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New Haven Biz-July 2021

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n e w h a v e n b i z . c o m | J u l y 2 0 2 1 | n e w h a v e n B I Z 13 of startups has increased steadily. e complexity and size of today's venture deals have created a growing demand for startup companies to hire a chief financial officer earlier in their life cycle, experts say. In fact, from May 2020 to May 2021, the number of CFOs hired by startups with assets between $10 million to $100 million — a range typical of early or mid-stage companies — has increased by 95 percent, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence data. Connecticut Innovations CEO Matt McCooe said he is encouraged by the CFO trends emerging among early-stage companies. In the late 90s, he says, it was common for a startup's founding team to include a CFO, but many companies over the past decade-and-a-half moved away from that approach to conserve investments and outsource functions like finance. But as the amount of venture capital and investor expectations increase, and short- and long-term growth strategies develop, CFOs can play a critical role beyond simply balancing the books, he said. Over the past three years, close to half (43 percent) of first-time CI-funded startups had a CFO in place, McCooe said. "A [startup] CEO can't do everything," McCooe said. "A strong [CFO] can keep an eye on expenses, help cra a vision of the organization, drive product and help raise more capital." Shaping strategy Hiring a CFO is a decision more ear- ly-stage startups are making. Last month, New Haven-based Cybrexa erapeutics, an oncology-focused biotechnology company, founded in 2017 and spun out of Yale's re- search-to-startup ecosystem, hired Stephen Bosso as its new CFO as the company's lead therapeutic heads toward its first round of clinical trials. Per Hellsund, Cybrexa's CEO, says the company has raised more than $47 million to date but as it gears up for an IPO in 2021 or 2022 — to attract in- vestment for additional trials — hiring a CFO was necessary. Bosso, who previ- ously served finance leadership roles at other pharmaceutical compa- nies including Alexion and Pfizer, says the CFO role has evolved from shepherding the finances to being a strategic business partner. "One of the things about joining Cybrexa is to partner not just on the finance side, but also helping to shape and frame the clinical strategy in terms of setting the path forward for the organization," Basso said. Having that type of business partner ear- lier in the company's life cycle has become more important, says John Pacifico, the chief operating officer and CFO of the East Coast for Westport-based venture investor Canaan. "ere's an appetite from larger strategic companies to get involved earlier in the development cycles and that has created an opportunity for startup companies — par- ticularly in technology, to go public earlier in the life cycle than we would have seen 10 years ago," Pacifico said. He noted the re-emergence of spe- cial-purpose acquisition companies, or SPACs — which require fewer regulatory hurdles than traditional IPOs and can be a pathway to startups going public via acquisition by a larger company — has accelerated the types of people, including CFO-caliber talent, at the leadership helm for developing companies. Another driver of the CFO trend, Pacifico says, is the volume of money being funneled into startups. "[ese companies] are raising more money faster than they ever have and there's planning that needs to be done to really make that work," he said. "Startups need to be identifying who might be interested in funding the next round of financing, [understanding] the criteria [investors] would require to be interested and work- ing networks to build relationships with prospective investors." More money, more responsibility Frank Milone, who runs the emerg- ing companies and venture capital audit practice for Glastonbury-based accounting and consulting firm FML, says investors' ex- pectations about progress at certain funding rounds has also accelerated and driven the trends toward CFOs. Because startups, he says, have more access to early-seed money and larger Series A investment, the expectation from some investors is that scaling the company may be possible in the first funding round. Growth and scale can create several challenges that a CFO is best equipped to solve, he said. "If an [early-stage] company needs to pivot to support accelerated growth or change because growth stalls, how do they reallocate funding or conserve cash flow to get further down the development path," Milone said. "Investors want to know a company has the right individual to address those [situations]." n EMCOR SERVICES NEW ENGLAND MECHANICAL We'll be there when you need us. With 50+ years of experience and more than 300 continuously trained, licensed, and certified facilities services technicians, we provide a wide range of building construction and facilities solutions across New England. COUNT ON NEMSI FOR: HVAC, Plumbing and Process Piping Design-Build Construction Electrical Services Energy Management Systems LEED Certification Programs Comprehensive Preventive Maintenance Programs 24/7/365 Emergency Response Call 860.871.1111 Toll Free 800.741.6367 Fax 866.481.3250 55 Gerber Road East, South Windsor, CT 06074 nemsi.com OFFICES IN Trumbull | New London | Palmer, MA | Albany, NY | Manchester, NH License #s: E1-0125666 • S1-302974 • P1-203519 • F1-10498 • SM1-192 • MC-1134 John Pacifico 2011 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 0 $100M $200M $300M $400M $500M $600M $700M $800M Number of Deals Dollars raised 58 69 $298.3M $707.3M 2012 2013 2014 2020 2019 2018 2017 2015 2016 CT venture fund investment Here's the amount of money CT companies have raised over the last 10 years. Source: PwC/CB Insights MoneyTree Report Frank Milone

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