Posts Tagged ‘Fool’s Gold’

User Experience at Grow VC

Friday, March 20th, 2009
Google Buzz

Christoffer LangenskiöldHi, my name is Chris(toffer) and I stand for User Experience at Grow VC. I work and live here in Helsinki (Finland) with my wife and my 4 year-old twins. My free time? Astanga yoga, cruising on my sector9 and Grow VC : )

With a background in Cognitive Technologies, User-centered Product Development and a strong personal interest in visual design, I end-up noticing every little details when I walk down the street, whether they make something easy-to-use, crash-and-burn or flow. Anyway, I manage anything related to the user experience, from user studies to UI design, via branding and marketing.

During the past few months, I’ve been studying entrepreneurs, start-ups, business angels and how early phase funding is done today. Not very pretty: according to Scott Shane writes in Fool’s Gold, less than 1.5% of angel backed start-ups end in exits. It is facts like that which drive me when I design Grow VC. Aiming at a place where people would grow as investors and entrepreneurs. Get the best feedback, learn from others, improve your business plan, not only to better find investors, but to increase your chances of success.

I hope to share with you either via my twitter @christoff3r anything related User Experience and on this blog anything that cross-relates it to Grow VC.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark

Who are business angels – how to make angel investing work better

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009
Google Buzz

Scott Shane has written an excellent book about angel investing: Fool’s Gold, The Truth Behind Angel Investing in America. It is the best and most fact oriented book I have seen about the angel investing. Many finding are really revealing. They are from the US, but based on my own expriences I believe results would be similar in Europe and Asia too. For example, actually business angels look very different from the way that they are described in the media. The typical business angel is less wealthy, less well-educated, younger, and less likely to be retired that suggested by the stereotypical description of angels. For example, the wealth statistics are interesting, 2/3 of the angels have less than $1 Million net worth. It very much indicating that almost anyone can be a business angel.

The book also list many different reasons to invest:
1. To Make Money
2. To Get Involved with Private Companies
3. To Learn New Things
4. As a Hobby Job
5. To Find a Job
6. To Help the Community
7. Because a Friend of a Friend Has a Business

I recommend this book to every one who wants to make angel investments or entrepreneurs who look for angel investors. This book also gives many concrete ideas, how to develop angel investing. Angels can be an important source of money for many companies, and the total value of annual angel investments is greater than VC investments. But angel investments could be even more important funding source, but all players like entrepreneurs, angels, banks, VC’’s and policy makers should better understand facts of angel investing.

My conclusion was that more open market place, better deal flow, better transparency (to know companies but also investors better), and opportunities to co-invest with other angels are important areas to make angel investing work better. Angel investment market today is not effective (i.e. not enough transparency, no open deal flow, high transaction costs) and by making it more effective, we can make it much more significant.

  • Share/Save/Bookmark