Financial Success:

Venture Investing

Warren Buffett (Born in 1930 )

The World's Most Successful Investor: Success Story and Key Teachings

By: Vadim Kotelnikov, Founder, Ten3 Business e-Coach – Innovation Unlimited, 1000ventures.com, 1000advices.com

"Price is what you pay. Value is what you get."  – Warren Buffet

Buffett's 7 Contrarian Principles

Ignoring Convention

  1. Do not follow the crowd. Ignore the market, the crowd, and its fashions... More

 

 SMART Executive (Ten3 Mini-course)

Buffett's Five Tips for Individual Investors

  1.  "Look at stocks as parts of business. Ask yourself, 'How would I feel if the Stock Exchange was closing tomorrow for the next three years?' If I am happy owning the stock under that circumstance, I am happy with the business. That frame of mind is important to investing."... More

 

 

Business Angels

Search for Investment Opportunities

Investment by Venture Capital Firms

Think Pad Inc. – a Home Run (case study)

Corporate Investing in External Ventures

GE Equity (case study)

Nortel Telecom (case study)

Evaluation of a Start-Up Company

Business Plan Evaluation

Venture Financing

Selection of Investment Opportunities

Key Documents To Be Prepared by an Entrepreneur

Step-By-Step Guide To Venture Financing

The World's Most Successful Investor

Warren Buffett is the world's most successful investor and a self-made billionaire. In 2005, Buffett was ranked  the world's second richest man with a personal net worth of $43 billion.

 

Buffett runs and owns about 31% of Berkshire Hathway, a $136 billion investment company, that has substantial stakes in Coca Cola, Wells Fargo and American Express. A $1 investment in Berkshire in 1965 would bring about $5,500 in 2005.

Since 1951, Buffett generated an average annual return of about 31%. The average annual return for the Standard & Poor's 500-stock over that period is 11%.

Buffett's Teachings on Investment

Warren Buffett is the world's most successful investor. "Buffett's teachings on investment sound deceptively simple. But there is no deception. They truly are simple. Do not allow investment advisers to persuade you that investment is a complex matter needing great expertise. Instead, learn how to assess the fundamental and financial values of a business yourself, and invest according to your convictions."

Ignoring Conventional Investment Guidelines

Warren Buffett believes that the conventional approach to investment makes it difficult to beat the market and easy to do worse. If you wish to invest well you must be prepared to go against the prevailing wisdom and ignore conventional investment guidelines. You can increase your chances of finding winning stocks by adhering to Buffett's contrarian principles.

Be Different and Make a Difference!

Relying On Gut Instinct

Bill Gates, Founder of Microsoft Corporation and a Berkshire director, praises Buffett's hard-to-imitate management style. "It's baffling to think who else could do it," he says.

Warren Buffet spends most of his day alone in an office with no computer. His desk isn't littered with stock research. "I don't use analysts or fortune tellers, " Buffett says. "If I had to pick one, I don't know which it would be." He deliberately keeps the outside world at bay, believing it is the best way for him to remain "rational" as an investor. If he is interested in investing in a company, he studies the financials himself. "All I have to do is think and not be influenced by others," he says. Warren Buffett "spends the better part of most workdays thinking and reading. He fields a handful of phone calls, and on most days, he confers with the chiefs of of a few Berkshire subsidiaries. He seldom holds meetings."1

Warren Buffett's Investment Criteria

Warren Buffett was once asked what is the most important thing he looks for when evaluating a company to invest in. Without hesitation, he replied, "Sustainable competitive advantage"... More

Hands-Off Management

Buffett believes that managers of the companies he is investing in ought to be left to run their businesses without interference from him and without having to hew any to any unifying corporate strategies or goals. "We delegate to the point of abdication," Buffett says in Berkshire's Owner's Manual.

Yin and Yang of Employee Empowerment

Despite its investment size, Berkshire Hathways has a tiny staff. It's headquarters is staffed by just 17 employees. The company has no public-relations, human-relations, investor-relations, legal departments, or investment committee. It holds no quarterly earning calls for investors and analysts, has no asset allocation guidelines, and gives no guidance on future earnings. Warren Buffet tells the chiefs of his business units not to produce any special reports for him.

On occasion, when severe problems arise, Buffett abandons his hands-off management approach however.

 Discover much more in the FULL VERSION of e-Coach

Identifying an Outstanding Company...

The Power of Focus...

Making Fast Decisions...

Making a $800 Million Investment Decision Within One Day...

Using the Probability Theory...

 

References:

  1. "Buffett Still Scores More With Less", Susan Pulliam and Karen Richardson, The Wall Street Journal

  2. "Roads To Success," Robert Heller

 

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Inventor, Author & Founder – Vadim Kotelnikov

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