Dr. Earl R. Smith II
Managing Partner, The Federal Circle
DrSmith@Dr-Smith.com
www.Dr-Smith.com

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A number of my clients have recently been in the ‘money hunt’ and I wrote an article advising them what to look for and what to avoid. Angel Investors – The Good, Bad and Very Ugly. I would be very interested in your comments, suggestions for improvement and war stories. The idea is to provide better guidance for entrepreneurs seeking funding. Thanks for any contributions.

© Dr. Earl R. Smith II

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Related Articles:

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Dr. Smith is Managing Partner of The Federal Circle. The Federal Circle partners with teams and existing companies. We help them up their game and win big in the Federal space. We also arrange funding for acquisitions and expansion by acquisition. Our model is based on the belief that, if you select the very best and work with them in a highly professional and focused manner, the results will be truly amazing. He is the author of Amazing Pace: Turbo-charged Business Development – a book that shows how Advisory Boards can dramatically increase revenue. Dr. Smith is also the author of Dream Walk: Parables for the Living – a book of Raven Tales and exploration.

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79 Responses to “How to Search for Angel Investors the Right Way – the Responses”
  1. Alan Sporn wrote:

    I read your article, Angel Investors – The Good, Bad and Very Ugly and it is literally right on the money (no pun intended).

    My situation is unique in that I had invested a great deal of time/money into a company that was pitched to me by (2) broker-dealers from NY. The company at one time had well over $300,000,000 in sales in the dietary supplement business but had filed for Bankruptcy protection after the FTC sued them for making a false claim.

    The bottom line is that after I put money in, it was diverted/embezzled. I sued and obtained a 26-page Federal TRO and Preliminary Injunction. Towards the end of 2008 the Defendants settled and I ended up with all the assets, intellectual property, etc.

    It is difficult finding both an honorable partner/investor to help re-build what is still the top 5 dietary supplement brand in the USA, has proven an extremely difficult task.

    Best Regards
    Alan

  2. Ali Zartash-Lloyd wrote:

    Hi Earl

    Great article and perhaps a bit of the painful truth!

    Just a contribution to your excellent advice:

    1. Ask for a reference! Strange you may say when you have the proverbial begging bawl out, but the reality is any business relationship is a two-way street. When you are being interviewed for a job (remember those days?), did you ever ask to talk to existing employees? Well may be you should have. You are giving up a piece of your business which you have worked your guts out for, so why should anyone think it is strange to ask for a reference? Talk to other companies they have invested in, get their views and without the person being involved if you want the truth told!

    2. Make a watertight contract and as Earl suggests make sure everything is covered. It is better to have a fall out before the wedding than afterwards. Remember divorces cost 10 times more than any cancelled wedding (ask Paul McCartney!).

    3. Take professional advice. This is one of those occasions you should not rely on your entrepreneurial skills alone. Angels, non-execs and investors do this for a living, so what makes you think you can match them or outsmart them? Pay someone who does this for a living to put together an agreement that protects both parties’ interests. Remember a good deal is only when everyone wins.

    Finally, if you are looking for funds we have investors that are willing to support any sound business that is looking for extra cash to deliver growth or survive tight cash flow situation but their banks are being … eh… well bankers!

  3. Feargal Byrne wrote:

    Excellent article. It’s takes the blinkers off entrepreneurs who are seeking angel investment. Great insight.

  4. Scott, There is an old saying, “if you turn the other cheek, expect to get slapped”. The purpose of my article and question is to help educate entrepreneurs so that what happened to you happens less in the future. In the end, you need to take responsibility for not paying sufficient attention to the details. My experience is that, if there is advantage to take, investors will take it. Dr. Smith

  5. Christopher Zuzick wrote:

    Excellent article!

  6. Dennis Meekins wrote:

    Thank you Dr. Smith for a very accurate depiction of the field. Our recent experience exposed another player – the “Masked Angel” – claims to have money but really wants to be paid for consulting to introduce you to his “network” of potential investors. I put them below the Bottom Feeders. Thanks again.

  7. Thanks for the kind words Robert. I am glad that you find them useful.

  8. Robert Kim wrote:

    Thank you, Dr. Smith. Your articles are pure gold.

  9. Gurmeet Singla wrote:

    Awesome article and very informative especially someone like me who is working on a business concept and will search for angel investors in very near future.

    Thanks Dr. Smith.

  10. songclash.comsongclash.comsongclash.com

    Juan

    Carlos Cruz wrote:

    Enjoyed reading your article Dr. Smith.

    Performance metrics are the most valuable asset I can re-emphasize on. Having measurable points on everyone’s efforts can really show where changes or adjustments can be made.

    Thank you very much for sharing the article with us Dr. Smith.

    Best regards,
    Juan Carlos
    http://www.songclash.com

  11. S N Sharma wrote;

    Dr Smith,

    It’s one of the best posting I have come across.
    Your contribution is of an immense benefit.

    GOD bless you !
    S N Sharma
    sharmasn@gmail.com

  12. John Nistler wrote;

    Points well made. Over the course of the last 4 years I have seen an example of all three. At the same time, stumbled on occasion and was blessed on occasion. The point of an investor being liquid should be taken to heart by any founder. Any time an investor talks about how he or she will sell personal property guaranteed to make sure the money is there – it is time to walk. In addition, any investor who wants the lion share right of the block with no management buy in opportunities or ignoring the value of your appraisal, it is also time to walk. Keep in mind it is like fishing. You may have the lure out there and get no bites, at other times – you may need to release a few of them back into the pond for someone else.

  13. P. (Kate) Kathleen O’Hara wrote:

    Dr. Smith
    Thank you for starting a great conversation with a question.

    On another group the question was also asked and after 192 comments it amazes me that one answer never comes up.

    Actually two: One is, “get a contract”
    Two is sell. Be a sales person on commission.

    When I first left a demand resort property many years ago my ex told me that I was not a “sales person, I was an order taker”. (I had sold over 4.2 M on a large GM account and thought I was the bomb in sales)

    Well of course I had to prove him wrong and I got a job on straight commission. Needless to say, my new owner and sales manager threw a yellow page book at me and said “here’s your leads, start with die-casting” (I did not know how to spell it ,not to mention what it was or what I was selling.)

    One year later, after (starving to death), I turned to my now partner and said, “I am a 20 percenter”. (20 percenters sell 80 percent of the all the business.)
    Our company went on to acquire/sell over three thousand clients in the Bay area and over 3M in sales. It was then sold to the largest media company in the world.

    This taught me sales, so from there, many start ups later, the main lesson I learned, was “get a contract”, put it in writing and offer to the investor, client a return. This works for angels, VC’s, tycoons, celebrities, politicians, friends and family, grants, etc.

    One example;
    As the founder of a heavy oil company, we needed a prototype developed. At first we went to Halliburton, they said yes to the prototype development cost but it took 6 months to get the President to commit. In the meantime ,we had gotten a contract for 75 M dollars and we sold our Angel investor (1.5 M) for a 18% return. (as the barrels of oil came out of the ground and were sold.)

    Everyone in the investment community thought we were gifted and could not believe that not “One Share” of stock was exchanged for such a huge amount in an un tested and un proven technology.

    I can go on and on, but you get the drift, hire good consultants but most especially hire a sales person who is a 20% percenter and listen to them….

    Do not blow them off thinking that they are with no scientific, doctorate,medical degree. It is a science to sell and “no’, engineers and lawyers are not made into salespeople, they only turn out to be bad lawyers and bad sales people.

    Thank you again for this opportunity to share in war stories that will help some of the most fasinating technologies in the world to get off the ground. Some of these same technologies could be saving lives in Haiti right now…

  14. Erica Drake wrote:

    Bravo Dr. Smith! I read your article with a smile on my face – having personally lived through the Angel investors experience many time, (and I have the battle scares to prove it). I have raised millions through Angel investors as an entrepreneur. Now I advise and assist other entrepreneurs in looking for capital. I have a few thoughts to add or supplement what’s already been said:

    (1) The entrepreneur must be willing to do whatever it takes to get the job done – unconditionally adapt the attitude “failure is not an option”. With that said, I do agree with others in this discussion that bootstrapping it together is preferable to a point. In my experience, one must creatively think outside of the box to find solutions to further the company from a purely start-up stage to a development stage company. When personal funding is not an option, try cutting strategic alliances, JV or pre-negotiating vender contracts. Cut a deal with a marketing company to start developing your brand/vision. The further along the company, the more likely it is to find an Angel investor.
    (2) Be prepared. You never get a second chance to make a first impression. Have your Ex Sum and Financials completely done – and proof read by others! You never know when you may meet the ideal Angel investor. You need to respond to interested prospects immediately.
    (3) Don’t let your ego prevent you from learning – as already mentioned, many entrepreneurs may have the skills to run their respective business, but lack the skill set to find the funding. If you don’t know how to prospect, ask for help. If you don’t know what a convertible debenture or dilution is…Ask and learn. To often I deal with entrepreneurs who are afraid to admit that they don’t understand. When all is said and done, you as the entrepreneur must learn this sooner or later to manage your business – and sooner is much preferred.
    (4) Structure you deal strategically – To tell an entrepreneur that a prospective Angel investor may not be ideal, is like telling a starving man that the food doesn’t taste very good. As a fellow entrepreneur, the passion and desire to find funding – any funding often out weights a logical business decision. If you must take funding from a less than desirable source, be sure to structure your deal using specific milestones, a strong corporate operating agreement and a pre-determined exit strategy or funding round. By defining the parameters of “success” in advance, you may save the day. Also, if the investor requires milestones to be reached to trigger further funding, be sure this funding is already escrowed. Too often the entrepreneur reaches their goals, yet the Angel investor no longer has liquid capital to invest.
    (5) Lastly, prospect, prospect, prospect. You never know where you may find your Angel. Cold call in warm markets. Brainstorm for win-win situations. Think strategically and never be afraid to ask! The line use as an entrepreneur was simple: “my name is Erica Drake and I need $2 million, do you have $2 million? You’d be surprised how many people said yes…

  15. amerwld.comamerwld.com

    Dick Brown wrote:

    Many definitions and cautions on angels in our book. We’ve just finished a book for any entrepreneur that’s seeking capital for their company or venture. “How to Raise Money, the Truth” is: very “real world”; simple; easy-to-understand; and, CHEAP. There’s even a section on writing a professional business plan! Probably most important, it blows away the “Myths and “Misconceptions” about raising capital and saves entrepreneurs wasted time and misdirected efforts. It also has proven suggestions for reaching and closing qualified money sources. It’s at: http://www.amerwld.com … and, it’s less than $10 and available immediately as an eBook. Dick@amerwld.com

  16. José Carlos Graça wrote:

    Dear James, Larry, Earl, Hal and Chris,

    I believe that we have come to the conclusion that there is a shifting in the ladder and that seed capital has been left to personal savings, FFF and Mutual Guarantee backed up by state guarantee (at least in my country)

    Business Angels moved up from seed to start up and early stage.

    VC have moved to EarlysStage and Second Round.

    Banks take minimal risk today asking for enomerous type of guarantees to grant their loans.

    Would like to point out that many banks have VC with special funds in very attractive markets with high ROI that offer small risk and is out of the reach of the common BA due to high need of investment like the BIO Technology and Renewable Energies.

    James I think you are too optimistic in relation to the values because although it has moved up the ladder the amounts are not going with it.

    I am working on a new model in order to overcome all these problems we have been pointing out in this discussion by joining together BA, Private Investors, Goverment, Local Goverment, VC, University, Banks, Mutual Guarantee and Incubation Centers.

  17. James Wallis Martin wrote:

    With banks currently earning a 200 point spread on 5 year loans vs CDs (the largest in history), borrowing from the Fed at another 400 points spread, and increasing credit cards from an average 800 point spread to a 1900 point spread, there is absolutely no reason for banks to invest like they used to, they can make money essentially risk free (since the government has proven it will use taxpayer money to bail them out).

    The VCs that survived this most recent economic meltdown are looking for guaranteed investments (what banks were looking for in the 90′s so they have become essentially like the banks when it comes to risk.

    The Angels are hiring gatekeepers who are experts in their field to find high returns like VCs of the 90′s but lower risk like the banks of the 90′s. So many Angels have inadvertently become the worst of both VCs and Banks in the 90′s.

    So like Larry mentioned, we need to redefine Angels, and Jr. VCs sounds like the perfect label, but that doesn’t resolve the need for a new type of investor to fill the void left by the Jr. VCs (f.k.a. Angel Investors).

    The marketplace is truly a global marketplace, yet investors tend to invest locally unless the company is public, then they tend to invest nationally, but rarely internationally.

    However, it is exactly in this space that a new group of investors will truly yield the return found in the 90′s.

    So lets break the investors down:

    Seed Investors (R&D and first customer stage) [$100K - $500K]
    - Industry Seed Investors
    - Marketspace Seed Investors
    - Local Seed Investors

    First Round Investors (Market roll out stage) [$1M - $5M]
    - Industry Micro-VC Investors
    - Marketspace Micro-VC Investors
    - Local Angel Investors

    Second Round Investors (IPO or acquisition stage) [$10M - $50M]
    - Industry Venture Capital
    - Marketspace Venture Capital
    - Local Angel Group Investors

    Third Round Investors (Public or acquired stage) [$100M - $500M]
    - Institutional Lending Banks
    - Venture Capital Groups
    - Public Exchanges

    Industry – I am defining as those that invest in a given industry and are less concerned with geography of the company.

    Marketspace – I am defining as those that invest in a given market (which can be regional, national, or local) to where the company is targetting its market efforts (the company may still be headquartered externally but has significant presence in the marketspace)

    Local – I am defining as those that invest in a local company (geography is a prerequisite) and where or what industry they are selling in is secondary (albeit still very important)

    Feel free to revise my suggestion. It is just a draft.

  18. James, I have seen the same progression for the most part. There are exceptions but most of them are negative. The really professional angel investors have moved up (or back) in the process. Many of them are acting like venture capitalists – including deploying more thoroughgoing diligence and comprehensive investment agreements. The ones who are still playing with small deals generally fall into one or more of the categories which I describe in the articles I referenced in my response to Jose. They are easier on the way in but tend to be destructive in the long run. I have had a good deal of work lately undoing such ‘bad marriages’ and helping entrepreneurs to avoid getting into them in the first place. Your comment on banks resonated. When I was at the Sloan School at MIT, there were few venture capitalists. In fact, it was the banks that provided most of the funding for the Route 128 expansion. It is strange how the world has changed, isn’t it. Dr. Smith

  19. Hal Spice wrote:

    I found the comments today of James, Chris, and Earl had a common theme. My observation after 25+ years in the business is many promising companies never get funded because they never developed a “capitalization” strategy for their venture. A key element of such a strategy is to analyze potential investors using the same methodology to properly analyze a market opportunity.

    There is not a one size fits all angel investor. To increase the odds of getting funding, segment the local angel community. (Local, because I have met very few individual angels that invest outside their immediate geographic area). In segmenting investors and building a capitalization strategy, recognize that successful investors place their money based upon pre-established investment guidelines. The parameters that comprise these guidelines include:

    1. Product – software, hardware (by type), comm, biotech, clean, nano etc.

    2. Stage – concept, R&D, prototype, beta, revenue ready, revenue generating

    3. Strategic value – does investment relate to other investments or business interests.

    4. Ability to add value – good angels want to hedge their bets by having the ability to add value, either by technical or industry knowledge, or their network of business connections.

    5. Risk tolerance – This is related to stage, but other risk factors come into play, for example execution risk.

    And if you are trying to raise capital right now, you must recognize that for the foreseeable future is is a “buyer’s” market. I have never seen so many high quality deals available at such huge discounts. Also recognize unless your venture has established a revenue generation track record, you have very little leverage in valuation negotiations (another reason by use the convertible note, which takes valuation differences off the table – but that will be the subject of another post).

    Successful investors NEVER fall in love with a deal, because we know that great deals are like buses in NYC, another on will come along in about 10 minutes.

    regards,

    Hal

  20. James Wallis Martin wrote:

    Dr Smith,

    My twelve years of capital raising experience, have (in gross generalization) seen Angels behave more like VC, VC behave more like Banks, and Banks no longer lending at all! So there needs to be a new group to fill in the void of Angel Investors who have gone on from seed round funding of R&D in the 90′s to Round A funding of market expansion in the 00′s. Chris Maresca mentioned ex-bankers.

    For my personal experience, I have been fortunate enough to be able to afford to seed fund my cloud computing applications in which JB Metrics has developed nine different suites, of which six are already on market, have existing reference site customers, we are profitable and have more than doubled our revenue over the past three years. We are only now of interest to angel investors with product in production, customers, and a profit track record. But what about those entrepreneurs who have a good idea and need seed funding of R&D and getting their first customers on board?

    I see most of the good Angel Investors have moved on to funding Round A for startup companies like mine, not for what we used to call startup companies back in the 90′s who had a vapor-ware product, a business plan, a team of industry professionals and letters of interest from potential customers (and even further back in the 80′s where they had an idea on a cocktail napkin and a garage of two guys, no business plan, and no customers!). Where do today’s entrepreneurs looking for seed round funding go? (other than the three F’s – friends, family, and fools)?

    It is interesting that back in the late 90′s (before the dot-com burst), a startup was considered a company that was under a year old and not making revenue. Now heading into the 10′s JB Metrics, which is now already five years old, with three years of more than annually doubling revenue over the million mark is still being called a startup company.

    The bar has definitely been raised for what qualifies for angel investment in my experience over these past twelve years.

  21. dr-smith.infodr-smith.info

    Jose, Thanks for the comment. You have described the ‘perfect angel’. I wish they are all that way. Unfortunately they are not. See my two articles – Angel Investors to Avoid: http://www.dr-smith.info/angel-investors-to-avoid/ and Angel Investors – The Good, Bad and Very Ugly: http://www.dr-smith.info/angel-investors-%E2%80%93-the-good-bad-and-very-ugly/ . How do you sort these out? It seems to me that that is an important question for entrepreneurs seeking funding. The comment has been made that the funding dance is like a courtship. Deciding who to dance with early on can make or break an early-stage company. Dr. Smith

  22. José Carlos Graça wrote:

    Angel Investor is somebody who has a private fund (50 k to many millions),
    earned with his ventures and hard working along a long period of time for 10 or more years, gained experience in managing business and creating a network of relationships, has a deep knowledge in one ore more business areas, knows how to obtain additional funding and is a team player, he knows that at the end it is the team that counts and the money is an instrument like many other ingredients. Wants to stay active and loves ventures, he is looking for a fast and high return on his risky investments (would put it on the bank otherwise). Spreads the risk by participating in several ventures, takes part of the management team, is looking for scalable business that can be sold in a period of time of 3 to 5 years or that can be bought back in the same period by business owners.

    This is the common situation but as usual there are good and bad Business Angels as in all other things. When you are looking for a Business Angel you should screen his credentails. Remember you are taking a FULL BUSINESS PARTNER and you should take into account his opinions.

    When you decide to accept a Business Angel you need to accept that he is a FULL BUSINESS PARTNER and will bring much more to your business other then money alone.

    If you are not a TEAM PLAYER do not look for a Business Angel just go to the bank because it is much cheaper and you keep the decision making to yourself.

  23. dr-smith.infodr-smith.infodr-smith.infodr-smith.info

    James,

    I have a couple of questions about your last comment. the first is ‘what is the appropriate role of an angel investor’. My experience is that they are all over the lot. I wrote two articles on the subject. Angel Investors to Avoid: http://www.dr-smith.info/angel-investors-to-avoid/ and Angel Investors – The Good, Bad and Very Ugly: http://www.dr-smith.info/angel-investors-%E2%80%93-the-good-bad-and-very-ugly/ . Many of these negative types push for deep involvement in the management of their portfolio companies; most often with negative results.

    I’m not sure that I agree with you that “Cash flow is the difference between being able to become a market leader and staying a market innovator who gets beaten by someone who can bring the necessary cash flow to take the market.” Cash flow is a lagging sum. I have always been a fan of segregating capital and operating expenses. Many of the angel investors that I work with seem happiest when they are providing finds for expansion of existing revenue streams. They would rather avoid funding product development and R&D. Has your experience been different?

    Dr. Smith

  24. Chris Maresca wrote:

    @james

    Good point. It’s worth pointing out that companies will often act as such strategic investors. I’m a member of a group here in Silicon Valley that brings together a bunch of innovation executives from large companies and most of them have programs to seed startups and help introduce them to the marketplace, including helping with warm introductions to their customers and setting up prototyping/manufacturing. They have seed funded companies at $200-$300k or even just paid someone a salary equivalent to develop an idea (I would note that the latter is very, very rare, however).

    As far as angels not having the funds, I think that largely depends. Quite a few angels I know are worth in excess of $100 million (and several in excess of $500 million) and a number of angel groups (like Sand Hill Angels) will actually do A-rounds as well. OTOH, you are right, because it is their money, they are more risk averse regardless of how deep their pockets are…

    One other route that a ex-banker pointed out to me recently is that potential customers, particularly in finance, may pay big dollars for potentially game changing technology. To get an edge, they will sometimes fund prototype development, which can substitute for angel funding.

    Chris

    P.S. Happy New Year to all – hopefully you didn’t spend the day catching up on emails and other work like I did…. ;-)

  25. James Wallis Martin:

    Now one thing that I don’t believe has been brought up in this discussion yet, is what is the Angel Investor bringing to the table (besides money)? If an Angel Investor can bring customers or key access to a critical supplier, their value is much more than one that can only bring money. The other question, which is always one of discomfort, but needs to be brought up early on is the discussion of how much the investor can and is willing to bring to bear.

    Cash flow is the difference between being able to become a market leader and staying a market innovator who gets beaten by someone who can bring the necessary cash flow to take the market. There have been many arguments that being first doesn’t guarantee getting the market. The main reason always falls back on the availability of cash flow. Angel Investors usually don’t have the funds or are willing to put all their eggs in one basket, when it comes to providing additional funding, should the venture be more successful than projected. Success can be harder on cash flow demands than failure.

    Variable costs can easily be trimmed back down if the market uptake is slow or if a few mistakes along the way means it takes longer or requires a bit more money than originally expected. But in contrast, if the market demand quickly exceeds the cash flow, then it is important for the angel investor to have either deep pockets or have connections to others who can throw in more funding and quickly. It is important to know how much an Angel Investor can and is willing to put in at a later stage (assuming both delays and rapid success).

  26. Ricardo Polycarpe wrote:

    Happy New Year Dr.Smith,
    I’m currently looking for a US (because we’re in touch with a LA-based IP Lawyer) early-stage investor interested to acquire equity stakes of a future new success-story multiplatform (portable into Iphone,Facebook,Wii,…) casual game of cards !
    And you can imagine how useful the article will be for us !

    Happy Holidays again, Doc
    Ricardo
    Game Designer & Orange mobile Premium Partner

  27. Mark Montgomery wrote:

    A couple of observations that might be useful. First, as I said in other forums and shared in one of my groups, this is an exceptional article. Second, I agree with Chris on the issue of raising capital in this environment — sweat equity compared to any external capital is preferred, and sadly in the U.S. we have little choice but to sell to industry leaders as an exit, or watch another bubble form, which I won’t take– I’ll relocate if that happens perm. I’ts ruining the country.

    However, I would add that volume doesn’t a wise investor make, particularly in angel investing & VC– it usually means someone was good once and/or got lucky once, while others who have a track record of several — particularly in bubble years, are based on relationships rather than anything else.

    The very small minority are true serial entrepreneurs turned investors who really understand what they are doing, as evidenced in many markets, multiple industries, and multiple environments. These are the folks who are true market makers — they build economies rather than tear them down or skim off the top, and they are very wise folks. Quality is all that matters to me — not how much capital they have, or a one hit wonder, and I avoid arrogance at all cost.

    I prefer to surround myself with those who are business builders for the long term, and I do my best to stay away from everyone else until the venture is mature enough for financial investors, who are usually clueless in tech.

    That said, some types of ventures simply require a lot of capital, and in those cases I think sweat equity and lean venturing is still essential, but they do need capital– the self-funded model doesn’t work with many sectors– most actually, and those where it does work tend to be way over invested due to the supply and demand dynamics of low cost of entry– like social networking where some angels invested in hundreds of ventures– losing in almost every single one. In most industrial ventures I’ve observed early on, the greatest challenge in capitalization is matchmaking.

    For example I have deep relationships in hardware, but they don’t know zip about software. Similarly many corp execs are angel investors– they can sometimes help on exits, but good luck finding any who understand revolutionary new technology, or how to gain adoption– they often find their network useless in that regard.

    Generally speaking, it’s the most expensive education in the world to learn early stage venturing– particularly technology today. Cultural prep helps, formal education can hurt or help — I’ve seen both many times — natural inclination /drive/internal motivation is paramount, and experience and mentoring helps — particularly on the investment side.

    I am hesitant to share even this much with Linkedins IP grab in the user agreement, which is counter productive in my view, but so it goes. They found a lot of money to grow market share, and I suspect that’s one reason why. The web isn’t an easy game.

    .02- MM

  28. Jose, Thanks for two great comments. Your second one brought a smile. I am working on a book that is being written in two sections. The first is focused on the process from the investor’s perspective while the second section looks at it from the entrepreneurs’. the reason for the smile is that, during some of the interviews with both ‘types’ some offered the same observation. Investors wanted entrepreneurs to change while entrepreneurs wanted investors to change. Both offered the request wistfully and without much hope that the changes would occur. My own feeling is that they won’t change. The very nature of their respective professions and world views drive their behavior. But I have experienced a coming together in a neutral space. My PhD thesis focused on developing an alternative to comparative cultural analysis. The core ideas I used have proven very helpful in bringing oil and water together, at least temporarily, into a commodious mixture. Dr. Smith

  29. José Carlos Graça wrote:

    Dear Chris Maresca,

    Your contribution in this discussion has been one of the most important. I can tell you are an experienced person in this area. I have been around to know that. I have setup several startups myself and also been active as a BA and recently raised a small fund with a group of investors, university, incubation center and goverment to invest in ventures under a new business model which I am building up right know. This model avoids the major risks and problems which goes with it and you have pointed out. The problem is most of the startups are not interested to value the business and sell it at the end. They have no money to share the risk and are commonly bad team players. Most of the ideas are common and lack of potential for risk investment. Those are the common comments I experience from other VC´s and BA.

    Best regards,

    Jose Carlos

    I also believe that BA and VC´s should change their model in order to overcome many of the problems pointed out in this discussion.

  30.  
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