation, yet that implies risk that is harder to achieve. Agility is more important than ever, you want to be a speedboat rather than an ocean liner.  We will discuss how to incorporate hidden values into your strategy and how to attain value short-term and for the future health of your company. Value creation starts at inception and gets more complex with maturity.

Who should attend?

Exclusively for CEOs, Presidents, Founders, Board Members and Investors.

M&A Guidelines Benchmark Report

M&A activities are picking up?  How should you prepare?  NSS conducted a survey last year with a diverse group of M&A EXPERTS about the internal and external approach a business needs to consider to end up with a successful exit.

By Rudi Scheiber-Kurtz, CEO of Next Stage Solutions. Inc.

Growing a company takes all the energy of a CEO and Exit Planning is mostly on the periphery.  Developing a long-term approach is essential in achieving a successful exit.  This will be the biggest game you will ever play and you want the end result to reflect that.  With this survey summary we want to showcase the necessary steps for you to consider.  Mitigate risk up front and consider early on an advisory team.

The EXPERT survey takers included prominent Investment Bankers, M&A Advisors, Attorneys, CPAs and Financial Advisors|CFO, Valuation and Management Consultants from the greater Boston area.

The summary and Benchmark Report represents the overall sentiment from the EXPERTS. Click to get the report: M&A Guidelines 2011


A CEO Survey to gain trigger points for action

Are you a CEO or  President of a company? If so, take this survey and be done in less than 4 minutes!!

We want your participation in our Annual NSS CEO Survey. The survey is anonymous, so your privacy is completely protected. The information collected from this survey will be aggregated and only the collective data will be shared.

We are conducting this survey to better understand how you view the current and future state of your organization and what is of importance to your company in moving forward.

We have experienced one of the worst economic cycles in the nation’s history.  From today’s afflictions to tomorrow’s aspirations, the annual NSS CEO survey presents a number of options that will contribute to overcoming challenges. Rank what priorities you think are most important and then find out what your peers are thinking.

How will you prioritize the next steps for your organization?

Within the framework of present state, future state, challenges and resources, please review and rank the following questions. It is a forced rating, meaning that we ask you to choose from most to least.

To take our survey, please go to:  http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/NLHHBP2


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Next Stage Solutions, Inc. 2011- Proprietary & Confidential

How do you communicate and manage the goals for your team?

On May 11, 2011, NSS held a CEO Workshop concerning Budgeting and Forecasting.  The group discussed the different measurement criteria, value drivers and how to lead an ongoing budget process within your business. Flexible budgets, annual budgets and rolling forecasts were compared.  Here are two articles you may want to read that are relevant to this topic.

Contact Ben Weller, BD & CFO of NSS at weller@nextstagesolutions.com or call at 617-449-7728 ext. 710 for a consultation.

  1. Let It Roll: Why more companies are abandoning budgets in favor of rolling forecasts by Russ Bangham of CFO Magazine, May 2011
  2. Use a Rolling Forecast to Spot Trends by Harvard Business School Working Knowledge, March 13, 2006

Budgets and Forecasts represent two parts of a business management continuous improvement process. A successful enterprise must first have a clear understanding of its strategic plan. In fact Budgets and Forecasts are the financial GPS tools that carry strategy through to implementation.

How do you communicate and manage the goals for your team?

The workshop posed the following questions to our CEO participants;

  • Do you see a budget as a Strategic or a Tactical tool?
  • How can your budget reflect your strategy?
  • Do you see your budget as more of a tactical tool, i.e. the performance yardstick for annual goals and compensation plans?
  • Is the budget made up of strictly financial metrics?
  • Where do you capture operational goals and performance measurement metrics?
  • Is your budget implementation process a reflection of your company’s culture or is it a process within itself?
  • Do you recognize your business and industry drivers within your budget?
  • Does your budget have an expiration date, or do you keep it alive through continuous improvement forecasting?

Ben Weller, BD & CFO for Next Stage Solutions compiled the following check list as a hand out:

The measure of how you execute strategy is captured in the topic of Budget. But different areas of your business require different measurement criteria.

Budgets can refer to:

  • Marketing Strategies
  • Sales Plans
  • Operational performance
  • Human Resource development
  • Capital Investment
  • Financing Strategy
  • Ownership Return

And can take on many measurement dimensions

  • Fiscal
  • Continuous Improvement goals
  • Key Performance indicators
  • Strategic Planning Milestones
  • Benchmarked Metrics
  • Customer Satisfaction

Budget Implementations can take on the personality of the organization

  • Size of Company and distribution of authority
  • Top Down versus bottom up management style
  • Fiscal Micro management vs  Strategical Macro management
  • Cash Flow is Primary Focus
  • Performance vs External Expectations is a Priority

And all methods and uses need to focus on Business Drivers

  • Variable Sales and Cost (Marginal Profitability)
  • Fixed Costs
  • Project Costs (New Product Introduction)
  • Occupancy Costs
  • Variable Energy Costs
  • Headcount
  • Average Selling Prices (Competitive Positioning)
  • Efficiency (Labor and Machine Operations)
  • Productivity

What Profiles of budget design fit with various industries

  • Software
  • Life Science
  • Medical Device
  • Manufacturing
  • Food Production
  • Professional Services

What are the various focuses of forecasting and where do they apply

  • Traditional Rolling 12 Month forecast
  • Sales Driven Top down vs trend based
  • Cash Flow vs P&L
  • Analysis vs Plan
  • Current State vs Future State (This involves lean accounting and is a whole other topic)

If you are interested in this topic and would like to explore rolling forecasts further for your business, NSS provided a customized one-day workshop.

Contact Ben Weller, BD & CFO of NSS at weller@nextstagesolutions.com or call at 617-449-7728 ext. 710

March 31 |Private Equity Transaction: What you need to know!

NSS Workshop Series for CEOs and Business Owners

If you are a service provider receiving this, please share it with your clients, a value add for you, thank you.

Private Equity Transactions: Raising Growth Capital and what You Need to Know!

Time: Thursday, March 31 2011 | 7:30am – 9:30am

Place: Bridge Bank | 1050 Winter Street | Suite 1000 | Waltham, MA  light breakfast

Bring your questions to this interactive discussion with a great panel:

Moderator:

Frank Leibly, Partner,  Alcon Partners

Panelists:

Paul Harting, CEO, Neuroptix

Ethan Flaherty, Partner,  Pabian & Russell

Laura Kevghas, Partner,  Mirus Capital

Scott Goodwin, Partner, Wolf & Company

Host:

Dick Sweeney, Partner, Bridge Bank

Discussion Topics:

  • What is Private Equity, and how is it relevant to my business?
  • What kinds of transaction structures are common?
  • What questions should I be prepared to answer?
  • Should I hire an investment banker or business broker?
  • What are some of the metrics to consider building value?
  • What are the steps towards a capital raise?
  • What does a due diligence process look like?
  • What to expect after a transaction is complete?
  • Is now a good time for a private equity transaction?
  • We will share horror stories and how to prevent them.

Who should attend?

CEOs and presidents of companies with $10MM+/- of revenue who are considering next steps for their company.

If you do not match the above criteria, please forward this email to clients and colleagues who are.They will appreciate it. Thanks.

About the NSS CEO Workshops Series:

Next Stage Solutions, Inc (NSS) is a financial consulting firm providing CFO and Controller support to growing businesses on an interim or ongoing basis. Through its extensive network, NSS began offering the workshops in 2010 exclusively to CEOs and presidents of growing companies.  These workshops are interactive in nature and encourage company leaders to explore new ways of tackling the complexities a 21st century business, to learn from each other and gain new and more effective tools in leading their business to the next stage.

 

Register today at info@nextstagesolutions.com or 617-449-7728

Feb 8th | Leadership Skills for the Next Stage of your Company

NSS Workshop Series for CEOs and Business Owners

Leadership Skills for the Next Stage of your Company

Date: Tuesday, February 8, 2011   7:30am – 9:30am – Snowdate will be Friday, Feb 11th same time and place

Host: Bridge Bank | 1050 Winter Street | Suite 1000 | Waltham, MA

You have been growing your company significantly and are now contemplating how to take it to the next stage.  What new leadership skills do you need to successfully take the company through this transition? Whether you are contemplating succession planning, market expansion or business process technology to improve productivity, the ultimate success of this next change will depend on your leadership.

This workshop will focus on the complex demands made on CEOs and how to develop the specific and personal leadership skills you need. The goal of the workshop is for you to identify the 3 most important leadership skills you will need and what you might consider as your next steps in your development.

Who Should Attend?

This workshop is exclusively for Presidents, CEOs or Business Owners of a company with $10MM+/- in sales. If you are not a candidate of the above criteria, please forward this email to clients and colleagues who are.

About the Discussion Leader:  Gerry Donnellan, PhD

Gerry Donnellan is president and founder of Big Leap (www.big-leap.com), a consulting company that utilizes innovative approaches in working with family and closely-held businesses. Trained as a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst, Gerry has over thirty-five years of professional experience. As an organizational consulting psychologist and family business consultant, he works with families and their businesses as they navigate their way through the ups and downs of owning and running their businesses, all while hoping they all will still want to be together for Thanksgiving dinner.

He is adjunct professor at the International Business School of Brandeis University and has held university faculty appointments at Harvard Medical School and the City University of New York. He was awarded the Certificate in Family Business Advising by the Family Firm Institute (FFI). He is on the faculty of the certificate program and is a frequent presenter at FFI conferences. He was founding director of the Institute for Organizational Consulting Psychology at the Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology (MSPP), Boston.

He lives in Lexington, Massachusetts.

About the NSS CEO Workshops Series

Next Stage Solutions, Inc (NSS) is a financial consulting firm providing CFO and Controller support to growing businesses on an interim or ongoing basis. Through its extensive network, NSS began offering the workshops in 2010 exclusively to CEOs and presidents of growing companies.  These workshops are interactive in nature and encourage company leaders to explore new ways of tackling the complexities a 21st century business, to learn from each other and gain new and more effective tools in leading their business to the next stage.

Sponsored by Next Stage Solutions, Inc

Attendance is complimentary, but registration is required. Limited seating and workshops fill up quickly.

Call today 617-449-7728 or send an email info@nextstagesolutions.com to save a space

Private Equity Transactions: From Raising Growth Capital to Making an Exit

NSS Workshop Series for CEOs and Business Owners

Private Equity Transactions: From Raising Growth Capital to Making an Exit | What you Need to Know.

Date: Tuesday, November 9, 2010   7:30am – 9:30am

Host: Wolf & Company | 99 High Street | Boston, MA 02110

Who Should Attend?

This workshop is exclusively for any President/CEO or Business Owner of a mature company with greater than $10MM in sales. If you are not a candidate of the above criteria, please forward this email to clients and colleagues who are.

Attention: This workshop will be strictly confidential. Names and contact information will not be released.  No solicitations.

Moderator:

Frank Leibly, Partner, Alcon Partners

Panelists:

John Fernsell, CEO, Ibex Outdoor Clothing

Ethan Flaherty, Partner, Pabian & Russell

Laura Kevghas, Partner, Mirus Capital

Discussion Topics:

  • What is Private Equity, and how is it relevant to my business?
  • What kinds of transaction structures are common?
  • What questions should I be prepared to answer?
  • What types of companies are good candidates to work with Private Equity firms?
  • Should I hire an investment banker or business broker?
  • What are the steps towards a capital raise and an eventual exit?
  • What does a due diligence process look like?
  • Why a private equity transaction instead of a strategic sale?
  • What to expect after a transaction is complete?
  • Is now a good time for a private equity transaction?
  • Horror stories and how to prevent them.

Sponsored by Next Stage Solutions, Inc

Attendance is complimentary, but registration is required

Call today 617-449-7728 or send an email info@nextstagesolutions.com to save a space