Tag Archives: Investment

What You Probably Don’t Know About Angel Investors

Fool's Gold: Truth about Angel Investing by Scott ShaneThe handful of angel investors I’ve met were moderately affluent, 40ish yuppies who seemed to enjoy the thrill of having a front row seat at the game of business.  Being an angel investor is nothing like the risk of being an entrepreneur, since all their eggs aren’t in one basket and a deal gone South is not going to make or break them. But, hey I’m glad they’re out there and occasionally willing to take a flier on a young company.

Angels usually invest in groups of 2 to 5, so when you hear how much money each of them invests, remember there will likely be more than one looking at your deal, so the amount of cash invested could go higher.

Angels invest in 50 times the number of deals venture capitalists invest in, which is a pretty good clue as where to look for money, at least in the initial stages of a business. Another differentiating factor is, angel money is very patient money, and they are willing to wait a number of years, far longer than a venture capitalist, for a return on their investment.

There are probably active angel investor groups in your city. Ask your banker, lawyer or accountant to help you identify them, and, if possible, introduce you.  I’ve also provided a list of angel directories below, but the best course is always to find a business person or lawyer to give you a personal introduction to a local group.

For more detail about angel investors Anita Campbell over at | Small Business Trends always has a sound and pragmatic take on business issues. She has written about a new book by her colleague Scott Shane, one of the Small Business Trends Experts. Anita says in Fool’s Gold: The Truth Behind Angel Investing in America :” Scott (is) someone always ready with the facts. Often those facts are contrary to popular belief or common wisdom. Very often he floats a provocative idea that challenges you to think.

For instance, you may have had the notion that individual angels are rich — or at least very well off — and invest a lot of money in each business.  Not necessarily so, says the new book “Fool’s Gold: The Truth Behind Angel Investing in America.”

You might wonder how a book of facts and data could help you as an entrepreneur. That’s easy. From information gleaned you can get a much better idea of such things as:

  • why angels invest (it may be as much about having a hobby as making money)
  • how angels decide on which businesses to invest in (with less investigation than you’d expect)
  • how angel investors come up with valuations and what kind of ownership interest they will expect (most don’t do formal valuations and they demand smaller ownership stakes than you might expect)
  • where and how to find angel investors (hint: look locally)

All of these things will help you understand how to appeal to angel investors.  I put together the following chart with a handful of the many misconceptions and the corresponding real facts, so you can see the kind of information the book can give you (this is a small sampling):

Thanks to Anita for that eye opening chart!

To help get you started, if you’re searching for an angel, Inc. compiled a list of U.S. angel networks. Because many angel groups limit their investments to a particular geographical area, we’ve divided the list into eight regions: Pacific Northwest, Southwest, Mid-Atlantic, Northeast, North Central, California, South, and Midwest. There is also a category for those groups that consider investments anywhere in the country. In addition, there is ACE-Net (The Angel Capital Electronic Network) developed by the U.S. Small Business Administration‘s Office of Advocacy for those who can sell security interests in their company.

National Networks

Pacific Northwest

Southwest

Mid-Atlantic

Northeast

North Central

California

South

Midwest

Again, the best bet is always to get a colleague, a lawyer or accountant to give you a personal introduction to a local group.  At the very least you may make some new and interesting friends who are plugged into the local business world.

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Want To Get Rich? Stop Trading Hours For Dollars

If you work and are paid by the hour, your income is limited by the number of working hours you have at your disposal.  Like everyone else, all you have is time and your time is finite.  If, however, you are able somehow to expand the time available to you, without expending any more effort or acquiring any more skills or expertise…. becoming a brain surgeon for instance, an estate attorney for the seriously affluent or a used car magnate…you will be able to earn more.

How do you do this?  How do you expand your time? Every affluent person knows the answer to this.  One way or another, you have to find a way to climb out of the traditional and perpetual trading hours for dollars method of earning money.  Yes, you can earn some money that way but only with your core expertise.  And let that money be your launching pad.

Here’s how the people who start climbing towards wealth do it.

Take Anna.  Let’s say she’s a seamstress.  She makes so many dollars an hour sewing.  She buys a sewing machine and the automation allows her to work faster and make more money.  She is able to hire more workers, buy more machines and the next thing you know she has a small factory.  Anna is now able to use her time training others, moving from doing to delegating, overseeing quality, and spreading the word about her sewing enterprise. Business picks up.  Anna is starting to make a lot more money

Anna is on her way to attaining wealth because she  was able to stop trading hours for dollars.  How did she do this?  She had a skill and developed a reputation around the quality of her skill.  She could have raised her prices incrementally and continued to get more customers but, in the end, she would have been limited by the time she had available to work.  Instead, she invested in automation and labor, which freed up her time to market her services.  All her customers knew Anna, liked the quality of her work, and felt comfortable that if they dealt with her, she would guarantee good quality.  They didn’t care who sewed the material or what brand of sewing machine they used.

Whether you are an online entrepreneur or a work at home mom, you can do the same thing. Once you have established your business and built it up to a certain point, you have some choices to expand your supply of time so you can do what you do best, which is probably to design, produce, sell and maintain the quality of  your product or service:

1.  Automate – If you’re not a techie, ask a local tech guru or college student to set up as many automated features as possible on your computer.  Have emails with a certain subject line go into their own email box.  Set up an auto responder with a series of messages that fit your most common situations.  Set up a service to answer your phone and fax then send a voice mail to your in box. Don’t answer your phone except during a certain, designated time each day when you return calls. Put as many of your bills as possible on auto pay. See what other repetitive chores can be automated.

2. Outsource -Give up all the routine, administrative work someone else can do for you: from book keeping to setting up online accounts, there’s someone out there you can find through Google or eLance.com who can do it better and faster and free up your time to create, oversee and market, which pays a lot more.

3. Offload non-essential tasks. This means getting rid of anything that’s a time consumer and not an income producer, including in your personal life.  I hope you’re not still mowing your own lawn or cleaning your own home, if you’re trying to start, grow or run a business at the same time.  I have a friend who works at a top national radio chain.  She pointed out that the common denominator of every successful female executive she knew was that they had household help.

4. Invest for Passive Income – Aside from the fact that you want to save and invest, you want your money to be working for you.  It’s the same principle as hiring an employee or contract labor: someone else is carrying some of the load while you are out doing what you do best.  And your hours have been stretched. Plus which, if you’re ever injured or can’t or don’t want to work, investments producing passive income keep working for you.

5. Diversify - My father used to say  you should always have at least three businesses because there will never be a time when one of them isn’t doing badly.  Scale that back and say three revenue streams.  Same principle as not having only one big client. What do you do when they drop you, hire their brother-in-law or go under? What do you do when one revenue stream dries up or sinks like a rock in river?  Better have another to fall back on.

Lessons From My Business

In my web business, I devote my skills and attention to the creation or gathering of high quality content, graphics and business processes for the website or blog I am producing or overseeing for another organization.  Someone else can do the rest. I do some of the tech aspects since I had to learn to do them when the web was still getting cranked up and there were few techs and no automated software around.  But if I can pay someone, say $300 to handle a tech piece, while I am creating, say  $1,000 or $1,200 in revenue, that seems to me like a pretty good trade off for everybody. The tech gets more jobs, the client gets a great product faster, and I create more revenue for my company.  Everybody wins.  Right?

Tell us what you think.  Tell us how you stretch your hours.  Does this post help you?  Share your thoughts with us.

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How To Raise Capital For Your Company

Victorinox Swiss Army knife, photo taken in Sw...

Image via Wikipedia

To continue with the second in a series on raising money:  This is more like a reference, a Swiss army knife of best ways to pitch your product or service, and its benefit to the consumer and its ultimate profitability for your investor. You may not want to browse through it in one sitting.  But you might well want to book mark it and come back to it for future reference.  It is chock full of useful and specific information for each step of your proposal like ..
“The Little Man Technique” (Art of the Start)Why should the investor care?

1. You say a feature.
2. Little Man asks “So what?”
3. You reply with the benefit
4. Elaborate with an example ( connect the dots)

So here goes…
For more see:
Or buy this book:

The Startup Company Bible for Entrepreneurs: The Complete Guide For Building Successful Companies and Raising Venture Capital.

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Is Your Business Fundable Or Is It Viable – There’s A Difference

Ok.  I’m going to offer a mini-series today on raising money for your business.  I’m not going to do it alone. I’m going to call on some experts to come into the room and help explain this.  I understand some of this may be a bit esoteric if you’re not out there trying to raise money from venture capitalists.  But I think it is extremely helpful anyway, because anyone who goes into business will need to raise money and keep raising it for a good while until you pass that magic threshold when the business is self sustaining.  So, here’s Guy Kawasaki ( and if you’re short on time, I suggest you at least watch the first video where Guy sums up 5 main points.)

How to Change the World: The Art of Raising Venture Capital – Guy Kawasaki

Guy says “These videos are my recent attempt to explain the art of raising venture capital. They are part of the Montgomery & Hansen online learning site and conference. For example, to learn about financing agreements and the term-sheet process, click here.

Click on these links for up-to-date information about venture capital, startups, and pitching.

For more go to:

The Cold, Hard Facts About Business Plans, Elevator Pitches And VC Presentations
Family, Fools and Friends, Seed Stage, Angels and VCs – Where the Money Comes From

Or buy Amazon.com: Reality Check: The Irreverent Guide to Outsmarting, Outmanaging, and Outmarketing Your Competition: Guy Kawasaki: Books.

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