SaveNabaztag or the journey of a rabbit

Written by Petrean on October 20th, 2009

nabaztag_book_strategy2The journey of the rabbit started mid-August after the publication in ‘Les Echos’ (French financial newspaper) that the company behind the Nabaztags (Wifi Rabbits) – Violet – was going under. If you follow the French entrepreneurial scene, you will find that innovative companies are hard to come by; and successful innovative companies are even rarer. People who disagree should compare the age of the companies in the CAC40 vs SP500.

‘Because we don’t like to see Rabbits die’ or because we are slightly crazy, Franck and I decided to rescue the company by placing a bid for it. Unfortunately, none of us had or have the adequate funds so we decided to crowfund the bid.

The story thus started with the launch of savenabaztag.com. Due to legal ramifications, we decided not to collect any money but to collect pledges. These pledges would entitle you to a share of the new business with the corresponding voting rights. The idea was to have a democratically ran business where X number of people would vote for Y representatives that would then elect the board. The advantage of this type of corporate structure is that the managers are totally accountable to owners (Warren Buffet would have been proud).

The website received a lot of publicity and visits (more than 1M hits and close to 30 000 unique visitors!!). The site collected a total of €166k in pledges. Unfortunately, the administrator was not that forthcoming and we never managed to access the dossier. We thus estimated how much it would cost to purchase the company and restructure it but we knew that these numbers were estimates.

We were contacted by several journalists and private investors who were keen to chip in if we went ahead. However, none but one were keen to get the dossier for us to carry out a proper due diligence. Unfortunately, the demand was late in the process (48H before deadline) and was rejected.

As it turns out 3 companies placed bids for the company and all 3 were rejected. The average bid was about €300k proving that we were not that far off target and had we had the dossier, we would have managed to collect at least that much from private investors. Currently, the decision as to who will take over Violet is still up in the air but only one company (the creator of the Adibou educational series) is in the loop and has until the 20th to place a reasonable bid.

All is not lost though. We do not know what Adibou’s parent has in mind and perhaps there will be an opportunity to create an Association and purchase the servers, the code to keep the Rabbits alive.

Business and Finance and Crowdfunding

From a pure investment point of view, the experience showed the limits of the current financing and investment models. Crowdfunding (i.e. calling onto public funding) is actually illegal if you ask more than 100 people. In this day and age when the human population getting cleverer and smarter, why should a startup not be allowed to ask the general public from some money. It would obviously need to be within a regulated framework with a limit on each individual’s contribution and some kind of light financial reporting. We think that this is a major lever for future innovation and funding.

As a simple example, take a company X part of a large conglomerate. Imagine X is profitable but not as much a the rest of the group. The group might well decide to liquidate and/or simply close the company. Why would, in these cases, the general public not be allowed to bid for it by offering, €10, €20, €100 euros? Politicians have to acknowledge this new source of funding and financial regulators need to create the appropriate framework. The ball is in your court…

 

1 Comments so far ↓

  1. Other variant is possible also

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