Showing posts with label venture capitalist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label venture capitalist. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
InvestMidwest 2013 Extends Application Deadline
It's a well-known problem in the startup world: there are always too many ideas and not enough investors. How can entrepreneurs improve their chances of getting funded in the year 2013? What will it take? Blood, sweat and tears? A miracle?
Perhaps not. Because this year, the 2013 InvestMidwest Venture Capital Forum aims to provide access to capital for emerging, privately held companies and to promote greater entrepreneurship, business growth and expansion in the Midwest region.
InvestMidwest will take place on April 3-4 at Westin Kansas City (Crown Center). The event will include 3 industry tracks including life sciences, IT/general business and food/ag/bioenergy. There will be 10-minute presentations from 40-45 emerging business as well as an opportunity for individual meetings.
InvestMidwest recently extended its application deadline to January 18, 2013 so startups have over a week to submit their businesses.
Learn more about InvestMidwest and submit your own startup at www.investmidwestforum.com.
Follow me! @AllisonThinkBig
Friday, July 6, 2012
020 Think Big Radio: The 10 Questions Every Venture Capitalist Will Ask
Every entrepreneur is nervous to pitch to investors. No matter what you do, your palms may sweat, your hands may shake and your voice may quiver while delivering your ever-important pitch. And you should be nervous—you’re talking to the people who could potentially invest in your company! But there is no need to look nervous when under the startup microscope. Think Big is here to help. In this episode of Think Big Radio, you’ll get insight into the top 10 questions that venture capitalists almost always ask during the question-and-answer session of a pitch. Questions include:
- Where did you get your idea? If it’s so great, why hasn’t anyone else done it?
- Are you funded? Who, other than yourself, has invested money into your idea?
- What is your monetization strategy? In other words, how will you make money off of this idea?
- How big is your market? Are there enough people that want to spend money on your idea?
- There are risks involved in any startup, but have you thought of yours?
- Have you heard of ______?
- How big is your team? How much money are you spending to currently operate?
- What is your exit strategy?
- Tell me more about yourself.
- What did you do before this idea came along? What are your prior experiences?
So listen up, tune in and Think Big! This is Think Big
Radio, and we’re here to help you perfect the grueling investor
question-and-answer session.
Follow Think Big! @thinkbigkC
Wednesday, April 4, 2012
LiveOn (Among Other Startups) Head to St. Louis for InvestMidwest
What do you get when you put 300 attendees, 60 venture capital companies and 44 startup organizations under one roof in St. Louis, Missouri? You get an entrepreneur's dream; you get InvestMidwest.
InvestMidwest showcases 44 companies representing 10 states across the flyover region in three different industry tracks including life sciences, technology and clean energy/sustainability. This venture capital conference has helped to generate over $850 million of investments in the past 12 years.
One company in particular is looking forward to the InvestMidwest opportunity. The startup has been making a splash in the entrepreneurial world with appearances and nominations at SXSW and at during the Think Big Field Trip to Silicon Valley. The startup, known as LiveOn, is hoping to make an even bigger impact at InvestMidwest today.
"We are looking forward to attending the InvestMidwest Forum as an opportunity to meet potential investors as well as to mingle with other entrepreneurs," said Jonathan Whistman, founder of LiveOn. "The Midwest continues to be an interesting place to build a business and these types of forums always help with creating a platform to connect like-minded people."
LiveOn hopes to take what they learned during the Think Big Field Trip and implement pitching strategies at the InvestMidwest Forum.
"We just recently returned from a trip to Silicon Valley to participate in a two startup showcases. One was put on by Silicon Valley Bank and the other by Kansas City's Think Big Partners. It will be interesting to see the differences in the investment environment from the coast to here in the Midwest," said Whistman.
All startups presenting at InvestMidwest must be located within the center corridor of the United States. These companies must be seeking $1 million to $20 million in funding and must have revenue projections of $20 million within the first five years.
InvestMidwest will take place on April 4-5, 2012 at the Hilton St. Louis at the Ballpark in St. Louis, Missouri. To learn more, please visit https://www.investmidwestforum.com/.
Follow me! @AllisonThinkBig
Monday, March 26, 2012
A Few Key People Can Really Make a Huge Difference (Whether You're in Silicon Valley, Seattle or KC)
When we first read this article by Mark Suster of TechCrunch, we couldn't help but notice the similarities it had with Tyler Prochnow's recent article, Silicon Valley Knows a Secret: It's Okay to Fail! Simply replace the words "Seattle" with "Kansas City" in Suster's article, and it still reigns true. Don't believe us? Read for yourself:
This article can be found at: http://techcrunch.com/2011/05/05/a-few-key-people-really-can-make-a-huge-difference/
I’m in Seattle this week.
People keep asking me if I’ve “seen anything interesting.” Of course I have. I’m an entrepreneur at heart so I’m always inspired when I hear stories about innovation.
I really liked BigDoor, MediaPiston, OpsCode, BuddyTV, SEOMoz and much more. Can’t list them all.
But I’m not here trolling for deals. I’m here to build long-term, stable relationships that I hope will pay off over a decade, not a week. I’m looking to turn dots into lines over time.
I’m inspired by the enthusiasm of the young, emerging startup ecosystem that is here. It has all of the components for success: a steady inflow of smart, CS graduates from UW who prefer to stay local if they could, a smattering of local VCs & angels, some “patron” companies like Microsoft and Amazon who provide new talent as well as the opportunity for company-defining partnerships and it has “elder statesmen” like Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos.
[Kansas City: the enthusiasm of young, emerging startups every day is apparent in our city as well.]
The ingredients are all here. Seattle should be the envy of any non-Silicon-Valley tech community in the country. Great lifestyle, great cost of living, motivated people and only the crap weather on the negative side. They have their successes; yet somehow all of the neurons don’t yet seem to be firing as powerfully as they need to be.
[Kansas City: great lifestyle, great cost of living, motivated people and not-so-bad weather!]
As I gear up to give a keynote at the annual Seattle 2.0 awards dinner on Thursday night I started to reflect on what it would take to “change the trajectory” for Seattle or for any regional market, really. It really wouldn’t take much to turn a great technology ecosystem into a truly electric one.
And I think about the “Seattle issue” as a metaphor for startups and business in general. I’ve always been a big believer that just a couple of key individuals make all of the difference in a company’s success. It’s why my investment philosophy is called, “the entrepreneur thesis.”
I was meeting with a first-time CEO of a very promising young startup recently and offering my advice on what his priorities should be. He listed all of the product releases that were upcoming, the customers that were in the pipeline and where he saw his competition moving. I gave him the same advice I give nearly all over-worked, control-freak, do-everything-yourself startup founders:
“Your number one priority isn’t any of these things. Your highest priority right now is hiring the 1 or 2 people that are going to join your company and make a difference. There’s you and your killer CTO co-founder. But who else is going to get out there and close your big biz dev deals with you? Who’s going to help you with improving your marketing / positioning to become a clear platform category leader like Twilio?Are you going to do all of this? Evidence over the past year would suggest otherwise. You have too much on your plate.A few key people really can make a huge difference.”
Him:
“I know, I know. I will start recruiting soon. But I need to get our next release out the door. I need to take some VC meetings. I just don’t have enough time to focus on it right now. It will be a bit easier when we have a little more progress to show.”
Me:
“Bullshit. It never gets easier. There are always the next 20 tasks. The reason you’re not getting to the next level is that you’re not prioritizing the precise thing that could take you to the next level. I would say recruiting at least one superstar would be your priorities 1,2 & 3.”
I don’t care if you’re a 10-person organization, a 1,000 person organization or a multinational corporation – often it is the few key players that change the dimensions. Imagine Apple without Steve Jobs. Or less obvious, imagine Facebook without Sheryl Sandberg.
So entrepreneurs need to think the same way some VCs do – because markets change, competition changes, innovation & technology cycles move so fast that only by having a few truly outstanding leaders in your company can you sustain any sort of advantage.
And that is precisely my thoughts for Seattle and what I plan to deliver on Thursday night: Which few key community leaders are going to step up and get those neurons properly firing and connected?
My recipe for Seattle or your community: [Kansas City: let's take this advice from Mark Suster and implement it in our own community! This is, after all, the mission of Think Big Partners.]
1. Community Leaders + Organizers
You need a good mixture of both.
You need a good mixture of both.
Look at what Brad Feld has done for Boulder. I know it’s not single-handed as he has both fantastic partners at Foundry Group and many other community leaders. But he has helped put Boulder on the consciousness of so many young, aspiring entrepreneurs in search of somewhere other than the San Francisco Bay Area to work & live. It is possible and he’s showing people that.
David Cohen deserves much credit for building TechStars into an internationally recognized brand name for innovation. If you can attract people to Boulder for a session to be part of the magical mix of people at TechStars then some will naturally stay put afterward. But it did take Brad as a public spokesman, consummate networker and successful VC to help create legitimacy to let David’s ideas flourish.
It takes both to build a community. The business leaders need to do their parts. The people with the time, energy & creativity to build organizations like TechStars need to bring their ideas to fruition.
[Kansas City: We have leaders from the Kauffman Foundation, Think Big, KCSourceLink, PIPELINE and many other organizations working toward this same awareness.]
I see this emerging in Seattle and the passion of “a few key individuals” who can help shift the game. Chris Devore & Andy Sack have created Founder’s Coop with the goal of funding, incubating & launching more early-stage ventures in Seattle. If you could convince a few young “wantrepreneurs” that there is a community that can support them & a safe landing if they’re not immediately successful you might have your next Amazon in the works. It’s a very cool vibe at Founder’s Coop. These two guys are part of the recipe for Seattle’s growth.
2. Passionate Entrepreneurs & Ambassadors
Stating the obvious but you can’t will a region into success. You need to have passionate tech entrepreneurs who want to build businesses locally. They have the same trade-off decisions that you do about packing up and moving to Silicon Valley vs. staying and building locally. The answer seems obvious (to move) but it’s not. When you account for competition for talent, the difficulty of retention, the cost of living and the difficulty of rising above the noise – there are many advantages of staying put. The advantages of moving are more obvious.
Stating the obvious but you can’t will a region into success. You need to have passionate tech entrepreneurs who want to build businesses locally. They have the same trade-off decisions that you do about packing up and moving to Silicon Valley vs. staying and building locally. The answer seems obvious (to move) but it’s not. When you account for competition for talent, the difficulty of retention, the cost of living and the difficulty of rising above the noise – there are many advantages of staying put. The advantages of moving are more obvious.
So you need Dave Schappell who is building an interesting business in Seattle called TeachStreet, a local-community initiative to connect teachers & students. Dave is ex-Amazon and is a tireless advocate for the Seattle community. He’s been steadily emailing me for the past 18 months with ideas for local entrepreneurs I “have to meet” and has been egging me on to spend more time in Seattle. He’s why I came this week.
Dave Schappell & Daryn Nakhuda rally the troops
He helped me organize a set of meetings with high-potential individuals and a dinner where we all debating how to increase entrepreneurial velocity. I re-connected with Andy Liu the founder & CEO of BuddyTV – the largest destination for social TV enthusiasts on the web. When I saw what BuddyTV is working on and how long they’ve been the market (since 2005) I realized that this has huge potential to help disrupt the television market. They haven’t launched their next gen product – watch this space. No Dave S. = no knowledge of what BuddyTV is up to for me.
Every community needs their “ambassadors” who build relationships with leaders from other communities, who convince these people to come visit the community, who help organize events with local teams to get the cross-city interactions and who create awareness for the local talent.
Dave is a potential key ingredient in the recipe for Seattle’s success.
[Kansas City: Loads of driven entrepreneurs come from our area too. Just take a look at AgLocal, LiveOn, Zaarly, Audio Anywhere and many others that are making a splash from the Midwest.]
3. Patron Companies
Seattle has something that many communities don’t have. It’s what I call “patron companies” and the local giants are Microsoft & Amazon. When you think about the success that is Silicon Valley, the unfair advantage is not just the huge amounts of available venture capital. When you start a company in the Bay Area you can often get your first biz dev deal done with Google, Facebook, Salesforce.com, eBay, Yahoo! or the countless other successful startup firms.
Seattle has something that many communities don’t have. It’s what I call “patron companies” and the local giants are Microsoft & Amazon. When you think about the success that is Silicon Valley, the unfair advantage is not just the huge amounts of available venture capital. When you start a company in the Bay Area you can often get your first biz dev deal done with Google, Facebook, Salesforce.com, eBay, Yahoo! or the countless other successful startup firms.
[Kansas City: We have innovative giants like Cerner, Sprint, Garmin and Hallmark.]
A key deal not only helps you raise venture capital but it can help attract employees, garner press attention, help with product focus & importantly drive customer adoption and/or revenue.
In Los Angeles we don’t have “patron technology companies” that are big enough to matter – we’re still hoping to see them emerge. But every time I talk with senior executives a the big studios or talent agencies I tell the same story,
“You know that your industry is being disrupted. What industry isn’t these days. You can be part of the creative destruction. You can help local entrepreneurs get their first deal done and the innovation ought to benefit you.Sure, it might mean some of your employees or colleagues go to join the barbarians at the gate, but would you rather that innovation happen in your home town where you can play to your strengths or do you want your entire future industry to shift to Silicon Valley?”
This message is surprisingly well received. People do want to help. They just need a few key individuals who are willing to go out on a limb, take some actions and make things happen for them. They need somebody bending their ears. They can then direct staff, allocate budgets, talk to the press, connect you with politicians and attend events. A few key people really can make a difference.
And that is what is most disappointing about the feedback I’m getting about Seattle. It has the dual technology patrons and yet the consistent story I get is that they’re not actively out embracing the startup community, helping local successes emerge, getting comfortable with the symbiotic benefits of some employees going to startups that innovate at a different pace and then buying up local teams, talent & IP. They’re doing stuff – just not enough.
Seattle has its patrons. The neurons aren’t connecting to the startups. Somebody needs to make this happen.
4. Elder Statesmen
This is where I think the action on connecting neurons has to come from. Jeff Bezos (and executive team) have to recognize that it’s in their best interest to see the community thrive and the benefits to Amazon (not to mention Seattle) are far greater than any negatives of employee flow. Steve Ballmer, Bill Gates and other senior teams from Microsoft need to want to promote local startups. These kinds of connections seldom emerge from middle management who view the immediate threats more than the long-run benefits.
This is where I think the action on connecting neurons has to come from. Jeff Bezos (and executive team) have to recognize that it’s in their best interest to see the community thrive and the benefits to Amazon (not to mention Seattle) are far greater than any negatives of employee flow. Steve Ballmer, Bill Gates and other senior teams from Microsoft need to want to promote local startups. These kinds of connections seldom emerge from middle management who view the immediate threats more than the long-run benefits.
But Jeff, Bill, Steve and well as Howard Schultz, the executive team at CostCo, etc. are not likely to spearhead this movement. They’re too busy running their companies and literally changing the world. Who from Seattle has their ears? Who can get help get access to their capital? Who can get them to communicate the bigger picture message top-down to their teams to embrace the startup community and unleash local partnerships?
Without this – it’s a totally wasted patronage. Who will step up the way that Steve Case (founder of AOL) has done with Startup America to promote this initiative to politicians, business leaders and the press. Actually, who will get Steve Case to spend time in Seattle helping communicate the message to local leaders? It’s clear that America has a vested interest in promoting entrepreneurship in many regions in the country to stimulate innovation & job creation.
Who will be those key leaders who will step up and make a difference?
[Kansas City: on the road to becoming the most entrepreneurial city in America thanks to other initiatives like Startup America, Google fiber, and the mayors' involvement.]
5. Playing to Your Advantages
Every region has its advantages and while not limiting innovation to local themes it seems to make sense to at least consider local advantages. It’s no big surprise that I spend a larger portion of my time in LA working on: disruption of television, performance-based marketing, games & mobile. We have unique skills, teams, experience and regional assets that give us a better chance of success than other regions.
Every region has its advantages and while not limiting innovation to local themes it seems to make sense to at least consider local advantages. It’s no big surprise that I spend a larger portion of my time in LA working on: disruption of television, performance-based marketing, games & mobile. We have unique skills, teams, experience and regional assets that give us a better chance of success than other regions.
In no expert in Seattle but when I look around I see: enterprise software (Microsoft), the market leader in cloud services (Amazon AWS), games (Xbox), some of the most innovative retailers in the country (CostCo, Starbucks, REI) and what is left of Boeing (HQ moved to Chicago). I’m sure there’s much more.
I’m not sure it makes too much sense to have check-in applications for restaurants here. That seems likely to be dominated by a more urban startup from NYC or from San Francisco. But who know? I’m just saying’ … what local assets do you have that load dice in your favor?
6. Marketing Muscle
It’s great to see an initiative like Seattle 2.0 because every community needs its local tech press to report on companies and run conference. Consider just how much exposure the Austin community gets every year due to SXSW. It’s awesome.
It’s great to see an initiative like Seattle 2.0 because every community needs its local tech press to report on companies and run conference. Consider just how much exposure the Austin community gets every year due to SXSW. It’s awesome.
I’ve often talked about the NY advantage of having the NY Times, WSJ, Silicon Alley Insider, New York Magazine and even the editor of TechCrunch based there. Not to mention every major agency, many PR firms, etc. There is no question NY startups get disproportionate press. That’s natural. Not to mention they have the highest profile VC / blogger Fred Wilson of AVC.
It was great to hear that in Seattle John Cook and company are solving this at GeekWire. Every region needs its local media & events. In LA we have SoCalTech, for which I am grateful. It’s an awesome source of regional news. I’d LOVE to see it become more of a national vehicle. How do we make that happen?
[Kansas City: local media like KC Business Magazine, the KC Star, the Kansas City Business Journal and events like Think Big Kansas City, PIPELINE Innovator of the Year, and the Chamber's Innovation Conference help lead the way.]
I’m now getting about 400,000 views / month at BothSidesoftheTable. I don’t write about LA but I write from LA. It’s important. A few key people can really make a huge difference.
7. Local Angel Community / Recycled Capital
Fred Wilson wrote an eloquent piece on his blog about “recycling capital,” which every regional community should read. The magic that is Silicon Valley is that every tech entrepreneur who has made a bit of money chooses to “recycle” it by investing back into the startup community. There is a long tradition of these and it’s what formed the original angel network groups.
Fred Wilson wrote an eloquent piece on his blog about “recycling capital,” which every regional community should read. The magic that is Silicon Valley is that every tech entrepreneur who has made a bit of money chooses to “recycle” it by investing back into the startup community. There is a long tradition of these and it’s what formed the original angel network groups.
As I look at LA I see a lot of this reinvestment going on. There are great entrepreneurs like Evan Rifkin, Tom McInerney, Paige Craig, Diego Berdakin, Brett Brewer, Kamran Pourzanjani, Jarl Mohn and many, many more who have done several local Los Angeles tech investments. There are several “club deals” where you see the same sets of people “passing the hat” around on deals.
I know from all of my private conversation that they aren’t seeing this as a “get rich quick scheme” – they’re giving back to the community. And the truth is that they know $25-50k from them on a deal that they can help influence returns on is a lot better than handing it over to a money manager who is parking your cash in a vehicle you don’t understand.
I have done the same. I had the good fortune of doing one small deal that returned 6x in a year. So it was newfound capital I wasn’t expecting. I plowed it back into 9 deals. I prefer not to do any angel investments because I focus on my VC funds but it was gratifying to write some small checks to support local teams.
I know there’s tons of money in Seattle. Perhaps somebody needs to organize it a bit better to go into more angel deals. I know that Founder’s Coop has a fund as does TechStars Seattle. That’s one model. Perhaps some experienced tech entrepreneurs could formalize more of the Amazon / Microsoft money into a higher velocity of angel deals.
8. Venture Capital
And of course you need a mature venture capital industry. There are several local firms in Seattle like Madrona, Maveron, Ignition and others. But the consistent message I heard was “there’s not enough.” That’s why more VCs ought to be spending time in Seattle. It’s similar to LA in that there are a highly motivated cadre of tech savvy entrepreneurs wanting to create companies and a lack of funding. I’d bet if one is disciplined about investing here you’d see significantly better pricing than chasing deals in the overly competitive Bay Area corridors.
And of course you need a mature venture capital industry. There are several local firms in Seattle like Madrona, Maveron, Ignition and others. But the consistent message I heard was “there’s not enough.” That’s why more VCs ought to be spending time in Seattle. It’s similar to LA in that there are a highly motivated cadre of tech savvy entrepreneurs wanting to create companies and a lack of funding. I’d bet if one is disciplined about investing here you’d see significantly better pricing than chasing deals in the overly competitive Bay Area corridors.
[Kansas City: VCs need to be spending more time here too.]
It’s not an either / or but both / and. But as I look at the GRP Partners returns we’ve made a lot of money investing in companies in New York, Chicago, Baltimore, Las Vegas, Arizona and Seattle. We won’t rush into the market but we’re very open to finding teams with the ambition to build big businesses. We know it can be done.
9. Foreign Direct Investment (FDI)
The other message I delivered to the room of entrepreneurs & investors at dinner the other night was that you need to think about equity from outside the region the same way that countries think about foreign direct investment. The inflow of capital can be transformative.
The other message I delivered to the room of entrepreneurs & investors at dinner the other night was that you need to think about equity from outside the region the same way that countries think about foreign direct investment. The inflow of capital can be transformative.
But what is often not talked about is that those investments lead to 8-10 board meetings every year of which it would be hoped that the “outside the region” VC would attend 6-8 of them in person. I think a series of brand ambassadors should find out when these VCs will be in town and organize evening events for them the night before so they don’t do a fly-in, fly-out visit.
Imagine if the ambassadors from Seattle organized a dinner with 8 entrepreneurs, the CTO of Amazon, the head of Xbox and the head of marketing for Starbucks. You mean to tell me that the VC wouldn’t fly in early for that?
With VC FDI the community gets more than money. They get time, commitment & attention. One deal begets more deals. If you’re already on a plane to Seattle 8 times a year picking up a second investment there is trivial. Get them over that first hurdle.
10. Time
And finally, it’s clear that to really build a regional community you need time. LA and Seattle are in the second (or third) major wave of technology innovation. We have all of the 2nd-time entrepreneurs from Overture, CitySearch, MySpace, etc. on to their next companies and that produced Demand Media, a public company who even with a slight recent reduction in share price is still trading at $1.3 billion.
And finally, it’s clear that to really build a regional community you need time. LA and Seattle are in the second (or third) major wave of technology innovation. We have all of the 2nd-time entrepreneurs from Overture, CitySearch, MySpace, etc. on to their next companies and that produced Demand Media, a public company who even with a slight recent reduction in share price is still trading at $1.3 billion.
Over the past 15 years Seattle has built one of the most interesting technology companies in the world. I’m still amazed at how forward thinking Amazon has been in cloud services – years ahead of Google, Salesforce.com, IBM, HP, Oracle or the countless other companies that should have been strong in this space.
[Kansas City: the same goes for you. We are one of the fastest growing entrepreneurial cities in the nation and it's time to embrace that.]
It’s a shame that hasn’t translated into more local break-out successes, but if a few key people really wanted to put in the effort to make it happen I’m confident that Seattle could be a major force in the decade to come. That will be “the decade of the cloud” where it really starts to become a truly connect resource that continues to accelerate innovation.
Who’s in?
Follow Mark Suster! @msuster
Follow me! @AllisonThinkBig
Thursday, March 15, 2012
The 4 Characteristics VCs Look for in Startups
According to research done by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, nearly 60% of new businesses shut down within the first four years of operation. With these slim chances, it seems even more impossible to get funded. But don’t run off to the corporate world yet, entrepreneurs. Instead, check out the top four things venture capitalists look for when selecting a startup to fund:
- A Coachable and Passionate Management Team
When venture capitalists set out to invest in new projects, they first examine the brains behind it all. Whether your business is run by an individual, a partnership or small management team, the VC wants to be confident that the business is built on a solid foundation. Venture capitalists look for management teams that are goal-oriented and coachable. If the management team is not willing to learn from the VC, the collaboration needed to grow the business is difficult, if not impossible, to establish.
Two important characteristics that entrepreneurs need to be successful are resiliency and emotional intelligence. Resilient entrepreneurs exhibit passion and are the driving force behind the business and its employees. Entrepreneurs who have emotional intelligence also have the intuition to know when to pack up and move on to the next, more viable idea. Great entrepreneurs understand that making mistakes is part of the job description. Venture capitalists value entrepreneurs who can learn from failure and can use it as a motivator.
- Realistic Business Plans and Expectations
An entrepreneur must write a clear and concise business plan that defines what product and/or service their business offers. Although a long, detailed strategy is not always necessary, a solid written plan assures investors that the entrepreneur has calculated the potential opportunities, risks and competitors in the marketplace. Having the official business name, description, competitive analysis and goals clearly outlined in the business plan will be helpful in the long run.
More often than not, startups take twice as long to get off the ground and cost twice as much as the founders expect. Clear predictions and correct expense calculations are crucial for establishing a business’ credibility to potential VC’s. For more information on what (and what not) to include in your business plan to attract the right VC, see 5 Business Plan Mistakes that Send Investors Packing.
- Ability to Problem Solve and Scalability
Venture capitalists look for businesses that have long-term viability. Successful startups must be scalable in nature (in other words, they must possess the ability to grow and perform with consistent quality). Venture capitalists look for businesses that solve problems that are financially worth solving. The idea is not relevant, or financially viable, if there is not a sizeable, addressable market that cares about the problem the business is trying to solve. The business needs to provide a service that people are willing to take action on, right now.
At the same time, it isn’t just the idea that is important. In fact, the process could possibly be the most critical for a startup. Herb Sih, startup consultant and co-founder of Think Big Partners, advises that “entrepreneurs seeking to gain funding from a venture capitalist should remember not to fall in love with their idea, but instead fall in love with the idea of solving their problem.”
Business success is not always measured by an end result, but how the leaders react to the obstacles along the way. The ability for an entrepreneur to rebound after failure is an indicator that he or she will be successful in the future.
- Mutually Beneficial Relationship
Venture capitalists are not all the same. At the end of the day, the business in question should fit into the VC’s overall portfolio and the relationship should make sense for both parties. But how can entrepreneurs connect with venture capitalists in the first place? To many, they seem extremely difficult to find.
There are a handful of guidelines about what not to do when approaching investors. One of the worst ways to attract venture capitalists is by unsolicited email. Many times, this demonstrates that the entrepreneur has not done the appropriate research. If you have a particular VC in mind, find a way to get connected through professional acquaintances or at networking events. Use professional social media platforms like LinkedIn to stay connected after the initial meeting and attempt to develop a professional relationship through social media. And always keep in mind that whether the benefit is high margins, proprietary, patented technology or a different advantage, a VC ultimately cares about their return on investment - and how soon they will get it.
Securing adequate funding can be stressful and time consuming. If you focus on these four tips while planting your small business seed, you will reap the rewards of a credible VC and valuable capital!
Follow Think Big! @thinkbigKC
Follow me! @AllisonThinkBig
Monday, May 23, 2011
Yes, Dorothy, We ARE in Kansas and the Whole World is Flat!
Why this is GREAT for entrepreneurs, angels and the U.S. economy. Our guest blog post from Scott Mize.
As attendees prepare to gather tomorrow at the Kansas City Convention Center for the 2nd Annual Think Big Kansas City conference, my thoughts have turned to how the “flattening” of the world is impacting the entrepreneurial sector of our economy. This is the flattening popularized in the book entitled “The World is Flat” by New York Time columnist Thomas Friedman. The basic thesis of the book is that the internet and other information technology (e.g. new mobile devices) have created a level playing field for businesses worldwide. Increasingly, the historical hierarchies and barriers of geography, resources and markets are disappearing and becoming increasingly irrelevant. Although the focus of the book was globalization and its cross-border impact, there are many ways in which this transformation can benefit places like Kansas City. It also might be an important key to solving the problem of job creation in the U.S. and around the world.
We all know that the overwhelming proportion of new jobs come from small and medium-size high-growth companies. They are the primary engine of economic growth and prosperity. The Great Recession has dealt a serious blow to this job creation engine. Although we technically came out of the Great Recession in 2009, the so-called recovery has been nearly jobless. It is also showing every sign of going sideways at best for the foreseeable future. To battle this inertia, it is essential that we focus on regaining serious job-creation momentum.
I have long felt that we really need to have more than one word for investing. In much the same way that we could use more words for “love” in the English language (the Ancient Greeks had four!) we need at least two for “investing”. One would refer to the type done on the stock market. This is not IPOs or other offerings wherein an issuing company takes in the investment. I mean the overwhelming majority of the transactions wherein investors buy and sell existing stock from each other in a global speculation casino. This type of investing may create wealth for some investors, but is creates few jobs directly. The other would refer to what angel investors and venture capitalists (VCs) do - buying stock from a private company itself and having that money applied to building the business, which creates jobs quickly, many of them very high-value jobs. Diverting a relatively small percentage of the current investment in the stock, bond, commodity and/or foreign exchange markets into startup investments would have an extremely positive impact on job creation.
VC firms are often perceived as the key to funding early-stage companies. The reality however is that the overwhelming majority of businesses will never get any VC money because they do not fit their target profile in one way or another. I don’t have the room in this post to go into the reasons in detail, but Mark Suster of GRP Partners has written a couple of great posts about it here and here. On top of that, the venture capital sector in the U.S. continues to shrink and has generally delivered lackluster returns. Many observers believe that about half of the venture firms that have been active over the past few years will soon go out of business. This makes increasing the level of angel investment more critical than ever.
Angel investors have always been important to fueling start-up companies. Over the past decade, there has been strong growth in angel investing (despite a pullback during the Great Recession), and broad proliferation of angel investment groups. According to the Angel Capital Association (ACA), the number of angel groups has tripled since 1999. According to the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire, in 2010 in the U.S., 265,400 angels invested $20.1 billion in 61,900 companies creating 370,000 new jobs. This puts angels at rough parity with VCs, who according the National Venture Capital Association invested $23.3 billion in 2010. There are now angel groups in virtually every city in the U.S. The ACA has over 150 angel groups as members from 49 states and 6 Canadian provinces. Although data is harder to come by outside the U.S., there are many indicators that there is good growth in angel investing around the world.
In order have the greatest success at creating new jobs, ensuring economic prosperity and solving the major challenges facing humanity, we need more angel investing. The good news is that there are two key factors that poise us for a boom in angel investing. First, the ACA estimates that the potential number of angel investors (defined as those with over $1 million in net worth) is approximately 4 million. Second, in much the same way that the global competitive environment is flattening due to advances in information technology, so is the start-up funding environment.
There is a huge opportunity to make angel investors of a good chunk of the 4 million high net worth individuals that are currently sitting on the sidelines. The ACA and Angel Capital Education Foundation have made a great contribution by creating a professional association for angels, which among other many other things compiles and disseminates best practices for the field. Both are spinoffs of The Kauffman Foundation and are based in Kansas City. The proliferation of angel groups makes it easier for high net worth individuals that are new to the game to find a community in which they can get up the learning curve and plug into deal flow.
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications like AngelSoft make it easier for angel groups to aggregate deal flow and syndicate deals. This is good for both entrepreneurs and investors – taking down traditional barriers and limits and thus flattening the investment process. The ability to aggregate deal flow from multiple sources dramatically increases the number of deals to which an angel investor has access. Workflow management capabilities enable angels to more easily collaborate and use their collective intelligence in sourcing deals, performing due diligence, and overseeing their investments. The angels thus have unprecedented access to more and better start-up investment opportunities. This type of application is also good for entrepreneurs because they have access to a much wider range of potential investors than ever before, and therefore unprecedented access to investment capital.
It is the common wisdom in many quarters that globalization and the “flattening” of the world spells doom for the U.S. To the contrary, by using these same forces creatively we can stay in a leadership position. Activating the sleeping potential of angel investors and embracing these new technologies can produce exciting entrepreneurial successes, powerful new product and services, robust job creation and a myriad of ways to address the pressing challenges facing humanity.
------------------------------------------
Written by Scott Mize. Scott is a Silicon Valley Venture Development Executive and is the moderator of the Think Big Kansas City panel on “Lessons Learned from Kansas City Entrepreneurs You May Not Have Heard Of”. He can be reached at ayesem@earthlink.net.
As attendees prepare to gather tomorrow at the Kansas City Convention Center for the 2nd Annual Think Big Kansas City conference, my thoughts have turned to how the “flattening” of the world is impacting the entrepreneurial sector of our economy. This is the flattening popularized in the book entitled “The World is Flat” by New York Time columnist Thomas Friedman. The basic thesis of the book is that the internet and other information technology (e.g. new mobile devices) have created a level playing field for businesses worldwide. Increasingly, the historical hierarchies and barriers of geography, resources and markets are disappearing and becoming increasingly irrelevant. Although the focus of the book was globalization and its cross-border impact, there are many ways in which this transformation can benefit places like Kansas City. It also might be an important key to solving the problem of job creation in the U.S. and around the world.
We all know that the overwhelming proportion of new jobs come from small and medium-size high-growth companies. They are the primary engine of economic growth and prosperity. The Great Recession has dealt a serious blow to this job creation engine. Although we technically came out of the Great Recession in 2009, the so-called recovery has been nearly jobless. It is also showing every sign of going sideways at best for the foreseeable future. To battle this inertia, it is essential that we focus on regaining serious job-creation momentum.
I have long felt that we really need to have more than one word for investing. In much the same way that we could use more words for “love” in the English language (the Ancient Greeks had four!) we need at least two for “investing”. One would refer to the type done on the stock market. This is not IPOs or other offerings wherein an issuing company takes in the investment. I mean the overwhelming majority of the transactions wherein investors buy and sell existing stock from each other in a global speculation casino. This type of investing may create wealth for some investors, but is creates few jobs directly. The other would refer to what angel investors and venture capitalists (VCs) do - buying stock from a private company itself and having that money applied to building the business, which creates jobs quickly, many of them very high-value jobs. Diverting a relatively small percentage of the current investment in the stock, bond, commodity and/or foreign exchange markets into startup investments would have an extremely positive impact on job creation.
VC firms are often perceived as the key to funding early-stage companies. The reality however is that the overwhelming majority of businesses will never get any VC money because they do not fit their target profile in one way or another. I don’t have the room in this post to go into the reasons in detail, but Mark Suster of GRP Partners has written a couple of great posts about it here and here. On top of that, the venture capital sector in the U.S. continues to shrink and has generally delivered lackluster returns. Many observers believe that about half of the venture firms that have been active over the past few years will soon go out of business. This makes increasing the level of angel investment more critical than ever.
Angel investors have always been important to fueling start-up companies. Over the past decade, there has been strong growth in angel investing (despite a pullback during the Great Recession), and broad proliferation of angel investment groups. According to the Angel Capital Association (ACA), the number of angel groups has tripled since 1999. According to the Center for Venture Research at the University of New Hampshire, in 2010 in the U.S., 265,400 angels invested $20.1 billion in 61,900 companies creating 370,000 new jobs. This puts angels at rough parity with VCs, who according the National Venture Capital Association invested $23.3 billion in 2010. There are now angel groups in virtually every city in the U.S. The ACA has over 150 angel groups as members from 49 states and 6 Canadian provinces. Although data is harder to come by outside the U.S., there are many indicators that there is good growth in angel investing around the world.
In order have the greatest success at creating new jobs, ensuring economic prosperity and solving the major challenges facing humanity, we need more angel investing. The good news is that there are two key factors that poise us for a boom in angel investing. First, the ACA estimates that the potential number of angel investors (defined as those with over $1 million in net worth) is approximately 4 million. Second, in much the same way that the global competitive environment is flattening due to advances in information technology, so is the start-up funding environment.
There is a huge opportunity to make angel investors of a good chunk of the 4 million high net worth individuals that are currently sitting on the sidelines. The ACA and Angel Capital Education Foundation have made a great contribution by creating a professional association for angels, which among other many other things compiles and disseminates best practices for the field. Both are spinoffs of The Kauffman Foundation and are based in Kansas City. The proliferation of angel groups makes it easier for high net worth individuals that are new to the game to find a community in which they can get up the learning curve and plug into deal flow.
Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) applications like AngelSoft make it easier for angel groups to aggregate deal flow and syndicate deals. This is good for both entrepreneurs and investors – taking down traditional barriers and limits and thus flattening the investment process. The ability to aggregate deal flow from multiple sources dramatically increases the number of deals to which an angel investor has access. Workflow management capabilities enable angels to more easily collaborate and use their collective intelligence in sourcing deals, performing due diligence, and overseeing their investments. The angels thus have unprecedented access to more and better start-up investment opportunities. This type of application is also good for entrepreneurs because they have access to a much wider range of potential investors than ever before, and therefore unprecedented access to investment capital.
It is the common wisdom in many quarters that globalization and the “flattening” of the world spells doom for the U.S. To the contrary, by using these same forces creatively we can stay in a leadership position. Activating the sleeping potential of angel investors and embracing these new technologies can produce exciting entrepreneurial successes, powerful new product and services, robust job creation and a myriad of ways to address the pressing challenges facing humanity.
------------------------------------------
Written by Scott Mize. Scott is a Silicon Valley Venture Development Executive and is the moderator of the Think Big Kansas City panel on “Lessons Learned from Kansas City Entrepreneurs You May Not Have Heard Of”. He can be reached at ayesem@earthlink.net.
Thursday, December 2, 2010
InvestMidwest: Start Chasing Your American Dream with the Top Venture Capital Firms in the Midwest!
There’s no need to travel to the East or West Coast to connect with top venture capital firms. In fact, you need to look no further than Kansas City, Missouri. InvestMidwest is the venture conference of the Midwest for entrepreneurs and startup companies located within the center corridor of the United States.
The 12th annual InvestMidwest conference provides entrepreneurs the opportunity to pitch their business ideas with ten minute PowerPoint presentations to some of the top venture capital firms in the Midwest including venture capitalists, private investors and corporate investors. The conference will showcase companies in three different industry tracks including life sciences, technology/general business and cleantech/alternative energy. With business pitches given to over 250 attendees, InvestMidwest is an effective way to receive potential capital funding from respected and experienced firms.
“It’s our goal to find the best companies in the Midwest to showcase for our investor audience,” says Christine Walsh, executive director of InvestMidwest. “This is a venture-fundable opportunity that is an obvious need in the Missouri-Kansas market.”
With over $400 million in investment in 11 years, InvestMidwest is every entrepreneur’s dream. And it’s not too late to apply for this once-a-year opportunity. Applications are being accepted December 1st through January 7th. All companies will be contacted by February 11th regarding their acceptance. In order to apply for InvestMidwest, companies must meet the following criteria:
• Located within the center corridor of the United States
• Seeking $1M to $20M in funding
• Revenue projections of $20M within five years (with the exception of life sciences companies)
InvestMidwest will take place March 30-31st in Kansas City. To learn more about the event, visit the InvestMidwest website or contact Christine Walsh at cwalsh@stlrcga.org or 314-444-1151.
Written by Allison Way. Allison is a writer and videographer for Think Big Partners and bizperc, two of Kansas City’s newest entrepreneurial resources. To read more of Allison’s work, check out the Kansas City Entrepreneurship Examiner.
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InvestMidwest is an opportunity for Kansas City entrepreneurs to receive funding and achieve their American Dream. |
There’s no need to travel to the East or West Coast to connect with top venture capital firms. In fact, you need to look no further than Kansas City, Missouri. InvestMidwest is the venture conference of the Midwest for entrepreneurs and startup companies located within the center corridor of the United States.
The 12th annual InvestMidwest conference provides entrepreneurs the opportunity to pitch their business ideas with ten minute PowerPoint presentations to some of the top venture capital firms in the Midwest including venture capitalists, private investors and corporate investors. The conference will showcase companies in three different industry tracks including life sciences, technology/general business and cleantech/alternative energy. With business pitches given to over 250 attendees, InvestMidwest is an effective way to receive potential capital funding from respected and experienced firms.
“It’s our goal to find the best companies in the Midwest to showcase for our investor audience,” says Christine Walsh, executive director of InvestMidwest. “This is a venture-fundable opportunity that is an obvious need in the Missouri-Kansas market.”
With over $400 million in investment in 11 years, InvestMidwest is every entrepreneur’s dream. And it’s not too late to apply for this once-a-year opportunity. Applications are being accepted December 1st through January 7th. All companies will be contacted by February 11th regarding their acceptance. In order to apply for InvestMidwest, companies must meet the following criteria:
• Located within the center corridor of the United States
• Seeking $1M to $20M in funding
• Revenue projections of $20M within five years (with the exception of life sciences companies)
“InvestMidwest allows companies to stay here instead of heading off to the coasts for capital raising opportunities,” says Walsh. “We very much appreciate the support of the Midwest community—especially in Kansas City. Their support means the world to us.”
InvestMidwest provides access to capital for emerging, privately held companies and to promote greater entrepreneurship, business growth and expansion in the Midwest. Is your company looking for an exceptional business opportunity? InvestMidwest may be it!
InvestMidwest will take place March 30-31st in Kansas City. To learn more about the event, visit the InvestMidwest website or contact Christine Walsh at cwalsh@stlrcga.org or 314-444-1151.
Written by Allison Way. Allison is a writer and videographer for Think Big Partners and bizperc, two of Kansas City’s newest entrepreneurial resources. To read more of Allison’s work, check out the Kansas City Entrepreneurship Examiner.
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