The Entrepreneur Forum | Financial Freedom | Starting a Business | Motivation | Money | Success

Welcome to the only entrepreneur forum dedicated to building life-changing wealth.

Build a Fastlane business. Earn real financial freedom. Join free.

Join over 90,000 entrepreneurs who have rejected the paradigm of mediocrity and said "NO!" to underpaid jobs, ascetic frugality, and suffocating savings rituals— learn how to build a Fastlane business that pays both freedom and lifestyle affluence.

Free registration at the forum removes this block.

The power of IPOs - and IPO tracking?

ITA

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
26%
Dec 16, 2008
122
32
Hong Kong
One of the "easiest" ways to get rich, I believe, is through IPOs (taking your company public). Yet it is something that very few people ever consider. A search through the forums here gets me 0 results for "IPO" - shocking for a "get rich" forum :)

I'm FAR from a specialist on the topic, which I why I want to discuss it. But I've been lucky enough to be part of a company (a few years back) that was on track to an IPO.

I had a few misconceptions prior to that, which I think most people share:

MYTHS:
1. You need a super glamorous business, or to be in tech, to do an IPO
2. You need to be huge, big profits, have hundreds of employees, be in fabulous offices
3. You need a genius idea (ie be a Google, Youtube...)
4. You need a rock star management team (MBAs galore)

Those myths, for me, meant that never in a million-years would I have seen myself as capable enough to create a company and take it public. It just seemed overwhelming. Not my world.

What I saw in my former company changed my mind:

FACTS:
-The company wasn't in a glamorous sector
-It had less than 200 employees
-It was only a few years old and making a few millions turnover a year
-Our offices were so-so
-Management was NOT very bright. Greedy and cunning, yes, bright, no ;-)

Bottom line: many small companies go public, every year. From all sectors. Most of them do not look incredible from the outside. Nor do they raise hundreds of millions. They raise a few millions, or a few tens of millions. Enough to make the founder pretty rich and pretty fast indeed.

The point is, if you can see yourself building a small business with a few tens of employees and a few millions billing a year, you CAN think about taking it public. Most people do not realize that. It's not part of their reality.

If you read How to Get Rich, by Felix Dennis, he says the IPO process is a long legal nightmare, but that it made him very rich indeed. He says it's akin to having the right to print your own money.

Here is an example of a very small company going this route:
Tattoo removal firm aims for IPO as black ink flows - Los Angeles Times

Note that:
-the idea isn't new
-they are just branding it and expanding it into a chain with standardized process
-they are still very small (3 locations) and yet already going for it

The irony is by stating their far-fetched intention to go IPO next year, they will probably attract lots of private capital eager to "get in on the ground floor" and make lots of money at IPO time. It's kind of a "think and grow rich", virtuous circle.

I would like to get everyone's thoughts on this. Also, do you know of an "IPO tracking" site? I would like to read more stories like the one above. Techcrunch is good for tech stories. But I don't know of a place where you can get a steady streams of such stories from "normal" companies for inspiration.
 
Dislike ads? Remove them and support the forum: Subscribe to Fastlane Insiders.

taichijedi

Contributor
Read Fastlane!
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
21%
Feb 22, 2008
130
27
Philadelphia
One place you can get info on IPOs is the Naz:

Initial Public Offerings - IPO Stocks - IPO Calendar

Another good source is Hoover's (though if you don't have an account and try to dig up alot of info they'll try to charge you, but you can get some good starting points):

IPO Central from Hoover's covers ipo information

The Wall Street Journal generally covers a lot of IPO action, as does yahoo finance:

Yahoo! IPOs

That should get you started in finding them and being aware. Getting in on the action can tend to be much more difficult, unless the IPO is a dutch auction or some other similar vehicle. The reason being is that the agency handling the IPO usually makes a commission determined by the price of the initial offering, so they target large financial institutions with billions under management and avoid smaller, more privatized investors.

Good luck, because if you can get in on them, they can be very lucrative (Google, anyone?!!) Of course, as with any untested entity, they can fall right on their a$$ as well (anyone remember the much hyped AT&T Lucent Spinoff IPO.)

Best of luck, hope this helps. Just make sure to be thorough in your due diligence.
:cheers:
 

ITA

Contributor
User Power
Value/Post Ratio
26%
Dec 16, 2008
122
32
Hong Kong
Thanks taichi. My focus was more on starting a company and taking it public, rather than investing in one. Need to make those millions before I can invest them ;-) But those links will help.
 

Post New Topic

Please SEARCH before posting.
Please select the BEST category.

Post new topic

Guest post submissions offered HERE.

Latest Posts

New Topics

Fastlane Insiders

View the forum AD FREE.
Private, unindexed content
Detailed process/execution threads
Ideas needing execution, more!

Join Fastlane Insiders.

Top