Coaching Potential CEOs for
Venture Companies
To groom potential
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CEOs for the
future
spinouts, Thermo introduced a special formal program for training new
CEOs and preparing them to deal with Wall Street and media. The two major
features of the training are:
-
Contracting Harvard Business
Scholl professors as trainers
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Placing a major emphasis on case studies
written for and about Thermo and the experience of its subsidiaries' and
spinouts' executives
Thermo is also known for its
executive "bench". The company hires bright young MBA graduates and
engineers and assigns them to a series of
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projects as assistants to
senior executives.
Thus, when a new business emerges
new
managers are available to step up and
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lead it. The steady stream of new executive positions makes these prospects
very attractive to young talents.
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10 Commandments
of Innovation
→
10 Rules
for Building a Great Business
Selection of New Ventures
to be Spun Out
To be spun out, each venture is
required to pass tests. It should:
-
demonstrate a
unique and proprietary product or
service
-
project
time-to-market of less than three years
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aim at a large and growing market; and
-
promise 20% annual growth
Building Management Teams
for Venture Companies
A special
management team at Thermo
is assigned the task to match managers and technologists who share the same
level of
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passion
for the same project. In order to encourage the inventors to spin out new
businesses rapidly, Thermo distributes stock options to the subsidiary that
spawned the new business, as well as to the new business itself. Usually,
members of each new management
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team
share from 5 to 7% of the equity in the new enterprise.
Raising Private Equity
Funds for Spinouts
The two major steps in raising
private equity funds by Thermo for its spinouts are:
-
Raising $5million to $10 million
for start-up operations
-
Setting up an IPO shortly
thereafter and sell 25% of the spinout's stock for, say, $50 million
Thermo Electron invented an
innovative spinout financing technique in order to bypass the costly route
of more traditional
venture
capital financing.
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Venture Financing
Funnel
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Venture Financing:
Key Documents
A unique aspect of Thermo
Electron's financing is the company's guarantee that for the next five years
it would repurchase the stock at the original price. This no-loss promise
encourages private equity investors to buy stocks of the spinout and hold
them. For Thermo Electron, this strategy presents a low-risk solution as
well as it banks the principal and uses the interest as operating capital
for individual ventures.
Fast-Track to Establishing
Marketing and Selling Operations
Thermo accelerates implementation
of the new product by
acquiring an existing
business with established market, distribution channels, related know-how,
and experience, and merging the new venture with it. While the new venture
continues to develop the new business, Thermo begins looking for it termed a
"wounded eagle" to buy ‒ a business that had fallen on hard times but could
still provide a worthwhile structure into which the
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entrepreneurial business
could move. Having purchased a "wounded eagle", Thermo initiates a
disciplined and well-conceived turnaround plan that is executed by a small
team looking at every aspect of the business. This team:
-
works towards eliminating
overheads, reducing costs, and seeking ways to
improve efficiency, and
-
looks for ways to focus the
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marketing and distribution know-how on the new product.
Eventually, they inject the new
technology into the business, thus providing the
new technology platform
with the operating capability to serve the market.
Back To Consolidation
and New Focus
In January 2000, Thermo Electron, a
once-massive holding company worth more than US$4 billion, announced a major
reorganization that sought to sell off US$1.5 billion worth of businesses
and narrow its focus from 24 publicly traded firms that spanned four
diverse
industries to a single business focused on one just analytical instruments.
In 2006, Thermo Electron
merged with Fisher Scientific to form a new company Thermo Fisher
Scientific. |