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Want to Reach Entrepreneurial Heaven? Ask an Angel Published
with permission from Knowledge@Wharton |
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Adam
Breslin readily admits that before he was ready
to put his business plan to the test, he was
looking for a little help from above. But
Breslin wasn't banking on divine intervention,
he was simply courting angels. Breslin's
courtship with so-called angels–the earliest
of early-stage investors–resulted in
investments from seven sources totaling more
than $1 million for his Washington, D.C.-based
company, Pinpoint Training, which he founded
four months ago with partner Lawrence Berger. "To
be honest, it's not that tough to find a few
doctors or lawyers who will toss $25,000 a piece
into your company," Breslin says. "But
it's a whole different story if you're looking
for people who can add value to your business by
providing expertise, contacts and management
advice." Breslin's
experience in the rapidly evolving world of
angel investing provides a glimpse into a
segment of the private-equity market that falls
well below the radar screens of most venture
capital firms and big institutional investors.
For many entrepreneurs, angels provide
capital–and frequently, valuable guidance and
strategic assistance–that they would likely
not find anywhere else. "Not
every start-up is going to take the angel path
because they might be able to rely on their
resources for awhile, maybe they have access to
family money, or they can develop their business
on the side while they hold down a regular
job," says Mark Dane Fraga, managing
director of Wharton's Sol
C. Snider Entrepreneurial Research Center.
"But for those who need money to pay their
bills, fund development of a certain technology
or finance a market analysis, angel money could
not possibly be more important." Angel
Roll Call Drawn
by the allure of the spectacular returns rung up
by some start-up companies over the past several
years, a growing band of angels has pumped new
energy–and tens of billions of dollars–into
start-ups. Often, the recipients of these
investments are little more than an enthusiastic
entrepreneur and a rough-around-the-edges
business concept. Though
exact numbers are hard to come by, active angels
are believed to number more than 1 million.
According to estimates from the Center for
Venture Research at the University of New
Hampshire, angels invest a total of more than
$40 billion a year in 50,000 companies. They are
risk takers for whom the payoff for a good
investment may be a decade down the road. "A
venture capital firm will back you once your
business model is proven. Or they'll invest if
your model isn't proven, as long as your
business is glamorous," says Breslin, CEO
of Pinpoint Training, which delivers business
and management training both at company
locations and over the Internet. "But there
are a lot of companies that don't fit into
either of these categories and yet have a
legitimate need for capital. That's where angels
come in." Angels
take many different forms. They may be an
entrepreneur's friends or family members, a
professional who has accumulated a fair amount
of wealth, or an entrepreneur who has created a
successful business and is seeking a way to put
some of his or her capital to work. Angels also
share certain traits: Most stick close to home,
financing companies in or near their own
backyard. Typically, angels invest from $25,000
to more than $1 million, and prefer to be part
of a group of investors. "When
it comes down to it, I'm looking for Grade A
management, a terrific business model and great
execution of that model," says Ralph Mack,
a New York-based angel, who has invested in more
than 25 companies over the past five years.
"I realize that's what everyone says
they're looking for, but you'd be surprised at
the number of people who think they can get by
on just a good idea." Mack
says that the companies that capture his
attention are also those that have:
Mack,
whose investments include MGC Communications,
iVillage and eTechtransfer.com–the winner of
Wharton's 2000 Business Plan Competition–took
an interest in nurturing start-up businesses
during the early 1980s, and helped develop a
Wharton program on new ventures. "I saw a
lot of real solid business plans, but in those
days there just wasn't a lot of money around to
finance them," he says. "Now, there's
plenty of money out there chasing deals, but the
key is matching the right money and the right
business. It's not always easy." The
Ideal Angel Many
angels and entrepreneurs agree that finding that
match is not only difficult, but essential. "The
ideal angel is someone who is a generation ahead
of you in creating value in the industry that
your product will serve," says Wharton's
Fraga. "They'll provide financial capital
as well as intellectual capital, which could be
even more important than the money. That's why I
always tell entrepreneurs that they should be
doing as much due diligence on angels as the
angels are doing on them." New
York-based DealMaven LLC's quest for financing
has centered on an age-old business strategy:
Networking. The company, a developer of software
that helps investment banks analyze financial
transactions, is close to putting the wraps on a
$200,000 round of angel financing, says Andy
Stack, a partner and manager of investor
relations for DealMaven, which also offers
online training for financial services
companies. Vince
Scafaria, DealMaven's founder, has tapped many
contacts from his days at Donaldson, Lufkin
& Jenrette as investors for his venture.
"Our connections," Stack says,
"have been enormously helpful in not only
identifying investors but in identifying
investors who understand investment banking and
provide us with some real expertise." Stack
believes the keys to a successful round of early
financing are being somewhat selective in
choosing investors and always keeping in mind
that angels are not philanthropists. "You
have to make sure there's something exciting for
them from a financial perspective and that you
illustrate for them the kind of increase in
valuation they might expect," he notes. Some
of the difficulties of pairing the
"right" angel with the
"right" startup have been erased by
the Internet, which has enabled groups of
investors to band together to form networks.
Fraga points to web ventures such as www.garage.com
and www.venturehighway.com,
which work to match investors with businesses,
as powerful examples of how the World Wide Web
has "greased the wheels for angels and
start-ups." From
Entrepreneur To Angel And Back Jerry
Bedrin is an entrepreneur turned angel. About
two years ago, Bedrin sold the office supply
company he founded and began his career as an
angel. Since then, he has invested in about 20
businesses, typically contributing about
$100,000 to a financing round of $1 million to
$2 million. "I
saw the success that traditional VCs were having
with large amounts of money and I thought it
would be fun to join in but I didn't have the
kind of resources they had," Bedrin says.
"I learned pretty quickly that there's a
big market out there for people who want to make
smaller investments in new companies that the
VCs won't touch." Bedrin,
whose investments are concentrated in
technology-related companies, has been impressed
with the business plans that have come across
his desk. "I'm talking to credible business
people with great credentials and solid plans
who are coming up with world-changing kinds of
ideas. "I
know everyone says you have to concentrate on
the management team in order to decide whether
to make an investment, but I'm still driven by
the power of a new idea that has the potential
to change the way people or companies do
things," says Bedrin, who is getting ready
to launch a small-business incubator that will
offer office space, back-office support and even
seed capital to young companies. The
most common shortcoming among entrepreneurs, he
says, is that some "underestimate the
complexity of what they're getting into and how
hard it is to raise money to keep going or to
expand." Adds
Mack, the New York-based angel: "Angels are
often there to help you get going when no one
else will. The money you get from them can help
you [clear] certain hurdles and prove to others
down the line that you and your model are for
real.
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