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Paying Entrepreneurs to Find the Right Business

This is the way a search fund typically works: One or two ambitious graduates of a top-tier business school, who want to run their own business but recognize they lack practical experience, offer themselves as fledgling entrepreneurs who can make some tough-minded investors a lot of money.

These investors put up about half a million dollars for the pair to spend up to two years scouring the marketplace for a promising business with $10 million to $30 million in revenue. If satisfied with the choice, the investors help finance the acquisition of the business, join its board and give their young partners a crash course in hands-on management. If all works out, the venture grows and makes everybody richer.

H. Irving Grousbeck, co-founder of Continental Cablevision (later Media One) and now a consulting professor of business at Stanford University, helped originate the business model a quarter of a century ago and has been studying it ever since.

By BRENT BOWERS

Full Story: http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/12/business/smallbusiness/12hunt.html?_r=1&ref=smallbusiness

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