Can you have a partnership of entrepreneurs?
By brendan at 13 December, 2011, 9:16 pm
A group of Scandinavian entrepreneurs caught my eye this year, so when I was in London the other week, I decided to look them up. They had a local office above a shop in the fashionable shopping district around the Bond Street tube station and were a fascinating group, who seem to have built a working partnership model for entrepreneurial endeavours.
The mechanics were described to me as:
- Its all in, you don’t have activities on the side. Which means the partners are aligned on putting energy into the best projects.
- For each year you work, you accrue around 2,080 partnership points (52 weeks x 40 hours). So if you take 6 months off, you only accrue 1,040 points that year.
- Distributions of profits are based on the percentage of the total partnership points you have accrued.
- Every time there is a distribution to the partners, your partnership points are reduced by the same ratio ( e.g. 50% of NTA distributed, means a 50% reduction in your partnership points).
- Once you leave, your partnership points stop increasing (i.e. you have a smaller ratio) and get reduced with each distribution. When your points drop below a set amount, you are automatically bought out for a pre agreed amount (because you can’t get to zero when you are getting reduced by fractions).
The group then meets formally 4 plus times a year, and agrees which projects to put seed capital into, and which projects to kill. They also communicate daily over Skype Yammer and email, to draw on the unique skills sets of each member.
The result is that each partner:
- Is the CEO of their own startup.
- Gets a peer review on whether they should start, pivot or kill their project.
- Gets to access the skills of the team that includes marketers and capital raisers.
- Gets the freedom to take time off, which is costed into the model.
- Share the risk and reward.
- And probably more importantly than anything else, they get to reduce the loneliness.
Apparently the 9 partners were chosen carefully from the many that have applied. They also believe that this is about as big as they can get.
But does it work? So far they have generated 14 new businesses, sold 2 and have killed off 3 so its looking pretty good so far. Plus I believe a book on the group, called Rainmaking, will be out soon so I will get a chance to delve deeper into what they have learned.
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