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Turning the Corner: Trends in Angel Investingby John May, Managing Partner New Vantage Group and Vice Chairman Angel Capital Association
This article sets out to shine a light on the current state of the sophisticated, non-family provision of growth capital to struggling entrepreneurs. It is clear that individual business angels have been and will continue to be integral to funding the gap after exhaustion of start-up and proof of concept funding, and prior to venture, strategic or customer financing. However, a more effective market – a more transparent market – is evolving with the growth of several second-generation, structured angel groups. The dominance of structured angel groups on the two coasts, founded by successful high tech entrepreneurs and the Internet wealth generation, is giving way to varied groups being formed by business men and women of all types who are sadder but wiser after losing billions in the aftermath of the telecom and Internet crash.
What entrepreneurs should know about angels who were burned after the bubbleA mighty learning came out of four summit meetings held by leaders of existing investment groups and sponsored by the Kauffman Foundation of Kansas City in 2002 and 2003. Excessive enthusiasm and a 5,000 NASDAQ had blinded us to the common sense principals of growing businesses, rather than playing at financial engineering; of doing deep due diligence and mentoring entrepreneurs, instead of investing and hoping. Twenty million dollar pre-money valuations for common stock investments, with few protections, were not uncommon. What the heck, venture capitalists were obtaining buyouts of $900 million for $1 million-revenue e-commerce startups! After the crash, the decline in individual disposable investment capital impacted high-tech, service, lifestyle and family private businesses alike. Thus began the retrenchment of seed and early stage investment in 2001 that declined further in 2003, only showing signs of new life in 2004. Members of the Angel Capital Association (ACA) are reporting growth – more dollars are being invested and new investment groups are in formation than since the heady days of 1999-2001.
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