Entrepreneurship Tips

How Do I Get Introductions to Venture Capitalists for a Warm Call Instead of a Cold Call?

Posted by Robert Norton on

How Do I Get Introductions to Venture Capitalists for a Warm Call Instead of a Cold Call?

My favorite technique is approaching the CEOs they have invested in before, which are often available in public records or on their respective websites. First you need to target very narrowly the right investors for your type of deal by industry, stage and sometimes geography. Then with this focused list you can find their portfolios, and the CEOs of those companies. Although many CEOs will not take your calls the right approach, asking for help, not money, can get you their sympathy and a lunch. Not long ago they were you and the founder, bond can be powerful. Click here...

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How Does An Outside Investor Determine Pre Money Valuation?

Posted by Robert Norton on

How Does An Outside Investor Determine Pre Money Valuation?

Here is a graph showing the deals reported to Pitch deck, which could easily be skewed very high by all the smaller deals that go unreported Learn more about our Growth and Scaling (GSP)Certification program for Managers For a free video consultation call on what yourcompany and team need to scale better Click here to get this Financial Package To get entrepreneurship tips, check out Bob's Blog Bob Norton is a long-time Serial Entrepreneur and CEO with four exits that returned over $1 billion to investors. He has trained, coached and advised over 1,000 CEOs since 2002. And is Founder of The CEO...

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How Do I Find an Approach Angel Investors?

Posted by Robert Norton on

How Do I Find an Approach Angel Investors?

Networking is the key strategy. You need to get out there and meet other CEOs, investors and key referral sources at physical events. LinkedIn can be a way to find them, but cold approaches are difficult. I get invitations to invest every week from people I do not know, and I am certain most are not high-quality deals within seconds from their email, deck or type of approach.  Bad English, missing key data, no team background and a hundred other red flags mean an instant rejection. Too many to even send five minutes looking at them when the CEO cannot...

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How is it Possible that A Startup Company Can Raise A $100 Million Dollars Or More?

Posted by Robert Norton on

How is it Possible that A Startup Company Can Raise A $100 Million Dollars Or More?

The more money that is poured into a deal, the lower the risk and more market share they are likely to garner. And hot deals where growth and financial projections are getting real can create a feeding frenzy among investors. It is also likely that these larger investment can scare off smaller competitors.  It is often assumed there are a limited number of winners in any given market. Click here to get this Financial Package Furthermore, it could be three or ten, but limited. Therefore, more money means lower risk and higher upside. Sometimes these deal with blow up, proving...

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What Kind of Return Do Investors Expect When They Invest In A Startup or Small Company for The Long Term?

Posted by Robert Norton on

What Kind of Return Do Investors Expect When They Invest In A Startup or Small Company for The Long Term?

They say venture capitalist would like a 40% IRR which is an approximation of their ROI, but this is all fantasy based on assumptions that drive the financial projections.  Pessimistic projections can be used to negotiate lower pre-money valuation prices.  So the CEO/Founders are selling the potential while the investors are selling the downside risks. Angel investors would like to see good returns like this too, but are unlikely to develop their own models to their own assumptions as the amount of work involve is large, and they have no associates to do that work. Angel syndicates on $1M+ deals...

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