Tag: Angel Investors

How to pitch your startup at conferences

Rocky Agrawal is an analyst focused on the intersection of local, social, and mobile. He is a principal analyst at reDesign mobile. Previously, he launched local and mobile products for Microsoft and AOL. He blogs at http://blog.agrawals.org and tweets at @rakeshlobster.

From Venturebeat.com

I attended the Launch conference in San Francisco yesterday and saw quite a few pitches. Unfortunately, many entrepreneurs are still making the same mistakes they’ve been making for years.

Here are a few tips for pitching. Because many of the presenters were first timers and early stage companies, I’m not going to name names of companies that I thought did poorly. My goal is to help companies improve.

Booth

  • Have a sign! You’re competing with dozens of other startups for attention. People aren’t going to stop and talk to everyone. You’ve already invested money for the booth space and the people to be on site. Spend the money to get a decent sign that talks about what your company does in a few bullet points. See the example at right for a good sign. That’s the right amount of text.
  • Do your elevator pitch and then ask the person you’re talking to what his or her role is. You want to be able to meet their needs. It helps if you know that they’re press, investors, general user or competitor. Then adjust the rest of the pitch from there.
  • Make sure everyone working your booth is familiar with the basics of your company. Things like expected launch, funding, investors. If the answer is that you’re not disclosing something, that’s what you should say. I talked with one company I was interested in and the guy just responded to my questions with, “I don’t know. I’m just an engineer.”
  • Direct people to the right person. If there are others on the team who know the answer, make the connections. The same engineer just motioned at other people who were gabbing among themselves and said they might know the answer, without making any effort to introduce us.
  • Don’t lie. I asked one company if they had an Android app. They said they did. I pulled out my phone to download it. All of a sudden, they didn’t have an Android app. “It’s in development.”
  • Be prepared to answer questions about where you fit relative to the competition. The people most interested in talking to you likely know your competitors. (Saying you have “none” is a bad move.) One of the most frequent questions I ask is “How are you different from…”
  • Pay attention to badges. Many conferences have different types of badges for attendees. If there are a lot of green badges and only a few purple badges, you might want to pay special attention to people with purple badges.
  • Know who the players are in your space. If there are specific press, analysts, or investors your company is targeting, the people at your booth should know about them.
  • Don’t waste money on pens, T-shirts, and other giveaways. Investors and press don’t care about these things. Put your money into product. (Though you may want to get shirts for your own team to make it easier for people to find you.)

    Presentations

  • Grab attention from the get go. Many people are multitasking during these things and if you don’t grab them immediately, you might never grab them. Even if you have a 5 minute slot, that doesn’t mean people are paying attention the whole time. I was sitting next to a VC yesterday. We both would pay attention to the start of each pitch and if it didn’t resonate, start working on email, Twitter or other things. (We were also refreshing our screens to see if the Apple Store was back up; both of us bought the new iPad before the show was over.) Every once in a while we’d tune in or ask each other if the pitch was worth paying attention to.
  • Show your product. We don’t want to see a video of how great your theoretical product might be. Show us what is today, warts and all. Smart people will be able to fill in the blanks and see your vision. Dumb people — well, you don’t want them as investors.
  • Tell us why you are the right person or team to do this. What makes you better than most? What in your background inspired this idea or concept?
  • Be prepared to back up claims you make about traction. If your engagement is through the roof, show us with graphs. Everyone has heard the “we’re in discussions with major retailers” line. No one believes it. If you don’t have traction, don’t claim you do.
  • Have a back up plan if you run into technical difficulties.
  • Follow up
  • Pay attention to who is tweeting about you during and after the event. I tweeted that a company was interesting last night and because they followed up right away, I was able to meet with them this morning before the founder returned to New York. If you have a larger team, you may want to have someone who isn’t attending the conference monitoring Twitter and filtering leads.
  • Share/Bookmark

Strategies for Winning Funding in 2012

Critical factors for winning investment above the competition

From Vator News by Joey Tamer

Recently, I chaired the Venture Capital panel at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES), hosting a stellar cast of investors, who offered savvy advice on winning investment capital in the current funding environment. They offered key strategies and tactics for rising above the noise of so many early stage companies competing for the few positions available in each Fund.

Number of new deals planned for 2012: 4-5 per early-stage investment firm

Consistent with last year’s panel (2011), each early-stage Fund planned to invest in a Series A for four or five new early stage companies during this year.  No more than that.  In the case of Jerusalem Venture Partners, Yoav Tzruya reported that this number represents no more than 1% of the 600 companies JVP reviews each year for its early stage fund.  Kevin Spain of Emergence Capital, which has a focus on B2B applications, and Chris Petrovic of GameStop Digital, which is a strategic investor/acquirer of game companies, as well as Habib Kairouz of Rho Capital, agreed with the plan for 4-5 new deals this year.

Current market competition is significantly increased

We are in a boom period again, this time for the number of early-stage companies in play in the market.  The continuing trend that allows for new technologies and applications to be built with many off-the-shelf tools, using world-wide technical expertise, for much less capital, has created many new companies competing for the funding resources available.  The new trend of incubating companies in accelerators has added some seed capital to these concept-companies to get them through their initial product development.  But then these companies need to get some traction in the market, hopefully to significant revenue, before they can hope to move from seed capital to Series A.

Alternative strategies if you cannot get from Seed to Series A, or from Series A to Series B funding: ways to create a stronger offering

Looking at these market conditions, some on the panel offered an interesting perspective for rising above the noise: consider early stage strategic alliances/mergers to strengthen your position to attract funding.

Early stage companies not attracting that critical Series A or Series B funding should consider connecting strategically or through acquisition or merger with other similar-stage companies to create a stronger offering for funding.  Aligning with other early companies that would enhance your market position or extend your product offerings or brand, you might attract that essential next stage of funding.

I found this “investment banking” approach fascinating for early stage companies, but of course in the hour we had, we didn’t delve into and examples or the terms of such deals.

Kevin Spain added a new point, that he sees a strong emerging trend in B2B and enterprise applications using the new technologies that are mostly focused on the consumer market now.  He advised companies to look for those B2B market opportunities for their current B2C products and applications.  A doubling of your target markets, which rise and fall under different economic conditions, may present a strong offering to investors.

Strategic approaches to sourcing capital

We did move on to speak about strategic corporate capital, as both Scott English from Hearst and Chris Petrovic of GameStop approach their investments as strategic additions to their portfolios, rather than as pure venture investments –even though each has a different priority for these investments.

The first point made was to conduct your due diligence about how strategic investors value their target companies.  Hearst, for example, is a later stage investor focused on financial ROI to Hearst first, and strategic value to the portfolio second.  GameStop, focused on early stage game companies, values its acquisition targets first as an operational addition to its portfolio plan (does the company add to GameStop’s infrastructure, product mix, learning about new markets, or strategy) before financial and ROI considerations.

The lesson here, as offered often in these pages, is to ~

  1. Do your homework about your company’s “fit” with what an investment group might be seeking,
  2. Talk with other companies in the investor’s portfolio, and
  3. Narrow down your list and your efforts to those investors that prefer your company’s stage, market sector, and your possible enhancement of their portfolio’s current companies.
  4. Some strategic and corporate investors function very much like venture capitalists, and others have different priorities.  So, after your due diligence, and as you enter discussions, read the deal’s restrictions and the detailed legal conditions before negotiating or accepting any investment.

Critical factors for winning investment above the competition

The panel was particularly savvy about the profile of companies who would receive their funding:

Norm Fogelsong of Institutional Venture Partners, a later-stage venture fund, insisted that your company’s vision must be big, very big, to attract the rounds of capital needed to become a major player.

The panelists agreed that they are very focused on execution, in particular execution on market penetration.   After you have been funded on your product’s unique value, it is time to turn your attention to your market, especially your customer acquisition and retention strategies, tactics and results.

Yoav related that he looked for CEOs with deep market savvy, a founder who knows his or her product and its market realities, and has a strong go-to-market strategy.

Sharon Wienbar of Scale Venture Partners, a later stage investor, said that she looks for the CEO to “de-risk” Scale’s investment with the following factors:

  • Proof of market responsiveness:  does your customer commit to your vision of your product’s value, price and use?
  • A business model that prioritizes customer acquisition and retention:  do you have a plan that acquires each new customer quickly and for less and less cost of acquisition?
  • Compelling metrics:  are your projections for market penetration, growth and profitability backed up by proven metrics?

So, amid the growing competition for capital we are seeing this year, particularly in the consumer market, investors’ focus seems to move quickly from unique technologies and applications to strong execution.  Early stage companies need strategies to present compelling offerings to investors, and an increasing focus on market execution that leads to growing a big company and taking significant market share.

  • Share/Bookmark

10 Tips for Women Entrepreneurs Seeking Angel Funding

From FOXBUSINESS.COM Written By

Women still make up just a small percentage of business owners seeking angel investment to start or grow their business.  

But, according to the University of New Hampshire Center for Venture Research, A . The center also found that when an angel investment group is comprised of a small percentage of women, the group is more cautious about investing – compared to investment groups made up of more than 10% women, which are associated with increased investment.

Both of these findings support the idea that more women with good business ideas should seek financing for their operations; and if they can find investor groups comprised of at least a few women, their chances of getting funding are even greater.

So how does a female entrepreneur ensure her success in proving a viable business worthy of funding?

“It’s certainly important for women to understand that what will keep them in leadership is meeting their numbers and just continuing to do an excellent job in leadership,” said Stephanie Hanbury-Brown, founder and managing director of Golden Seeds, an angel investment group dedicated to funding women entrepreneurs. “When you are, there’s nobody happier than your board and investors. The more confidence a woman has about her ability to succeed and her ability to meet her numbers and her ability to realize her dream for herself and her product, the more confident she is.” 

Here are several tips on how to go about seeking – and receiving – angel funding, offered by Hanbury-Brown and several successful female entrepreneurs:

1 Network. It’s often a friend of a friend of a friend or associate who may know someone with the right kind of wealth looking to fund a good idea. It’s also beneficial to talk to as many people as possible who have sought and received financing to become familiar with the process.

“We just kept reaching out to more and more people. Every time we talked to one person we learned something … it really became this educational series of meetings that led us to really get a good grasp on the next steps to take,” said Whitney Trujillo, co-CEO and co-founder of Daily Deals for Moms, which began seeking financing in April 2011 and closed on the first round in June.

2.     Get a good lawyer. Find a lawyer, preferably one who is familiar with your specific industry and the investing process.

“It’s not something to use a family friend on,” Trujillo said. “This is something to really find a lawyer who has done this before and has a good understanding on how to structure it. In the end, they end up giving you a lot of good advice.”

3. Know your idea/product inside and out before putting forth a proposal. “It’s easier for me to pitch an idea if I’ve got it up and running and a demo – something I can show I take it a step further than just PowerPoint slides,” said Nina Sodhi, CEO of mobile startup Blu Trumpet, backed by IAC and owned and operated by Hatch Labs, Inc.

Putting together a prototype of your product helps investors – and you – get a better sense of how it all works. “Why would they invest if I haven’t bothered to build it?” Sodhi said.  “Have something to show when you go in to have an investor conversation. I get confidence from that, and I understand more of what I’m talking about.” 

4. Be confident in yourself and your business or idea. “We really knew and still believe we have something really, really special here and that really helps,” said Daily Deals for Moms Co-CEO Ashley Kingsley. “It’s certainly a big learning curve, but once you’re passionate and believing in what you’re doing … it sort of seems to move along.”

5. Keep it short. “The more you say in an investor pitch, the more there’s risk of confusion,” Sodhi said. “Keep it simple. Keep it to the high points and put an effort up front to understand what the high points are.”

 6. It’s not all about money. Seek out investors who can bring something other than money to the table, such as a social media or marketing background.

“We just really picked the people we wanted to work with,” said Trujillo. “With each of our investors, we really tried to make sure they were aligned with what we were, but also that they each had something to bring to the table to grow our business. That made it less intimidating because we had a really great group of investors.”

7. Follow up. Be sure to keep in contact with anyone who might know a potential investor or can put you in contact with probable funders.

8. Expect your first proposal to bomb. “Very few people are successful in their first attempt,” Sodhi said. “Just get through your first four attempts as quickly as possible so you can get to your fifth” successful attempt. “I think that’s one of the things men have figured out – they just throw themselves at a problem over and over again and don’t get hampered by the results.” 

9. Practice…a lot. Pitch your idea as much as possible before your “real attempt” in front of an investor board – that can include elevator pitches, or informal pitches or demos to potential investors.

10. Don’t sell yourself short. Many women may take less money than what their idea is worth in order to make sure their business gets off the ground.

And don’t give up more control than what you are comfortable with. “We don’t fight for our vision – we do listen to what people have to say and that makes us better executors,” Sodhi said. “Having more people at a table is actually a better outcome and I think women understand that. As a result, they’re willing to give up another 10% to help the company along.”

  • Share/Bookmark

Dave McClure’s 10 tips for the perfect investment pitch

From thenextweb.com byPaul Sawers

We’ve covered how to effectively pitch your startup to the tech press before, and at the Future of Web Apps conference in London this month, entrepreneur and angel investor Dave McClure was in attendance to give his advice on how best to pitch to a venture capitalist. It was interesting to note some of the similarities between pitching for money, and pitching for press.

10 tips for pitching to VCs

Deviating from the topic in the conference programme which had been 10 Tips for Web App Success and Profitability, Dave started: “I don’t know shit about that. So I’m going to talk about this instead. Though if you want to make a profit, I think you should sell something – way too few people are trying to do that these days.”

So the theme of the hour was how to build a presentation and pitch for VC money. “If you’re constructing a way to present your story, you should be aware that most investors have small attention spans”, says McClure. “They may be late to the meeting, they may be reading other stuff on their iPhone. So you want to organize your information in a way that allows them to process it more efficiently”.

As a general rule of thumb, the more time you spend speaking, the less time they spend listening. This means organizing your information by priority. “If there’s one thing you want them to remember, make sure that’s on the front slide”, says McClure. “A picture image that conveys what you’re talking about and leaves them with a quick memory or a reference is also good. So, at least if you don’t get any more time with them, at least they have that much.”

With the formalities out of the way, McClure launched straight into the ten tips.

1. Elevator pitch

Elevator 520x242 Dave McClures 10 tips for the perfect investment pitchThe elevator pitch should be short, simple and memorable,  ‘what’, ‘how’ and ‘why’ should be answered. “And remember to keep it free of jargon too”, says McClure. “So don’t be using technical context, or industry-specific context unless you know that investor has that background”.

McClure also noted that ‘X for Y’ is a good approach for the elevator pitch, as long as they are pretty similar. “So for Slideshare, it might be ‘we’re the YouTube for PowerPoint presentations. Both of these are well known, so that’s a reasonable claim. But if the points of reference are too obscure, they might not get it”.

Whilst the notion of having fun might seem a bit difficult in the face of one or more money dragons, this is something McClure says you should aim for. “Fun is infectious. So try and enjoy yourself”.

2. Think problems first, then solutions

When we interviewed Instagram founder Kevin Sytrom a few weeks back, he hit on this point too. “The app store is 90% full of solution-based apps”, said Kevin. “But do they solve a problem?” It was this concern that was the building blocks of Instagram. “Let’s focus on problems, not solutions” was the ethos as Instagram emerged from the ashes of Burbn, its previous incarnation. “With Burbn we started at a solution and worked back”, says Kevin. “That’s the wrong way to do it. You have to start with the problem and work forward from that”.

Dave McClure was coming from the same position at the FOWA conference. “A lot of the time people begin by saying what their solution is”, says McClure. “But I recommend that you talk more about what the problem is. This helps you establish emotional context with the person listening”.

“About 20 years ago, a friend of mine broke his wrist when were out rollerblading”, says McClure. After regaling the story in some detail, including a painful car journey to the hospital with his friend’s hand sitting at a most unnatural angle to his arm, he reveals the point to the story. “I’ve shared with you a problem, I’ve taken you through an emotional experience, perhaps even one you know personally”, he continues. “So you have all these ideas running around your head, and I haven’t even told you about the solution yet. But I probably have your attention, and we now have a shared emotional context”.

So if the problem is a horribly broken wrist, McClure’s point is that now’s a good time to talk about pain relievers, wrist-guards…any number of solutions to the problem. Translated into a pitch situation involving investors, you should consider scenarios that will help you connect with the people you’re facing, this may involve doing a little research into their background. “Do they have kids, are they straight, gay, old, young”? asks McClure. “Is there a context that you can tap into and share with them?”

3. Solution: Sex, money or power?

Great products and companies do 1 of 3 things: Get you laid (Sex), get you paid (Money), get you made (Power). “How does your solution tap into the emotional, powerful, evolutionary needs that we as humans have?”, asks McClure.

With that in mind, all good pitches should outline how it makes customers happy, how it’s better and different to existing products/services out there. And if it isn’t different, then change the context so that it is different to everything else.

“Maybe you’re not the best snorkel solution to ALL customers”, says McClure. “But maybe you are the best for left-handed grandmothers. If you’re product/service isn’t the best in your field, you need to change the frame of reference enough so that you become the best in your niche”.

Of course, all the talk in the world can’t beat a proper demo. This is the same whether you’re pitching for press coverage, or pushing for investment. “You need something that illustrates your solution”, says McClure. So what we’re talking about is live product demos, screenshots, videos and such things.

Ideally, you’ll have backups too. So if your product demo fails for whatever reason during the pitch – perhaps you lose the Internet connection, or some other unforeseen problem arises, you have something else up our sleeve. That could be paper printouts, or a glove-puppet presentation.

As McClure alluded to earlier, investors are often not the most personable people. “Expect to be interrupted. If you do get interrupted, what should you do? Listen”, says McClure. “If they interrupt you, it usually means they care enough about your product to ask you something. So don’t go right back to your presentation, answer their question properly – you’ve got their attention. The script isn’t your slides, the script is the face of the person you’re talking to”.

4. Market size

“Market size matters because most investors want to know that you’ve got a big business”, says McClure. “Bigger is generally better. There are two ways to think about market size – top down, which means someone else reported this market data – such as Forrester or Gartner. Or bottom up. This is the one I prefer. A number of users, a size of transaction, and frequency.”

Another way of doing this is if there is to look at the value of an industry in an offline capacity and compare it to its present online state. So for example, $100bn of transactions are carried out offline, but only $1bn takes place online – but it’s growing at 300% each year. This would demonstrate both size and a gap in the market.

5. Business model

“The business model – AKA ‘how do you make money”, says McClure. “I’m a big fan of simple revenue models, typically direct models, either transactional or subscription. When you’re listing sources of revenue, I recommend you keep it simple and keep it to one or two. When you list a large number of sources, generally that tells me that you don’t know how you’re making money.”

Whilst McClure acknowledged that some investors may have a different viewpoint on this, it makes sense that listing 5 or 10 sources demonstrates a lack of clear focus on where the bucks will come from. “If you do have a bigger list, at least prioritize them by biggest first”, continued McClure.

6. What’s your big unfair advantage?

McClure1 520x288 Dave McClures 10 tips for the perfect investment pitch

“Try to identify some big, unfair advantage”, said McClure, against a backdrop of images including a hand holding 5 aces, and a gun battling a knife. “Another micsconeption is that VCs like to take risks. That really isn’t true. VCs like to not take risks and bet on sure things. Your market lead could be based on your team, number of customers, revenue or intellectual property or patents. Your job during the pitch is to say what your biggest assets are, and emphasize what your advantages are over others in your market.

7. Competition: Why you’re better or different

Again, this is similar to how you would pitch your startup or app to the tech press. Investors want to know what else is out there and how what you’re doing is better than what’s already out there. “It is important for you to list your competitors”, says McClure. “I wouldn’t recommend leaving competitors off your pitch if you don’t want investors to know about them. That isn’t a great way to start a relationship with them.”

It’s also not good if investors know of competitors that you don’t – so it really pays to know your competition well and outline why what you’re doing is different. “Your job isn’t to hide your competition, it is to figure out how you can be better and different to them.”

By way of an example, you could outline how you plan to target different niches or cater for a slightly different demographic or market segment.

8. Marketing plan: Customers and distribution

With the best idea in the world, you still need to effectively broadcast your message. “This one’s tough because marketing has changed so much in the past  5 years”, says McClure. “There are more channels than ever, channels that didn’t even exist 5 years ago with hundreds of millions of users. Think Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Apple, Android, LinkedIn, Zynga…”

So, there’s a lot of platforms and channels to market through for sure, covering search, social, mobile, local, TV, radio…the list could go on. But there are challenges in successfully getting your word out there. In terms of communicating your plans to a VC, there are a number of things you should consider. “Volume, cost and conversion can be a good framing exercise that at least allows you to think about what volume of customers, or leads, and what does it cost me to get them and what is the conversion rate to the target – namely revenue?”

Put simply, when pitching for investment, it’s a good idea to outline how you plan to get your message out there. You should frame the problem or product that you’re selling to people in a way that’s interesting.

9. Team hires: Hustler, hacker designer

Jobs2 Dave McClures 10 tips for the perfect investment pitch

“In general you want people that can build and sell products”, says McClure. “That’s the simplest way of looking at your team. Geeks with deep technical experience are great, these days designers with great visual or usability experience are also good. But if you can tap into entrepreneurs that have sold companies before, or at least sales and marketing folk who have successful sales backgrounds, those are also important skills to have”.

McClure talked specifically about the ‘hustler/hacker designer’ skill-sets. Hustlers being those that figure out how to get customers, hackers being those with engineering or technical depth, and designers framing the product in a way that’s appealing. The one key point to glean from this is a breadth of skills is important.

Check out our guide to finding, hiring and keeping top technical talent.

10. Money and milestones

“If you’re trying to pitch people for money, have some frame of reference for how much money you’re asking for and how you would spend it”, says McClure. A key point McClure noted was the importance of having three budgets in mind which cater for different investment opportunities – small, medium and large. You should be able to demonstrate that each amount of money will be able to get you to a certain milestone.

“When you’re thinking about raising money, an optimum way of doing that is you want just enough capital to get you comfortably to a milestone that raises the value of the company”, says McClure. “And then you can raise more money with a higher valuation of your company.”

In terms of pitching what you’re going to do with that money, McClure noted that there’s three ways you’ll spend it. Hires, to help build your products, hires to help with marketing campaigns and get customers and then overheads. “Generally I think you should bucket money into those three categories”, says McClure. “When you’re talking to investors, you want to be able to say ‘I need this much capital to run operations, this much to pay headcount, and I might need this much to acquire customers’”.

Ultimately, you should demonstrate an understanding of exactly what you need the money for, what you’ll do with it and how you plan to make money on the back of it. Sounds simple, huh?

Meanwhile, The Next Web’s Boris produced his very own 10 tips for the perfect pitch last year, which is well worth a read too.

Sources: Image Source
  • Share/Bookmark

5 Reasons an Angel Investor Will Walk Away From Your Deal

Post written by Ty Danco. Ty is an angel investor and startup mentor. Read more of his thoughts at tydanco.com.  From Onstartups.com

You’ve got a killer idea, a good prototype, a terrific market opportunity, and maybe even some funding already. But you still may lose potential investors that have nothing to do with your deal, and everything to do with you. Here are 5 of my non-negotiable hot buttons that will make mturn down an investment, no matter how good the financial prospects appear.

 

1. You knowingly mislead people. If you’re not trustworthy, it’s over. Full stop. It can be as simple as pretending to know answers when you don’t, implying that you have investors or contracts that aren’t real, or giving half answers to questions that conveniently leave out non-flattering but significant information. Note that I’m not going to dump you simply for painting the rosiest plausible picture and showing hockey stick revenue numbers that seem ridiculously ambitious. Investors expect some amount of hype, and we can put up with that. But you have to be honest.

  

Worst is a coverup: An entrepreneur presenting to an angel group was discussing his record as a “successful repeat entrepreneur”, but didn’t give particulars other than “the last company he founded went IPO.” When upon questioning he told us the name of that company, it only took a few minutes on Google to discover that 1) the company was now defunct, having been in the middle of a penny-stock trading scam, with multiple lawsuits still ongoing; and 2) that the founder/CEO had a different name than the man presenting. He responded to the first fact that he had been the victim of those scams, and to the second that he had decided to change his name. Needless to say, no checks were written to that company. His new company actually had acquired rights to some interesting technology, but the integrity question made it a total no-brainer pass.

 

2. You haven’t done your homework. Unfortunately it’s not the norm that an angel will have deep knowledge of the sector you are in, so we’re going to ask questions, and lots of them. But imagine what our reaction will be if you don’t know the answers to our basic questions about your own markets, your competitors, or worse, haven’t even considered an obvious question. At best you’re too green to invest in, shown by your chase of angel investments before you are ready. The good news is that this is easily correctible. Do your homework before you pitch angels; when you practice your pitch dozens of times before mentors and other entrepreneurs, chances are you will have had a chance to think about and respond to almost all of the obvious questions. But until you get to that point, don’t burn your bridges pitching to investors too early. Work on your business model and your pitch until they are shining jewels.

3. Your projected expenses are unreasonable. As mentioned above, I don’t really mind—and come to expect—entrepreneurs showing revenue projections that go straight to the moon. However, I will scrutinize projected expenses, hard. If they are unreasonably low—for instance, having a model that depends on external sales without any meaningful salaries or commissions, not budgeting in legal expenses, etc.–that marks you as a greenhorn that needs to go back to school. Worse than the greenhorn is the greedy entrepreneur who is looking to raise money to immediately go back into his or her pocket. This is especially true when the entrepreneur has been on the beach, or an “independent consultant” for a period of time. It’s no sin to need or get a paycheck, but if you are looking to angels to fund your six-figure package, that’s a telltale sign of greed. Down the road, a me-first priority will manifest itself in losing employees, creating lousy margins, and other bad scenarios. The CEO needs to take the lead in all aspects—including demonstrated hunger, commitment, and sacrifice. If you’re focused on the short-term rewards, there won’t be any long-term rewards around for us investors.

4. You don’t follow through. This is another “tell”, as poker players say. This won’t be evident at a first meeting, but in the follow-up. Dharmesh and many other angels are correct in saying that diligence can be quick, given that startups will change directions. I too believe due diligence needn’t take more than a week or two, but I still think that in most cases there needs to be several interactions between entrepreneur and potential investors. Why? With the biggest risk for startups being execution risk, we need to assess whether you will do what you say you’ll do. If you call us when you say you will, if you follow-up on our questions quickly and efficiently, those are all positive indicators that you are accountable and will deliver on promises. There’s no shame in putting a reasonable but later date on some deliverable because you’re busy—I hope and want you to be busy, and maybe even you’ll earn bonus points if you turn something around earlier than promised.

5. You’re dogmatic. It’s easy to say no to someone who is a jerk. But assuming that you’re not arrogant, full of yourself, and “getting high on your own supply”, you can still turn us off by not considering alternative viewpoints. When you answer questions before we finish asking them, when you don’t take the time to really listen to what people are talking about, when you assume you know every answer cold even before it’s clear where a comment is coming from, that’s another telltale sign of too much hubris and not enough coachability. There are plenty of people who are uncompromising—Steve Jobs is just one example—but Steve Jobs are few and far between, and I’m willing to bet that he listens before he rules.

This is not to say that the investor is going to be right or that you are wrong. I especially like it when an entrepreneur has considered an option I just proposed and educates me why they have decided not to go down that route…as long as they have taken the time to listen. But an absolute black and white dogmatic approach that leaves an impression of “my way or the highway” raises the likelihood of an inflexibility that will most likely doom your company. Pivots happen…and you have to be open-minded along the way as you build your company.

For a good entrepreneur, it shouldn’t be hard to avoid these potholes: you do your homework, you don’t lie, you follow through, you’re not short-sightedly greedy, and you’re open to hear what others think about your strategy and prospects. Miss any of those, and you become a bad bet—low odds that can’t be papered over by any amount of experience, social proof, traction or the other building blocks that attract an angel’s attention. When our due diligence shows that you’re not going to let us down in those five areas—now you’re a whole lot closer to being bankable.

  • Share/Bookmark

Raising Seed Capital Now: 10 Tips

Originally posted excerpt on Businessweek.com

1. Meet angels via the entrepreneurs they’ve funded.

Referrals carry weight, but for those without a long list of angel contacts, getting access to angels via entrepreneurs they’ve already funded can be equally powerful.

2. Avoid approaching investors in July, August, and December.

The high-net-worth individuals [who] make up the angel universe tend to take extended vacations in the summer and the period between Thanksgiving and New Year’s,” says Jennifer Naylor, an angel investor with Golden Seeds in New York.

3.Let investors help you refine your pitch.

“Don’t enter the process blind,” says Jamie Rhodes, an investor in Austin with Central Texas Angel Network, which invested $5.5 million in 2010.

4. Skip the jargon.

Most early angels will not have domain expertise in your industry or technology.

5. Be coachable.

 ”Angels aren’t focused only on ROI,” says Tech Coast Angels’ Sudek. “Most have a strong desire to mentor and help build companies.”

6.  Entice friends and family with merchandise discounts.

To persuade friends and family to support your business, consider offering an investor discount.

7. Tell a story.

People relate to stories, and it’s amazing how many entrepreneurs who are trying to raise cash just dive into the details of their business without first creating the emotional connection that comes from a story.

 8. Recognize that investors come from unlikely places.

9. Concentrate on landing a lead.

Your lead investor can help set the terms and draw in other sources of capital

10. Target investors that have invested in your field.

“History is the best predictor of the future,” says Satya Patel, a partner at venture capital firm Battery Ventures in Silicon Valley

  • Share/Bookmark

Angel Investors Group For Women Entrepreneurs

I just found out about an innovative investors group targeting women entrepreneurs only.  

Over the past few years Golden Seeds, a rare angel investor group devoted exclusively to funding women-led and owned businesses, has poured more than $16 million into 26 companies. These select companies represent a small fraction of the more than 1000 companies that have submitted business plans and the 300 entrepreneurs who have presented at the group’s monthly forum, a yield rate typical for angel investors and venture capitalists.

The investment mission is simple: to champion women investors and women entrepreneurs because of a core belief that both men and women in management and in the boardroom together make better decisions and produce superior results. This is a fantastic initiative to spur and grow women led companies. Investors in Canada should take note.

  • Share/Bookmark

Copyright © 1996-2010 Ventureweek. All rights reserved.
Jarrah theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress