
BERKELEY, CA – MARCH 25: One-ounce bags of medicinal marijuana are displayed at the Berkeley Patients Group March 25, 2010 in Berkeley, California. California Secretary of State Debra Bowen certified a ballot initiative late Wednesday to legalize the possession and sale of marijuana in the State of California after proponents of the measure submitted over 690,000 signatures. The measure will appear on the November 2 general election ballot. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
It’s not easy doing business when you’re in the marijuana industry.
For an entrepreneur aggressively growing a business, much of the time is spent raising equity, taking on debt, creating infrastructure, working with shareholders, and forging new partnerships. There is always the quest to do deals at market. Believe me, I understand that if I were in a business that manufactured electronics, sold cars, or leased construction equipment, there would be a clearly established market norm for just about everything, including cost of capital, terms for partnerships, and expectations from clients would all generally be taken care of by looking at the marketplace.
But for me, there is no norm. Why? Because there is no truly established market for the marijuana industry yet.
There was a breaking point for me and it happened only recently. It was the impetus of this article, and it is how I have tried to live and act since I first entered the marijuana industry. But it wasn’t until this breaking point that my outlook crystallized. During an equity raise for a project, an attorney representing a potential investor was giving me a stump speech about how the only way they could get comfortable with the deal was if their client had debt-like downside protection but with all the equity upside contemplated in the deal. I said that I wasn’t comfortable with that structure and the attorney asked me “Why?” before going on a rant where he yelled at me, after which I posed a very calm, simple question, “Why not?”
“Why not?” is my new succinct outlook when dealing with anything where a market comp doesn’t already exist. When the contractual chess matches and debates become overwhelming, the entrepreneur is left beaten down and discouraged. This isn’t good for personal health (which we entrepreneurs all acquiesced to before we started), and it’s not good for business either. Your team and your business need you to be strong and present. The best way to do that is to be at peace with making your own market.
If you provide a service or product that didn’t exist yesterday, be thoughtful and calculated with deciding what you want to charge and then charge that price. No, not everyone will be happy about it and many will beat you up for it. If you are raising capital, create an opportunity for your investors to realize a windfall when you are successful and create alignment between both their interests and yours. Present the opportunity and let them take it or leave it. I don’t know if there has ever been an investor in an early stage business who has responded to an offering with “Looks perfect. Here is my investment.” You have created your value proposition, and if investors want to participate, they will. If you weren’t someone who looked at the world with a “why not?” attitude, you would not be an entrepreneur in the first place. Remind yourself that this product, service, and opportunity exists because you were willing to do something no one else was willing to do, and in the same way you are creating your unique business, you are creating your own market.
– Adam Bierman is the founder and CEO of MedMen
Source: http://fortune.com/2016/02/23/marijuana-market-adam-bierman/
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