Archive for the 'Angels' Category

Top 10 Tips For Entrepreneurs Pitching VCs

from:
http://altgate.typepad.com/blog/2007/05/top_10_tips_for_1.html

Top 10 Tips For Entrepreneurs Pitching VCs

After sitting through 20+ pitches as a “VC” and having given 10 times that from the “sell-side” of the table, I figure it’s time to throw my hat in the ring along with all those offering advice to entrepreneurs pitching VCs. In B-school, we had a thing for “top 10″ lists, so please forgive the following format:

10. Get someone you know to introduce you. Everyone knows this, but it’s worth repeating. I’ve seen a lot of CEOs/CFOs with lists of VC funds they are pitching and the status of each (a sort of “fundraising pipeline”). But I’ve yet to see one of these spreadsheets with the most important two columns: (a) who’s going to introduce us to this fund and (b) what’s their relationship to the fund, i.e. how does the fund view them. Ideally the person making the intro is someone who’s made money for the fund in one capacity or another. Do yourself a favor and add these columns to your spreadsheet.

9. Don’t bring the whole company. Who and how many folks to bring obviously depends upon circumstances, but ideally it’s the CEO and one other key executive (e.g. founder, VP Sales, CTO, etc.). Any more than that you’re fighting for air time or looking like moss on a rock, neither of which help the cause. The best pitch I’ve seen so far was given by the CEO alone (to a group of more than a dozen).

8. Arrive early and set up your stuff. Every shop has a different A/V setup. Great entrepreneurs come prepared…wireless modem, memory stick, Ethernet cable, hard copy screen shots… Woe to the entrepreneur who starts off the meeting with a bunch of VCs sitting around and yelling “press function-F7!” 

7. Introduce yourself by describing how you’ve made money for shareholders. Less than 5% of the management teams I’ve seen have figured this one out. The best intros are ones where multiple people on the management team can say, “I was CXO of Lightning-in-a-Bottle, Inc. for 3 years and we raised umpteen million returning numberteen-X to investors.” That’s what VCs call an “A-team.” Every exec worth their salt should be able to come up with some version of this such as, “I was VP whatever at Blue Chip, Inc. and generated a 5X return on capital with my insert project name” although too many of the later on the team will get a “B” label from savvy investors. At all costs, entrepreneurs should avoid what 95% of us do and launch into an intro with, “I worked at…” and then proceed to name drop 5 companies that are successful but which everyone knows probably had little to do with said executive.

6. Tailor the pitch to the audience. When the VCs are introducing themselves, great entrepreneurs are doing more than just listening; they are qualifying the prospect. Entrepreneurs should take the VC intro part of the meeting to ask a few questions with the goal of understanding the VC’s perspective…how much do they know about my market, my company, competitors, etc.? Armed with this, the team can tailor the presentation to the audience.

5. The slide presentation should be at maximum 10 slides. Do the math: 10Art_of_the_start minutes for  introductions, 3 minutes per slide (30 minutes) for the presentation, 10 minutes for a demo and 10 minutes for Q&A…that’s your meeting. Bring all the slides you want, but a great presentation only needs 10. Guy Kawasaki has a great book called Art of the Start which talks more about this (and gives a description of what a 10-slider looks like). A lot of folks send 40-page drafts to me with the caveat that they “are working on cutting it down.” I recommend starting the other way around. Start with 3 slides: what’s the market, what’s the solution and how does it work. Then add slides to fill in the holes until the magic number of 10 is reached.

4. When a potential investor asks a question, answer it. It’s rare that the response, “Good  question! If you could just hold that thought until slide 36, I’ll address that point.” The trick to understanding why is to realize that, when asking questions, smart investors are really trying to get a feel for what the CEO is like, how they think on their feet, perform under pressure, listen, relate to investors and what it would be like to work with the entrepreneur in question. So every time a VC asks a question, the entrepreneur should think to themselves, “oh, she just asked me what it’s like to work with me” and then respond.

3. Don’t hide bad news. Entrepreneurs are by definition optimists, but there is a well known fine line between genius and insanity. I’ve seen a lot of entrepreneurs, including myself, paint themselves into a corner instead of proactively defining holes or unknowns in their business plan as manageable risks. Savvy investors bucket these folks as “first-timers” or “green.” 

2. Be concise

1. Practice, practice, practice! I’ve heard many CEOs say, “gee, that’s the first time I’ve seen that slide…John (VP of whatever) do you want to walk us through this one?” It sounds silly, but for those of us not gifted with Bill Clinton-like stage presence, we should practice the full pitch at least 50 times, ideally in front of a video camera and a live crowd. A lot of entrepreneurs “practice” with their first 10, 20 or more VC pitches, but that is really a disservice to all involved. If a CEO can develop a total comfort with the presentation (slides and delivery) then that comfort level shows through and they have a chance of really connecting with their potential partner/investor.

The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Raising Venture Capital

The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Raising Venture Capital

My current objective is to create the entrepreneur’s manual for raising venture capital.  The posts below are parts of this manual, organized in the chronological order of the fundraising process.

I generally post on Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

Suggest a topic by commenting on this post.

Disclaimer
Disclaimer

Venture Trends
The Longtail Of Venture: Why Some Companies Will Continue To Need VC And Other Won’t

Starting Your Company
Your Company Is Who It Hires
First Mover Disadvantage

Picking The VCs
Why VC Websites Stink
The Advantages Of A Local VC
Consider Available Capital When Selecting VCs
Types Of Risks VCs Take

Preparing Your Materials
What An Executive Summary Is
PPT Presentations Are Not Executive Summaries
The Importance Of Geography
Value Proposition/ Pain Point:  Make The Case
Addressable Market:  Not Market Size
Addressable Market:  Making The Estimate
Disruptive Technologies Can Shrink Addressable Markets
Competitive Landscape Overview
Barriers:  Get The Story Right
The Significance Of Patents
Major Achievements
Projections:  Nothing To Stress About
VC Financial Performance Requirements
Overview Of Funding Status
Executive Summary Management Bios
The Significance Of Grey Hair

Getting The Meeting
Why VCs May Call
Why VCs Don’t Sign NDAs
Submitting Your Executive Summary
How Not To Submit An Executive Summary
Why An Executive Summary
Who You Should Submit Your Executive Summary To
Why A VC May Be Slow To Respond
Why You Might Not Get The Meeting
VCs Have Flashback Syndrome
Another Reason You May Be Rejected: Portfolio Concentration
Entrepreneurs Should Ask Why Not
Why VCs May Not Share Insights
Being Invited For A Call
Be Nice To Assistants (Most Recent Post)

The First Meeting
Who You Should Bring To Your First Meeting
Sit On One Side Of The Table
The Objective Of The First Meeting
The Investment Overview Slide
Competition:  Provide Insight
Management:  Competency
Enlisting Your Complements
Management:  Compatibility
Good Management Takes Less Time
Concerns About Successful Entrepreneurs
Build Rapport
Pitch Is Not The Right Word
Proving You Can Execute
Figuring Out The ‘How’
Give Straight Talk
Expect Straight Talk
Present Flexibly
Solve The VC’s Issues
Do Not Stand While Presenting
Do Not Ramble
Do Not Name Drop
Don’t Focus On The Exit
Be Careful About Over-Selling Fundraising Interest
Follow-up Items
The End Of Meeting VC Pitch
Ask Questions At The End Of The Meeting
Ask The VC About Follow-On Investing
What To Do When The Meeting Ends

After The First Meeting
What To Expect After The First Meeting
Why VCs Don’t Always Cut You Loose
What To Do When Your Company Is Being Monitored

How VCs Make Decisions Internally
How To Take Advantage Of The VC Decision Making Process
Creating Momentum
Maintaining Momentum:  Create Urgency
Find A Champion
Make Younger VCs Your Champions
Respond Quickly To Follow-up Questions
VCs Are Not Like Your Parents
Reading VC Interest
Hear Feedback
Submit A Detailed Model
If You Can’t Create Interest Move On
Getting Your Executive Summary Distributed To Other VCs

Why A VC Might Not Share Your Executive Summary With Other VCs

Sharing Your Executive Summary With Anonymous VCs

The Due Diligence Phase
Why VCs Conduct Due Diligence
Why You Should Facilitate Due Diligence
Types Of Due Diligence Meetings
Exploratory Meetings:  Open Your Kimono
Manage VC Expectations About Operating Performance
Evolve

Sharing Your Cap Table
Signs You’re Close To A Term Sheet
Doing Due Diligence On The VC

An Introductory Guide to Startup Funding

from:
http://www.instigatorblog.com/an-introductory-guide-to-startup-funding/2007/10/17/

An Introductory Guide to Startup Funding

by Ben Yoskovitz

Getting a startup funded isn’t easy. There’s no shortage of hype, and multiple announcements daily of new companies getting money. And there’s an equal (and growing) amount of chatter about a “new bubble” that we’re entering. Still, raising money is far from a cakewalk.

Most people I’ve spoken to say it takes a solid 4-6 months to raise money. Mark MacLeod, CFO at Mobivox, echoes those thoughts (Mobivox recently raised $11 million dollars.)

Sure, it can happen faster than that. In the hottest startup hubs it might seem like everyone and their brother is getting funded for something. Don’t let that fool you.

You might also think that everyone knows everything about startup funding, but that’s not the case. Recently someone sent in a question asking about the differences between angel and venture financing. With that in mind, I’ve put together a brief, introductory guide to startup funding.

1. Can You Boostrap It? Should You?

Boostrapping means you fund your startup on your own. Scrimp, save and squeeze by on the minimum you can. Guy Kawasaki does a good job of explaining how to bootstrap, and in most cases, every business starts out this way.

The principles behind bootstrapping - watching every penny, weighing spending options versus return on investment, doing more with less - have merit regardless of your funding situation. Companies that raise lots of money tend to overspend (and spend poorly); they forget about running lean & mean.

Sramana Mitra says bootstrapping is becoming sexy again. Certainly, second and third-time entrepreneurs are bootstrapping more; in many cases they can afford it. I think the bigger trend is in small angel/seed financing rounds to help kickstart companies.

The advantage of bootstrapping is simple: you retain control. You’re not diluted (by investors), there are no additional chiefs (read: board of directors, influencers, etc.), you can go at whatever pace you see fit and retain your vision. Bootstrapping gives you control.

But the disadvantage of bootstrapping is a lack of capital (unless you’re rich.) That lack of capital can be a significant constraint. Of course creativity loves constraints but there’s a limit on that. If you can’t afford to keep the business moving forward, you’re in trouble. And first-time bootstrappers frequently under-estimate what things will cost.

A final note on bootstrapping: You might think it’s an “either or” option — bootstrapping vs. raising money — but it’s not. Venture capitalist, Matt Winn makes this point clear in his VC view of bootstrapping.

2. Love Money

I love money, too, but that’s not what I mean. “Love money” is money you get from friends and family.

This is an extremely common way of raising money. From Connecting People I found out that:

“…$100 billion ‘friends and family’ money is used annually to fund 3 million start ups. This compares to only $25 billion through venture capitalists. The average amount invested by friends and family is between $20,000 and $25,000, and further, 58% of the fastest-growing companies in the U.S. started with $20,000 or less.”

If you can get, go for it. The benefit is that it should be easier to get the money (vs. raising from outside sources), and you’ll gain some experience pitching in a friendly environment. The disadvantage is that you run the risk of ruining personal relationships. And, unless your friends and family are wealthy, $20-$25k won’t get you that far.

3. Angel Financing

This is where the real action and opportunity lies for entrepreneurs. We’re seeing the most movement in the angel & seed financing space.

Venture capital firms are moving into the space, developing early stage programs (some already exist like Charles River Venture’s QuickStart Program). And of course, we have the now-famous, Y Combinator which turned the entire early stage funding market on its head. It was followed by a similar program called TechStars (and others.)

And in-between Y Combinator and VCs we’re seeing angel funds pop up like Montreal Startup which attempt to blend the VC and angel worlds into one. Jeff Clavier’s new SoftTech VC II fund is another good example of this — a $12 million dollar fund dedicated to seed funding between $100k-$500k.

VCs are moving into early stage financing to get access to the freshest deals and brightest, new entrepreneurs. It makes complete sense, although they still have to change the way they invest and their mentality towards investment. Bernard Lunn makes the point clearly in his article: New VC Model For Small Scale Financing:

  • Early stage Web 2.0 companies need way less money to get started.
  • The pace that companies get to market and develop is much faster.
  • There’s less risk putting $250k at work versus $2.5 million.

Be wary of the VC that claims they’re interested in early stage financing but has yet to complete a deal. Or the VC that still wants to overload you with paperwork, complex terms and endless amounts of due diligence.

Carl Showalter does a good job of explaining why you don’t need big money from VCs to get started.

Angel and seed financing comes into play before a business has launched its product, or shortly thereafter. It’s the money you need to make it happen out of the gate. Generally, there are a few sources of angel money:

  1. Venture Capitalists. I’ve already mentioned this group. You can expect “heavier” deals by involving VCs, but they’re more accessible than other investors.
  2. Strategic Angels. A strategic angel is someone with industry or domain expertise in what you’re doing. For example, if you’re starting an e-commerce business, Pierre Omidyar would be a very, very strategy investor. In the Web 2.0 world another strategic investor would be Reid Hoffman. Having strategic angels is great, because not only will they provide some cash, they’ll provide expertise, contacts and legitimacy to your fledgling startup.
  3. Non-Strategic Angels. When most people think about angel financing, this is who they think about — wealthy people looking to diversify their portfolios (and perhaps have some fun) by investing in startups. Lots of people fit into this category: businesspeople, doctors, entrepreneurs, etc. If they have money and want to part ways with it for a “piece of the action” they’re potential angel investors. Often, these angels work together in groups - angel networks - to share opportunities. The problem is that it might be hard to find non-strategic angels, even if they might be the easiest to raise money from (since they’re typically the least scrutinizing.) But they don’t often publicize their interest in angel investing, so finding them can be tricky.

A few more points about angel and seed financing:

  • Amounts range from $25,000-$1,000,000. Venture capitalists that play in this area will often look at the $250,000+ range, whereas individual investors will be (typically) less. The higher you go, the closer it gets to a Series A (described below), which means more effort and paperwork to close.
  • The most popular structure for angel and seed financing deals is convertible debt. At least that’s the current trend. I’ll let others (more knowledgeable in this stuff) explain convertible debt.
  • If you’re raising a seed or angel round, keep it as simple as possible. You can’t afford to get buried in process and paperwork at this stage. But please, please, please make sure you understand it fully and you’re comfortable with it. This could very well be the most important money you raise.
  • Just because you’re keeping it simple and only raising a seed round doesn’t mean it won’t take 4-6 months to complete. Craig Hayashi has a nice angel investment timeline you should take a look at.

4. Series A Financing

Series A investments can happen at a fairly early stage - just after launch, for example - depending on how long the company has existed beforehand. A company with lots of technology and heavy intellectual property (IP) might have taken a couple years to get off the ground and already need a Series A when it launches.

But in most cases, a Series A is used once the company has shown some traction and needs more money to expand. It’s the money that will take you to new heights, massive revenues, cash flow positivity and a huge payday via acquisition (or some other exit.) At least, we hope that’s the case!

Series A financing ranges a great deal: think $2 million to $10 million or more. Depends on how much money you need, the valuation you can get for your company and what investors are willing to put in.

Series A financing typically comes from venture capitalists. And at this stage, you’ll want to bring in the strongest partner possible; the VC firm with the most experience in your space, the highest pedigree and the most success stories.

Final Funding Tips

Here are some final thoughts I can leave you with:

  • Be prepared to pitch a lot. Don’t get discouraged. Refine your pitch. You will get better at it.
  • Get organized. This sounds silly, perhaps, but the more organized and professional you look, the more comfortable investors will feel. This is especially true when it comes to presenting financials. Use a real financial model (not the back of a napkin!)
  • Get help. Seek out the advice of mentors, advisers and lawyers. A good lawyer can really help with more complicated deals.
  • Do your own due diligence. You’re about to get into bed with someone, you might want to check what they have under the covers. Don’t be afraid to ask for references. Go ahead and contact other companies your potential investors have put money into. Make sure you’re comfortable; because your investors are going to be major influencers on your company’s success.
  • Never stop fundraising. I’m definitely not in love with the fundraising process, but there’s no point stopping. Keep building relationships with investors, keep nosing around for opportunities. When the time is right to raise more money you don’t want to be starting at zero.

Great Resources on Financing

The best way to get a good deal is to be informed. Here are some necessary resources for anyone looking to raise startup financing:

How to Get the Attention of a Venture Capitalist

How to Get the Attention of a Venture Capitalist

iStock_000002519960Small.jpgAt the Elite Retreat I gave an off-the-cuff answer to a question concerning getting the attention of venture capitalists. My buddy Wendy Piersall blogged about my answer, and it was a very popular. However, to truly help entrepreneurs, I’d like to provide a cogent list of the tips to get the attention of a venture capitalist.

  1. Get an introduction by a partner-level lawyer. He should work at a firm that does a lot of venture capital financings like my buddies at Montgomery & Hansen. Best case email/voicemail: “This is the most interesting company I’ve seen in my twenty years of legal work for startups.” Venture capitalists dream about calls like this—it’s the equivalent of a scoring shot that knocks the goalie’s water bottle off the top shelf.

    Incidentally, this part of the reason of why you should pay top dollar and use a well-known corporate finance attorney instead of Uncle Joe the divorce lawyer (even if he handles venture capitalists’ divorces). You’re paying for connections not only expertise.

  2. Get an introduction by a professor of engineering. Best case email/voicemail: “These students are the smartest ones I’ve ever had in twenty years of teaching computer science. Larry and Sergei would have carried their backpacks for them.” Arguably this is even better than the lawyer’s call if the school has a history of receiving multi-million dollar donations from its alumni—if you know what I mean.
  3. Get an introduction by the founder of a company in the venture capitalist’s portfolio. Best case email/voicemail: “My buddies are starting a new company, and I think it’s really cool.” For this to work, it would help if the person making the call is a successful company in the venture capitalist’s portfolio. Also, this would be a good time to tap your network in LinkedIn to find acquaintances in the portfolio.

    Here’s a power tip regarding getting to venture capitalists using LinkedIn. Maybe it’s only me, but I hate when a connection of a connection of a connection wants me to take a look at deal. LinkedIn enables you to just go direct, and that’s my advice if you can show success (see below). If you can’t show success, the connection of a connection of a connection is useless anyway.

  4. Show success. Suppose you can’t get any of the introductions mentioned above. Then the most compelling email/voicemail that you provide is this: “My buddy and I have been working in our garage, taking no pay, and with MySQL we built a site that is doubling in traffic every month. Right now, we’re at 250,000 page views a day after thirty days.” With this one sentence you’ve proven you can (a) make a little bit of money (“none”) go far, your architecture looks scalable so far (once in my career I’d like scalability to be a problem), and most importantly, the dogs are already eating the food.

    Another way to show success is to hit it out of the park at Demo or the poor man’s Demo we call Launch: Silicon Valley, but this is a game that only a few dozen companies can play in every year. Finally, you can provide links to articles singing your praises, but this only means that you fooled the press, not that the dogs like what you’re serving.

  5. Make sure your company is in the right space. No matter how you get to the venture capitalist, make sure that she is the right one for you. For example, if you have the cure for cancer, contacting a firm’s enterprise software guru isn’t the brightest idea, so get on the web and do your homework.
  6. Use a short email. The ideal length of your email is three or fourth paragraphs:
    • What does your company do?
    • What problem are you solving?
    • What’s special about your technology/marketing/expertise/connections?
    • Who are you?

    Here are some things not to do:

    • Attach a PowerPoint presentation. I don’t care if it even adheres to the 10/20/30 rule. Save it for the face-to-face meeting.
    • Use the word “patented” more than once. All it takes to file a patent is $1,000. No good venture capitalist believes patents makes your company defensible. They just want to learn (once) that there might be something worth patenting.
    • Claim that you’re in a multi-billion dollar market. Isn’t every company in a multi-billion market according to some study? At least every company that’s ever pitched a venture capitalist.
    • Provide a lofty financial projection. Most projections that I see show how you’ll grow faster than Google. Frankly, I wouldn’t provide any projection at all. It will be either too low and make your deal uninteresting or too high and make you look delusional.
    • Brag about an MBA degree. Most venture capitalists want to invest in hardcore engineers at the start. The MBAs can come later, so focus on engineering or avoid the subject completely.
    • Try to create the illusion of scarcity. Many entrepreneurs claim that “Sequoia is interested.” If Sequoia is interested, you should take its money. If it isn’t, then the venture capitalist won’t be either. Either way, don’t even think of blowing this smoke.

This posting is merely about the process of getting across the moat. To learn more about what to do once you’re there, read how to fix your pitch by Bill Reichert of Garage.

How to ‘get across the moat’ with potential investors

from:

How to ‘get across the moat’ with potential investors

Editor’s Note: Following up on yesterday’s topic, I’m putting together a post on how to amend your business plan with a “global scope,” as well as how to find angel investors who can support you in this important strategy.

Meanwhile, I went to angel investor Guy Kawasaki’s blog this morning, and found a fantastic post entitled How to get the Attention of a Venture Capitalist. It’s got some of the best tips I’ve read for how to get that all-important, and so difficult, first look from a potential investor. The same advice can apply to attracting an angel investor, too. Do read Guy’s complete post, below are the highlights. Pay special attention to the PowerTip and list of Things NOT To Do at the end.

1. Get an introduction by a partner-level lawyer… at a firm that does a lot of venture capital financings…

2. Get an introduction by a professor of engineering. … this is even better than the lawyer’s call if the school has a history of receiving multi-million dollar donations from its alumni…

3. Get an introduction from a founder in the VC’s portfolio. … this would be a good time to tap your network in LinkedIn …

Here’s a power tip regarding getting to venture capitalists using LinkedIn. Maybe it’s only me, but I hate when a connection of a connection of a connection wants me to take a look at deal. LinkedIn enables you to just go direct…

4. Show success. … if you can’t get any of the introductions mentioned above, the most compelling email/voicemail you provide is this: “My buddy and I have been working in our garage, taking no pay, and … we built a site that is doubling in traffic every month…we’re at 250,000 page views a day…” 5. Make sure your company is in the right space. …if you have the cure for cancer, contacting a firm’s enterprise software guru isn’t the brightest idea…

6. Use a short email. The ideal length is three or fourth paragraphs:

  • What does your company do?
  • What problem are you solving?
  • What’s special about your technology/marketing/expertise/connections?
  • Who are you?

and…then Guy offers 6 Really Important Things NOT to do:
1. Attach a PowerPoint presentation. I don’t care if it even adheres to the 10/20/30 rule. Save it for the face-to-face meeting.
2. Use the word “patented” more than once.
3. Claim that you’re in a multi-billion dollar market.
4. Provide a lofty financial projection.
5. Brag about an MBA degree.
6. Claim that “Sequoia is interested.” … don’t even think of blowing this smoke.

from:
http://foundread.com/2007/11/02/7-steps-to-landing-and-leveraging-angel-investor/

7 Steps to Land and Leverage an Angel Investor

We’ve been writing a lot about the important role of angel investors lately. I’ve been working on assembling resources for our readers on things like how find angels, what to look for in these small-scale personal investors and, of course, how to pitch them. This morning I found a good one in this book: Winning Angels: The 7 Fundamentals of Early Stage Investing, by David Amis and Howard Stevenson. Both men are angel investors, and Stevenson is a professor at Harvard Business School.

In a long piece about Amis, Inc. magazine reviewed the book this way: “a practical guide for angel investors, it also can be read as a playbook for winning over angels. I’ve adjusted the athours Seven Steps accordingly, and here are the highlights…

7 Steps to Netting an Angel Invester:

Step 1: Identify yourself. One of the best bits of intelligence here is Amis’ method for sizing-up founders. Within seconds of shaking your hand for the first time, Amis has already put you in one of three file folders he mentally carries at all times:

Lifestyle entrepreneur. You enjoy owning your company … making sure your pleasant existence continues is more important to you than creating the next billion-dollar company.
Empire builder. You love your company’s growth rate… love being the ruler of your domain…wouldn’t sell the company if your life depended on it. They’ll carry you out with your boots on.
Serial Entrepreneur. You’ll expand your company to the best of your ability, sell out or go public, then start another company. Then you’ll do it again. And again.

Unless you’re in category 3, Amis won’t fund you!Step 2: Identify the right angel The best angels are always looking for good new deals. They call it “sourcing.” Before you go courting them, do some sourcing of your own….Here are five traits all good angels share:

  1. Contacts. You want angels who can help you locate suppliers, customers, and employees. Ideally, your angels will know important players in your industry.
  2. Industry experience. You want someone who know or has worked in your industry.
  3. Entrepreneurial chops. Angels who have previously raised money for their own companies tend to be easy, quick, and direct to work with. They also can detect the likely trouble spots in your company.
  4. Angel chops. It’s four times easier to deal with someone who’s been an angel before than it is to work with an investment first-timer.
  5. Medium-deep pockets. The ideal angel has a personal net worth of $2 million to $50 million. If an angel has more than that, the $50,000 your company needs may fall beneath his or her radar

Step 3: Your company’s fundamentals. Once you’ve identified potential investors, you must next prepare to cover these four areas in your first meeting with them:

  1. People. You your management team, but also your other investors, advisers — anyone who has a stake in your company’s success.
  2. Business opportunity. Your b-model, market size, potential and actual customers, and the timing of the opportunity.
  3. Context. External factors that could affect your business, including available technology, customer needs, the overall economy, regulation, and competitors.
  4. Deal. The price of the deal you propose and its structure.

Step 4: Valuation. How much money are you trying to raise? And what amount of ownership are you willing to give up? Angels will price your company based on its potential capital return, so expect the valuation to be a big debate. But Inc. offered a handy checklist of assets to start you off with a “back of the envelope” valuation:

  • Sound idea = $1 million
  • Prototype = $1 million
  • Quality management team = $1 – 2 million
  • Quality board = $1 million
  • Product rollout or sales = $1 million
  • TOTAL potential value: $1 – 6 million

Step 5: Structuring the deal. Three are many questions to consider, but here are the biggies:

  1. What type of financing will the angels provide: equity or debt?
  2. If equity, what kind?: Common stock, preferred convertible with various terms, and convertible note with various terms? Common stock is the simplest but provides few safeguards to the investor. Preferred convertible is more complicated but can benefit the investor to a greater degree. Convertible note allows no negotiation on price but offers angels the most protection.
  3. On what terms? Will the investors get their cash back before the entrepreneur does? Will the angels have the right to invest in future rounds?

Step 6: Negotiation. (Psst!: You don’t need to do it!)

Angels tend to focus on the numbers, specifically their initial ownership stake. They believe that will have the greatest impact on the future value of their investment, so many will bargain hard over it. Angels also …prefer to take their time during negotiations, not least of all in the hope that you’ll eventually come around to their terms. [But] There’s no reason why you, the entrepreneur, can’t take the same no-negotiate position.If you’re asked why, simply say you don’t want to start your relationship on adversarial footing.

Step 7. Leveraging the relationship.
Closing the “deal” is not the end, but the beginning.

Angel investors can also help your company move toward what investors call “value events…” Examples include signing deals with strategic partners, lining up venture financing, and landing a well-known account.

The best entrepreneurs provide regular updates, monthly notes along the lines of “We are currently trying to contact XYZ Industries to see if we can make it a customer.” Use these to jog an investor’s memory. Your angel might know the person, or how to make the contact.

A Founder’s Tale: Angels vs. VCs

from:
http://foundread.com/2008/02/05/a-founders-tale-angels-vs-vcs/

A Founder’s Tale: Angels vs. VCs

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Editor’s Note: Founder Aruni Gunasegaram has written about the virtues of ignoring “the experts” , things no one tells you about VCs, and her preparations for “shaking the can” for her current startup, BabbleSoft, in My Funding Toolkit. On her blog today, Aruni shares some insights from her funding experience. We offer the highlights.

Several readers asked me to write my experience raising funds from angels and VCs for my first entrepreneurial endeavor. We raised about $15 million of which $3.5 million was from angels or what I would call boutique VC firms (i.e. a group of angels under one investment roof). Keep in mind that was all before the bubble burst back in 2001. Here are some of my observations based on my experience and from stories I’ve heard from other entrepreneurs.

Angels

They tend to invest their own money and reputation in earlier stage companies …
The really good ones (yes, there are bad ones) have built their own businesses from the ground up…

They tend to get their ‘hands dirty.’ Our lead angel investor for my first company wasMarc Seriff founding CTO of America Online… Marc actually manned a career fair booth that we had at The University of Texas at Austin [and] participated in the interviews [of our] developers! … Since Marc was our lead for our first round, he even assured our vendors that he would make sure (i.e. personally guarantee) they got paid if for some reason we couldn’t close the round!

Angles tend to bring their friends along for the ride.
Another of our angel investors, Jack Baum also introduced us to the owners of our very first big paying customer who ended up doing a nationwide rollout with us. I remember framing the check!

He and his partner Steve Winter (late of SAP) brought in two of our three venture investors (from SAP Ventures). Steve even served as our interim-CEO when we parted ways with the first one who had replaced me.

They don’t necessarily have to invest money to be an angel.
Richard Benkendorf an advisor, introduced us to our first key customer in the Coca-Cola bottling system that helped us achieve our first $1 million in revenue!

When the dollars need [to] get big for future financing rounds, angel investors usually voluntarily step back …

Some of them may not have sat on a Board or been involved in building their own businesses making some board meetings interesting to say the least…

Venture Capitalists

They tend to invest in later stage companies with some revenue, product completed, and market traction…. after an initial angel round has been done.

The really good ones (yes there are bad VCs – in case you haven’t heard) … come with a big rolodex of contacts and partners to help you cross some of the early hurdles.

Jeff Nolan of SAP Ventures introduced us to departments within SAP who were targeting the same customers that we were. He also gave me a copy of The Monk and The Riddle by KPCB’sRandy Komisar, a great read at a time when I think he sensed I was no longer enjoying the journey.

They tend to be more bankers/financiers than operating people…

They tend to look at a business with a black/white eye on financial numbers [Returns!]…

The good ones will often bring along investment partners in a syndicate.

They seem to apply a formula
…. If something has worked for them with a portfolio company in the past, they’ll apply the same logic to future companies. [Study their portfolio!]

They are investing other people’s money
… and if they perform well those people will give them more money to invest. [Motive!]

Who To Choose?

  • Personally, I think… it’s definitely better to have people who have built businesses on your side.
  • It’s also good to have people who have backed high-growth businesses if you plan to IPO or sell to an established business in the near future.
  • … it is more than OK to start a good profitable business that provides value to your local community. [But] if you want to play with venture capitalists, then you need to aim for the ‘household name’ category like Google or Yahoo! …

My biggest lesson: how important it was to be able to communicate with your investors openly and honestly… it will be much easier to weather the inevitable storms…

As Ben Yoskovitz says in his Startup CEO School of Hard Knocks post, you must have fun! When you are no longer enjoying the journey, take a break [to] make sure you are doing what you should be doing. If you find you’re not — don’t be afraid to make changes!!