Angel Investing, Entrepreneurship & Learning

Brock Blake blogs…

Early-Stage Venture Capital Market

While reading through my daily google alerts, I came across an article that grabbed my attention.  The article is about the Northwest-based venture capital firm Monster Venture Partners and Rob Monster’s thoughts on the early-stage venture capital market.  The quote that stood out to me was:

“To keep up the current pace of investment and incubation, and capitalize on current low valuations and low operating costs for funding startups, now is a good time to raise an early stage fund,” says Monster. “In 24 months, many of the companies we back today will be ripe for harvest.”

I agree that now is a great time to raise an early-stage venture capital fund.  However, when I say “early-stage,” I’m not saying investments of $3-$5M, I’m saying investments of $750k-$3M.  Here are a few reasons why:

  1. It is widely known that there is a funding gap above the traditional angel investment ($300-$750k) and below the traditional VC investment ($3M+).
  2. Most of the current VCs can’t play in that space because their investment fund is just too large.  For example, if they have a $100M fund, it wouldn’t make sense to do 100 investments at $1M each because it would just be too hard for them to manage all of those portfolio companies.
  3. Most of the current VCs move up the food chain (into the larger investments) bc their management fee (salary amount) is usually getting a management fee of a certain percentage of the fund size.  So, if their fund size is $100M and their mgt. fee is 2%, then they have $2M for salaries, office space, etc.  But, if their fund size is $200M, then they have $4M for salaries, office space, etc!  Make sense?
  4. As Rob has mentioned, with the advancements of technology, it doesn’t require as much capital to start and grow a company as it used it.
  5. And finally, there are A LOT of very good opportunities in that investment stage.

I realize that there are a few aspects that detract from investing early-stage — one of them being the fact that the deals are, well, early-stage.  That often means that the deals are higher-risk because the company has yet to attract significant traction and/or revenue.  That being said, I think that the market is under-served and the opportunity is large.

Who’s ready to raise an early-stage fund with me?  :)

Comments

  1. September 1st, 2008 | 9:53 am

    I am. I’ll help you invest it too… :)

  2. ryan
    September 1st, 2008 | 8:28 pm

    Brock, I read something on Micro-VCs earlier this month that might interest you: http://venturelaw.blogspot.com/2008/08/micro-vcs-tiny-rainbows-or-snake-oil.html. It’s an idea we’ve toyed with over the past few months.

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