Clayton Christensen thinks so:
Ironically, one thing that many promising startup companies suffer from is having too much capital. Once a company gets burdened with too much investor capital, it starts to think that it needs to grow very quickly. Almost always, a startup’s first strategy is wrong. Once they get out into the marketplace and try to sell things, they find that many of the things that they had assumed are untrue, and that their strategy needs recalibrating. But when a company is overcapitalized, the founders can assume that they’re right for quite a while before they start to need to depend on peoples’ willingness to pay. The more capital, the longer a company can go without testing its fundamental assumptions. Tough economic circumstances tend to keep capitalizations lower, so in general, in the long term, I think that lean economic times can foster a proliferation of disruptive companies.
Comments