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Angel Investors
Your business needs cash to survive and
thrive in today's fast-moving new economy. We can introduce
you to angel investor community and help you prepare your business
plan to knock their socks off!
Want to go public
but don't know how? Ready for an IPO but concerned about how
to go about it. We can help. Let's sit down and discuss your
financing needs and what we can do to help you get what you
need to grow.
Angel investors are individuals who
invest in businesses looking for a higher return than they
would see from more traditional investments. Many are
successful entrepreneurs who want to help other
entrepreneurs get their business off the ground. Usually
they are the bridge from the self-funded stage of the
business to the point that the business needs the level of
funding that a venture capitalist would offer. Funding
estimates vary, but usually range from $150,000 to $1.5
million, sometimes significantly less.
The term "angel" comes from the
practice in the early 1900's of wealthy businessmen
investing in Broadway productions. Today "angels" typically
offer expertise, experience and contacts in addition to
money. The Small Business Administration estimates that
there are at least 250,000 angels active in the country,
funding about 30,000 small companies a year. The total
investment from angels has been estimated at anywhere from
$20 billion to $50 billion as compared to the $3 to $5
billion per year that the formal venture capital community
invests. In fact, the potential pool of angel investors is
substantially larger. There are over two million people in
the United States
with the discretionary net worth to make angel investments.
The Center for Venture Research at the
University
of
New Hampshire
which does research on angel investments has developed the
following profile of angel investors:
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The "average" private investor is 47
years old with an annual income of $90,000, a net worth
of $750,000, is college educated, has been self employed
and invests $37,000 per venture.
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Most angels invest close to home and
rarely put in more than a few hundred thousand dollars.
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Informal investment appears to be the
largest source of external equity capital for small
businesses. Nine out of 10 investments are devoted to
small, mostly start-up firms with fewer than 20
employees.
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Nine out of 10 investors provide
personal loans or loan guarantees to the firms they
invest in. On average, this increase the available
capital by 57%.
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Informal investors are older, have
higher incomes, and are better educated than the average
citizen, yet they are not often millionaires. They are a
diverse group, displaying a wide range of personal
characteristics and investment behavior.
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Seven out of 10 investments are made
within 50 miles of the investor's home or office.
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Investors expect an average 26%
annual return at the time they invest, and they believe
that about one-third of their investments are likely to
result in a substantial capital loss.
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Investors accept an average of 3
deals for every 10 considered. The most common reasons
given for rejecting a deal are insufficient growth
potential, overpriced equity, lack of sufficient talent
of the management, or lack of information about the
entrepreneur or key personnel.
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There appears to be no shortage of
informal capital funds. Investors included in the study
would have invested almost 35% more than they did if
acceptable opportunities had been available.
For the business seeking funding, the
right angel investor can be the perfect first step in formal
funding. It usually takes less time to meet with an angel
and to receive funds, due diligence is less involved and
angels usually expect a lower rate of return than a venture
capitalist. The downside is finding the right balance of
expert help without the angel totally taking charge of the
business. Structuring the relationship carefully is an
important step in the process.
What Does an Angel Investor Expect?
There are almost as many answers to
what angels expect as there are angels. Each has their own
criteria and foibles because they are individuals. Almost
all want a board position and possibly a consulting role.
All want good communication although for some that means
quarterly reports, while for others that means weekly
updates. Return objectives range from a projected internal
rate of return of 30% over five years to sales projections
of $20 million in the first five years to the potential
return of five times investment in the first five years.
Most are looking for anything from a five to 25 percent
stake in the business. Some want securities - either common
stock or preferred stock with certain rights and liquidation
preferences over common stock. Some even ask for convertible
debt, or redeemable preferred stock, which provides a
clearer exit strategy for the investor, but also places the
company at the risk of repaying the investment plus
interest. Additionally, the repayment may imperil future
financing since those sources will not likely want to use
their investment to bail out prior investors.
Some angels ask for the right of first
refusal to participate in the next round of financing. While
this sounds eminently reasonable, some venture capitalists
will want their own players only or certain investment
minimums so this strategy may limit who future participants
might be.
Future representation of the board of
directors also needs to be clarified. When a new round of
financing occurs, do they lose their board right? Or should
that could be based on a percentage ownership - when their
ownership level drops below a certain level, they no longer
have board representation.
In order to protect their investment,
angels often ask the business to agree to not take certain
actions without the angel investors approval. These include
selling all or substantially all of the company's assets,
issuing additional stock to existing management, selling
stock below prices paid by the investors or creating classes
of stock with liquidation preferences or other rights senior
to the angel's class of security. Angels also ask for price
protection, that is anti-dilution provisions that will
result in their receiving more stock should the business
issue stock at a lower price than that paid by the angels.
To prepare to solicit an angel, several
critical factors will aid in making the approach successful.
First, assemble an advisory board that includes a securities
accountant and an attorney. Two important functions of the
board are to recommend angels to contact and to work with
the management team to develop a business plan to present to
the angel. The business plan itself should define the reason
for financing, how the capital will be spent and the
timetable for going public or seeking venture capital
funding. It should include: an executive summary
(description of the business, opportunity and strategy,
target market, projections and competitive advantages); the
industry, the company and its products and services
(including entry and growth strategies); market research and
analysis (customers, market size and trends, competition,
estimated market share and sales); the economics of the
business (including gross and operating margins and
break-even analysis); marketing plan (overall strategy,
pricing, advertising, promotion, and distribution); design
and development plans (product/service improvement and new
products/services); manufacturing and operations plans
(geographic location, facilities and capacity improvements);
management team (organization overview, biographies and
compensation plans for key employees); financial plan (tax
returns, profit and loss forecasts, pro forma cash flow
analysis and balance sheets, 5-year projections); and
proposed company offering (desired financing, securities
offering, capitalization, timetable).
Most of all, take your time in forming a
relationship with an angel. You are going to be spending a
number of years together at a critical time in your
business' life. Take the time to assure yourself that this
is a person who you are comfortable with through both the
ups and downs the future will bring.
Let's talk today. . .
1-801-369-2225
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