Your Name:
Your Email Address:
Friend's Name:
Friend's Email Address:
  
Columnist Image

If you have taken angel money from a VC or individual partner, by all means don’t advertise the fact to potential Series A leads.

The guys over at Venturehacks have come up with an excellent idea to create a curated list of tech-focused angel investors.  While I fully support the project, I did notice that the list of “angels” includes a number of GPs at traditional Venture Capital firms.  I know many of the GPs and they are all great people and great investors, but this situation reminded me of one of my critical fundraising rules for entreprenuers:  Don’t take angel investments from VCs. 

 
Why not? you ask.  Well let me tell you a story to illustrate the point:
 
I once knew an entreprenuer who took a small angel investment from a well known VC firm.  Things went well and the entreprenuer went out to raise to raise a formal Series A.  The VC that invested in the angel round tried to the pre-empt the Series A fundraising with a low-ball term sheet, but the entrepreneur thought he could do better and politely told them “thanks, but i’d like to test the market”.  The response of the VC was swift and furious. For all intents and purposes, they basically told the entrepreneur that he had better take their low-ball offer because if he didn’t they wouldn’t invest and if they didn’t invest he basically had zero chance of raising money because every other VC that looked at the deal would assume that the reason the angel VC wasn’t investing was because there was something wrong with the company.  The entreprenuer, to their everlasting credit, stood up to the VCs’ blackmail tactics and eventually raised a Series A, but not after the Angel VC withdrew their EIR (who had been serving as an advisor) and then invested in a competitor and installed the EIR (with all his inside information) as COO.  I kid you not.  True story.
 
Now this is an admittedly an extreme example of the perils of taking angel money from a VC, but the basic lesson holds:  If you take money from a VC in your angel round, at a minimum you expose yourself to the huge risk that the VC will not want to invest in the Series A which will make raising your Series A much, much harder.  Also, having a VC in your angel round can scare off other investors who will assume the VC has the inside track to lead the round and therefore will not bother doing any work.  Thus, if at all possible I reccomend leaving VCs out of your angel round, even if they are just making a personal investment.  That said there are a few “super angel” VC firm’s, such as Angel Investors, Softtech, etc. that are OK to take angel money from because it’s well understood in the VC community that angel investing is their primary focus and thus there are no expectations that they will lead Series A rounds.
 
Now I’m sure there are plenty of examples where a VC invested in an angel round and everything worked out fine, but from the entreprenuer’s perspective why take the risk unless you absolutely have to (i.e. no one else will give you angel money).   If you have taken angel money from a VC or individual partner, by all means don’t advertise the fact to potential Series A leads.
 
I am going to suggest to Nivi at Venture Hacks that they divide the list into Angels and early stage VCs or something like that such that people at least known which side of fence the different investors are on.

 

Comments

BHARAT KANANI,

In Indian Environment raising Angel / Early Stage VC Funding is very difficult, there are number of Educational Institutes running Incubation Centers in India where Entrepreneur / Group of young professional develop business model i.e. Product or Services after lots of involvements from the various type of Mentors and guidance from the highly educated Professors and Experienced professional fails in getting Angel / Early VC Funding., under such circumstances what one will do, the only option is to accept the money coming from GP similar sources. One thing is very clear that who ever may be the first round investor, majority of them will have proper documentation and also may obtain first right of refusal.

Post new comment

  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.

More information about formatting options



Job By Category

View All

Job By Location

View All
Indepth
Doing Due Diligence Of A Company In "Troubled Waters"
SUJJAIN TALWAR & RAMYA MOHAN, ECONOMIC LAWS PRACTISE
Companies in ‘troubled waters’ normally pay less attention to compliance matters.
What Regulation Applies if No Exemption is Granted?
SAHIL SHAH & VAIDYANATHAN IYER, NISHITH DESAI ASSOCIATES
No convincing argument was made by the promoters to SEBI for obtaining the exemption in the case of Citadel Realty.
Interviews
AIM head brushes aside the shareholder activism dampener as specific to just a few cos & not a wide phenomenon.
Siguler Guff's Praneet Singh says PE Funds need to tighten processes and operations.