Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Accredited investors investing in early stage companies

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Accredited investors investing in early stage companies"— Presentation transcript:

1 Accredited investors investing in early stage companies
Angel Investing 201 Accredited investors investing in early stage companies Agenda Stages of investing Why a Portfolio? Doing Due Diligence to build a portfolio

2 Not all companies use all these stages.
Stages of Investing Amounts raised $ $x0, $x00, $xx,000, $xx0,000,000 Exits Bootstrap Friends and Family Angels Venture Capital IPO Crowd Funding Strategic Investors M&A Kickstarter Private Equity Grants Time Not all companies use all these stages.

3 What (ideally) happens when investing?
Assume you make equal sized investments in 10 companies Then, maybe five companies will provide a return, and one of those will give you a big win. $ $

4 How Big a Portfolio? Minimum of 10 20 is better

5 Decide how much to invest in total
What percent of your assets do you want to put into this asset class, and over what period of time? Reserve funds for follow-on rounds.

6 Improve Return Probability – Do Due Diligence
X Analysis

7 The Due Diligence Payoff

8 Approaches to Due Diligence
Go solo Prepare to spend a week Be part of a team Our angels working together Build upon diligence reports of others Maybe this is a syndication deal and another team has put in many hours Harder Easier

9 Performing due diligence. What to understand, and how to do it.

10 The most important consideration!
Due Diligence Goals Gain confidence in the management team. The most important consideration! Gain confidence that the company will have significant social impact Gain confidence that the company will become profitable and provide a return to investors

11 Due Diligence Process Process can be short cycled if a quality due diligence report is available from another investor Identify deal lead & diligence team Team writes Deal Memo Angels decide whether to Invest Company application pitch deck & Supplemental info form Deal Memo is not an investment recommendation. Rather, it is a set of observations. Angels make individual investment decisions. Download documents at Team in conversation with company

12 Team Validation –Job #1 What to understand How
CEO’s emotional maturity Transparent, open, trustworthy, humble, coachable, always learning Good team collaboration and communication skills CEO’s startup experience Prior mistakes are good CEO’s domain knowledge of the company’s market Appropriate titles? How does the C-level team work together? 10 additional phone calls 3 to direct references supplied by CEO 4 to secondary references shared by direct references 3 to former co-workers, board members, investors LinkedIn is your friend Recruit other angels to help Have entire C-level team in the deep-dive meeting/call

13 Social Impact Validation
What to understand How Is impact their primary business mission? Example missions: Improving health outcome Improving educational outcomes Empowering disadvantaged groups Protecting the environment Company interview If in doubt: Talk to industry expert Speak to one beneficiary

14 Efficacy of the Social Impact
Look for demonstrated evidence of the effectiveness of their solution in addressing a significant societal challenge Does the company have a metric for reporting efficacy? Example: Consider a new STEM education tool Is there evidence that the tool results in better educational outcomes compared to existing tools? And, can the company demonstrate they can successfully sell it? Without customers there can be no efficacy.

15 Quantifying Impact How much impact is the company creating per individual? Useful, Helpful, Relieving, Life Changing How many people will the company directly impact? Tens, Hundreds, Thousands, Millions, Everyone How long does the impact last? Days, Weeks, Months, Years, Lifetime How long before the impact takes effect? Days, Weeks, Months, Years

16 More on Social Impact Impact is in the eye of the investor
Disingenuous test: Does their social-impact in their pitch-deck match the impact story on their home page?

17 Market Validation What to understand How
Can they demonstrate that they solve a problem for a payer who strongly feels that pain, and who has a budget to pay for a solution? Are there enough of those payers to generate enough revenue (big market)? Is there thorough validation of the market opportunity? Early revenue from payers is strong validation Phone calls with three to five payers Understand their pain point and budget Understand the sales channels they routinely use

18 Go-to-market validation
What to understand How How do they connect with potential customers? What is the cost of acquiring one incremental customer? What type of marketing and sales organization and partners do they need? And are they in place? Is the sales process scalable? Is the current process just talking to the CEO’s friends? Interview company If there is a significant sales partner, make a call One-on-one call with VP of Sales/CMO

19 Product/Technology Validation
What to understand How How ready is the product for full release? Modern and viable architecture that matches market need? Is the technology scalable? Are developers tightly coupled to market validation? If hardware, is the supply chain in place? Company interview Recruit an angel with domain knowledge, to help, or find an outside expert

20 Competitive Advantage Validation
What to understand How How significant is their competitive advantage? What keeps them successful five or ten years from now? Critical mass of customers? Sales channel lock? Supply chain lock? IP? Company interview Web search Recruit an angel with domain knowledge, to help, or find an outside expert Patent review

21 Financial Validation What to understand How
Reasonable bottom-up details driving the financial model? Credible, customer-driven revenue plan? Yes: “number of customers willing to pay how much to solve a problem” No: “we will get 10% of big market” Detailed review of their financial model Recruit an angel with domain knowledge, to help, or find an outside expert

22 Investor Return Validation
What to understand How With this investment, can the company achieve a business result that significantly increases valuation Is the pre-money valuation or cap reasonable? What percent ownership will we achieve? What future rounds of investments are anticipated? Acquisition examples? Attractive for syndication? Company interview Recruit an experienced angel to help

23 A Good Resource

24 Consider taking the Angel Investing 202 class

25 Angel 201 Feedback What was most helpful?
What was less interesting? What would you like to learn more about?


Download ppt "Accredited investors investing in early stage companies"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google