“I’m going to suggest that any evaluation of an IPO should look more like a scorecard, where you evaluate the company based on the goals of an offering, weighted by their relative importance.”

Gloria Oh
Marker
Published in
1 min readDec 7, 2020

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Earlier this summer as the class of 2020 IPOs took off in a frenzy, Marker made the case for why the Day One IPO pop is highly overrated. Whereas a large day one pop fuels excitement and buzz, a lackluster spike or dip in the stock price is interpreted as anticlimactic and may harm a company’s external reputation. Venture capitalist Hunter Walk summarizes the dilemma aptly with companies facing a “damned if you do, damned if you don’t outcome of headlines” and offers a more nuanced approach to assessing companies as they go public, ahead of Airbnb and DoorDash’s long-awaited IPOs this week. Specifically, he argues that these four questions should be considered based on the goals of an offering, weighted by their importance:

  • 65% — Did the Company Raise Enough Money?
  • 25% — Did the Company Set Itself Up Well for Year One Performance?
  • 5% — Did the Company Take Advantage of the IPO as a Marketing Event?
  • 5% — Did the Company Prepare Employees Sufficiently for Post-IPO Life?

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Marker
Marker

Published in Marker

Marker was a publication from Medium about the intersection of business, economics, and culture. Currently inactive and not taking submissions.

Gloria Oh
Gloria Oh

Written by Gloria Oh

Senior Editor, Medium. Founding Editor of Index. Previously, The Atlantic.

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