Can’t Get Funding? Try Consulting – with Mike Jones

Mike Jones, Tsavo, Consulting

What if you can’t get funding for your startup?

Before launching Tsavo, his current startup, Mike Jones funded a startup through consulting work.

Mike Jones

Tsavo

Mike bootstrapped userplane and sold it to AOL, then went on to found Tsavo. Along the way he’s invested in and advised startups like GumGum and Dogster. Most recently, he was named COO of MySpace.

Andrew: So I wrote a little list here of what you’re going to learn in this interview. You’re going to learn about how to bootstrap your idea. Say you’ve got an idea but you can’t get any investment for it. You can’t get any angels, no friends and family are willing to put up money. Venture capitalists definitely aren’t listening to you, but you still are ambitious and want to see it through. Well, you’re going to get some good ideas from Mike Jones about how to do that, how to bootstrap.

You’re also going to learn, since he’s an angel investor, you’re going to learn what an angel investor looks for when he makes an investment. I think that will give you an idea of what to do and how to pitch when you talk to angels. They’ve got their own criteria, much different from other investors.

You’re also going to learn about how to get the most out of your advisor. If you’ve listened to any past...

Continue reading the transcript...

A few lessons from this program

Here’s an edited excerpt from his interview.

Do you have any advice for a startup that can’t raise money?

If you have a good concept that you really want to pursue, and there’s absolutely no way that you’re going to find financing because the market is the market, or your angel investors aren’t stepping up, then I think a consulting practice could be a bridge to get you were you want to go. But it is a substantial distraction and a lot of people might not either have the discipline to do it or the stomach for it.

We luckily did.

When you ran userplane, how did you make the transition from consulting to building your own product?

There was a really small client in the Valley here in Los Angeles that wanted instant messaging software that they couldn’t afford a typical engagement for us to build. We had interest in building it. It’s something we’d been talking a lot about, thinking a lot about, and sold them on.

We were able to strike up a licensing agreement with them, where they agreed to license the product. And we already started building it because we’d been building it in our spare time. But that first license relationship provided us with financing that allowed us to focus on it.

It was like a pre-sale.