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Interview with Teri Spencer of Ephibian
BizPlanIt recently spoke with Teri Spencer,
Co-Founder & CEO of Ephibian to gain her insight
into business planning, raising capital, and
successfully growing a technology company. Ephibian is a
global Internet services firm specialized in
infrastructure, application development and managed
services for Fortune 1000 and start-up companies.
Ephibianıs clients include AOL, Asimba, AT&T, eBay,
Contest.com, OurHouse.com, Sears, theonline401k, UUNet
and Bell Atlantic.
BizPlanIt: How
did Ephibian get started?
Spencer: Unlike most
start-ups, we were fortunate in that rather than banging
on doors for funding, funding actually came banging on
our door. For nearly a decade our team built large
systems for the army, and one of our equipment
subcontractors kept pushing us to give up the government
work. After six years of prodding us to shift our
resources to the commercial world, our military command
shifted from Tucson to New Jersey, and we decided the
time was right for a change.
We were introduced to a well-financed Swedish group
that manages a holding company with over 250 operating
entities. We flew to New York to meet with their
management team and they offered us the opportunity
refocus our skills to the commercial world. We jointly
developed a dozen business plans with their team and
worked together to decide where to focus our efforts.
After reducing the choices to three business models, the
Swedish group agreed to provide funding to back our team
and get us started. Everything moved rather quickly, and
the partnership has turned out to be extraordinary.
BizPlanIt: When you
met with this group to review the potential business
plans, it sounds as though they were more interested in
investing in you, your team, your capabilities, than in
any particular business model. Was that the case?
Spencer: Absolutely.
We discussed the alternatives, the marketing and the
various aspects of each business, but they essentially
said not to worry about those areas, and that those
things will follow the technology. They felt our team
had achieved phenomenal things in a short period of time
and that they were more interested in ³funding our
team.
BizPlanIt: How has
your business model changed as the company has
grown?
Spencer: Until a year
and a half ago we were rather general in the technology
solutions we offered our clients. Working for the
government can make you accustomed to large and
unfocused projects our responsibilities covered
the entire technology spectrum from communications to
processing systems to software applications to databases
to security, etc.
When we launched Ephibian and made the shift to the
commercial-side of the e-business, we stopped trying to
be all things to all people like a lot of other
e-business consulting firms. We decided to focus on
back-end issues including application development,
integration and management services where our core
competency was, and to leave front-end and strategy
consulting to others.
BizPlanIt: As your
business model changes, do you put the company through
formal business planning and strategic planning
exercises? Or is the process more informal?
Spencer: I view it as
a little of both. We conduct yearly meetings with our
parent company and the other presidents and CEOıs from
the holding company. We all meet to discuss and share
our ideas and high-level strategies. In addition, our
management team receives coaching from our holding
company and board of directors on a quarterly basis. Our
team is continually watching the market, and two to
three times a year we take a formal look at where we are
and what our next steps will be.
BizPlanIt: I
understand your company actively takes equity positions
in select clients.
Ms. Spencer: Yes, we
do. Ephibian provides technology services in exchange
for equity, and we also help those clients raise
additional funding as needed. We help ensure their
business plan is investor ready and introduce them to
our contact base.
BizPlanIt: What is
your methodology for selecting these types of
clients?
Spencer: We are very
selective in which clients we choose to offer an equity
opportunity. Most have already achieved various levels
of funding, but we also work with some un-funded
companies if we have a strong belief in their idea, and
more importantly, in their management team. We also look
for strong referrals. This philosophy has paid off well
for us.
For instance, one company we are working with was a
Garage.com incubated company that we worked with on a
blend of cash and equity. The equity stake puts our skin
in the game and tells the client we are not just there
to collect fees, but to intimately assist them in their
success.
BizPlanIt: What are
the biggest weaknesses youıve seen in the business plans
that cross your desk?
Ms. Spencer: The
management team. Many management teams simply have no
functional experience in the business and market they
plan to enter. They may have a good idea, but they
haven't worked in the industry and may not truly
understand it. We also see plenty of business plans
where entrepreneurs believe that no-one else has their
idea, or that there is no competition. Often the plans I
review are blurry in terms of how they propose to
actually make money with the venture.
BizPlanIt: What have
been the major challenges in growing your company?
Spencer: The
challenges we have faced relate to getting the processes
in place from a personnel standpoint. The technical
perspective was everything we knew, and getting the
proper structure instituted to attract and retain staff
was the true challenge. We felt strongly about
maintaining the culture of the company as we grew. This
was very important to us as a management team, and we
received invaluable assistance from our parent company
in this area.
BizPlanIt: What
suggestions would offer entrepreneurs of early-stage
companies?
Spencer: Stay
focused. Don't try to be too many things to too many
people, or you will start scattering your resources.
Focus is probably the most important component in making
a business succeed or fail. Concentrate on the end goal
and don't be afraid to go against the norm. When we
shifted from a broad focus to a more narrow core
competency, many felt it was an unwise move. But over
the past nine months, as the shakeout has begun, weıve
found that specialty shops with a focus are the ones
still standing. Be passionate - itıs easy to claim
you're a startup, but far more challenging to live
through it successfully.
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