R9 Accelerator Demo Day – 2 June

It would be great if NZ angels could get along to the R9 Demo Day to show our support for the large swathe of public servants in our community who are also aspiring to innovate and create ventures which are disruptive and scaleable….

We’re excited to announce that R9 Accelerator is having its second Demo Day on Thursday 2 June from 2:30pm – If you’re interested in attending please email Edd Brooksbank.

You’ll have the opportunity to invest in teams who are pitching their innovative solutions to improve public service for business customers, meet the teams and find out how they could help you. You will also hear what our panel of experts have to say and know why the R9 Accelerator is important to businesses across New Zealand.

Event details

  • Thursday, 2 June 2016, doors open at 2:30pm for a 3pm start
  • The Embassy Theatre, Kent Terrace, Wellington
  • Presentations will finish by 5:30pm with light refreshments and an opportunity to meet the teams from 5:30pm onwards

Any questions, please email Edd Brooksbank.

More information on R9 Accelerator

R9 Accelerator is a real life example of making it Better for Business when interacting with government. The teams are each working on an opportunity to make it better for businesses to interact with government.

The R9 Accelerator is led by the Result 9 Better for Business programme and delivered by Creative HQ to power better public services to business customers.

The R9 Accelerator brings together teams of entrepreneurs, developers, private sector specialists and government experts to work on projects to help solve major pain points for New Zealand businesses and reduce their effort in dealing with government.

The process takes just 14 weeks to generate a customer-validated prototype – ready for further investment. It takes a learn-as-you-go, fail fast approach to develop and test new products and services.
One of the teams – CoHelix. Dan, Nicole, and Alex are helping businesses be compliant by improving the fieldstaff services from regulatory agencies. Find out about the other teams and what they’re working on.

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90% of angel-backed startups use employee share plans – survey

New Zealand startups are enthusiastic about implementing Employee Stock Ownership Plans – or ESOPs – according to a survey undertaken by the New Zealand Venture Investment Fund and the Angel Association.

The survey was sent to the chief executives of 98 angel-backed companies in NZVIF’s portfolio to gauge their interest in and uptake of ESOPs.  Fifty companies responded, two-thirds of which have been operating for between two to five years and a quarter between six and ten years.

Of the 50 responses, almost 90 percent of the companies had an ESOP in place for their employees, among which 58 percent are software companies and 12 percent are technology hardware companies

NZVIF Investment Director Chris Twiss said the reason that many startups offer employee share ownership plans is that it gives them a greater ability to employ key employees and directors whom they might not otherwise be able to afford or attract.

In addition, share ownership plans can provide a financial incentive to employees to reach predetermined goals and in time, if the company is successful, enjoy the upside monetary benefits of an ownership stake, Mr Twiss said.

“ESOPs are useful in the way they align the interests of employees and owners in the success of a startup.  Early stage companies are high risk investments and many fail.  In order to attract employees, startups need to be able to offer something different, such as the prospect of a share in the upside should the company go on to be successful.

“Clearly New Zealand startups see the benefits of ESOPs with 88 percent of companies in this survey currently using an ESOP plan of some form.  And 96 percent of the CEOs who responded said that they would implement ESOP plans in future organisations, which suggest the plans are working well and seen as a really important part of a start up’s armoury.”

NZ Angel Association chair Marcel van den Assum said that the major benefits of an ESOP to a company, as cited by the CEOs, were around staff loyalty, an increased ability to hire high quality people into the business, and increased alignment between the employees and the business.

“The survey also found that ESOPs are also commonly used to attract and incentivise directors in addition to senior executives and other staff.  Over 30 percent of companies also made ESOP provisions available for external advisers and consultants.

“The value of this survey is that it will be a useful guide for many current and prospective ventures.  It also encourages us – NZVIF and the Angel Association – to take this to the next level by looking at some specific ‘best practice’ parameters such as ESOP percentages for directors, and vesting milestones.”

Other key results from the survey included:

  • Nearly half of the companies created an ESOP after the first 12 months of operation.
  • About two-thirds of the companies with ESOPs adopted a basic share option plan, rather than other ESOP types such as ‘borrow to buy’ plans or the use of special classes of shares.
  • ESOP allocation is mostly in the range representing 6%-10% of a company’s total share register, followed by the 11%-15% range.
  • 45% of companies received a positive reception from employees to their ESOP plan while 14% indicated further information was required to better explain the nature of the proposed plan.
  • At least one eligible person at one-third of the companies had exercised their ESOP rights.  For 51% of the companies, no eligible staff (or other eligible people) had yet to do so.

For here for the full ESOP survey report.

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WNT Ventures

WNT logo final

WNT Ventures is a technology focused incubator with a committed pool of capital in a fund structure, for investing into pre-seed, seed and start-up stage companies.  Based in Tauranga, New Zealand, we actively seek IP-rich technologies throughout the country from publically funded institutes and the private sector.  WNT is often actively involved in company formation and assisting companies in becoming investment ready including developing company strategy, initial IP protection and sourcing of management teams and Boards.

Together with our Limited Partners, we offer significant hands-on experience for investing into a range of technologies including but not limited to the Primary Sector – Agriculture, Horticulture and Food technologies, ICT, Engineering and Materials, Medical Technologies along with Robotics and High-Value Manufacturing.

Our collaborative approach we have with our investment partners means WNT Ventures has the ability to address complex IP opportunities from different perspectives.  We leverage our commercial backgrounds, risk-capital, domestic and international networks and our links within the NZ government via Callaghan Innovation, to provide early stage, high risk capital investment and incubation of technology, accelerating their growth in a targeted manner.

Visit their website

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Sequoia Capital and Airtree lead $10m funding in Kiwi start-up 90 Seconds

Silicon Valley heavyweight Sequoia Capital has teamed up with Australian tech venture capital firm AirTree Ventures to pour $US7.5 million ($9.9 million) into New Zealand-based cloud-based corporate video start-up 90 Seconds.

Sequoia is one of Silicon Valley’s biggest names, having invested early on in several of the world’s most famous tech companies including Apple, Google, YouTube, Oracle, Instagram, WhatsApp and Airbnb.

Read more

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Angel funds invest over $60m in 2015

Angel networks and funds invested a record $61.2 million into 94 young New Zealand companies in 2015 – a 9 percent increase on the previous record set in 2014, New Zealand Venture Investment Fund investment director Chris Twiss said today.

Releasing the latest Young Company Finance Index, Chris Twiss said New Zealand now has a strong core of investors involved in angel networks and funds which are driving the continued growth of investment into start-ups.

“The last year was noteworthy not just for the high level of investment – hitting over $60 million for the 2182047.jpgfirst time – but also that we are now seeing angel-backed companies successfully raising capital from overseas investors – including venture capital firms, angel groups and equity crowdfunding.

“That indicates that New Zealand is increasingly on the radar for international investors looking for opportunities.  Offshore investment brings capital and access to networks and markets, and widens the shareholder base for companies.

“While the activity is at healthy levels, significantly more capital is needed to ensure that more New Zealand companies can become internationally competitive companies of scale.  There is also a lot more to do to develop and broaden the investor base in New Zealand, particularly outside the main centres.”

NZ Angel Association chair Marcel van den Assum said that it is particularly pleasing to see the level at which ventures were engaging overseas and raising funds offshore reflected in the recent data.

“Four companies raised $7.2 million from overseas venture capital firms through series A and B rounds and three companies raised $7 million through overseas angel networks.  The market for capital is global and these results illustrate that New Zealand companies are internationally competitive.

“Another feature to note was that more than two-thirds of the investment into our companies last year was follow-on investment. Our market is beginning to mature. We’ve been at this for nearly ten years and we need to focus increasingly on outcomes, driving for the investment returns required of angel investment.

“The high level of activity mirrors what the Angel Association is seeing in terms of interest and growth in membership. My own network, Angel HQ in Wellington, has doubled its membership in the last 18 months which is heartening.

“We need to bear in mind that the Young Company Finance data is an indicative one – and does not capture much of the investment by individuals and others outside the formal angel networks and funds. There is a great deal of activity not captured in these figures.”

Chris Twiss said the $61.2 million was invested into the 94 companies across 132 deals (also a record) compared with $56.4 million across 119 deals in 2014.  Cumulatively, $414.7 million has now been invested into young companies by angel groups since the Young Company Finance Index began measuring activity in 2006.

2015 saw $39.4 million investment into the software and services sector, which was a significant increase on the $26.2 million invested into software companies in 2014, and comprised over 60 percent of all angel fund investment over 2015.

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Click here to read the latest issue of Startup.

Media contacts:

NZVIF: David Lewis, m: 021 976 119, [email protected]

Angel Association: Suse Reynolds, m: 021 490 974, [email protected]

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Angels aim for $6m with a second sidecar fund

The Bay of Plenty’s Enterprise Angels has launched an ambitious second sidecar fund targeting up to $6 million, which has already attracted more than $700,000 in commitments from members.

The early stage investment group, which now has 200-plus members across Tauranga, Rotorua, Taupo and Hamilton, closed EA Fund 1 on $2.4 million.

The first fund has to date invested $1.65 million in 15 companies and has reserved about 30 per cent of the fund for follow-on investments in the fund’s most successful companies over the next couple of years.

“The initial response from members has been great,” said Enterprise Angels executive director Bill Murphy. “We’re expecting it will be able to be quite a bit bigger than our first fund.”

The fund’s managers are targeting about $4.5 million, with a minimum size of $2 million and a maximum of $6 million.

The fund was launched at last month’s Enterprises Angels meetings and will close on April 15.

“There are two ways to minimise risk in the early stage investing space,” said Mr Murphy.

“The first is to do a very good job of due diligence and really understand what you are investing in. The second is to build up a portfolio of investments because the research tells us that the more quality investments you have, the greater the chance of getting the returns you need.”

Neil Craig, who chairs EA Fund 1 and EA Fund 2, said the new fund represented a unique opportunity for wholesale investors to invest alongside the largest and best-resourced angel group in New Zealand.

“Investing in early stage companies is high risk and potentially high reward,” he said.

“A key way of mitigating this risk is to invest in companies that have been through a rigorous due diligence and negotiation process backed by experienced early-stage company investors. The only way to achieve high levels of diversification for all but the most active and wealthy angel investors is to invest via a fund like EA Fund 2.”

Mr Murphy said the fund would rely on a combination of Enterprise Angels professional staff and the enormous sectoral and due diligence expertise of the group’s members.

Get in early: Studies have shown that an investor investing in 12 early stage companies has a 75 per cent confidence of achieving the returns of the Wiltbank Study (IRR 27 per cent, ROI 2.6X), and by investing in 48 companies, has a 95 per cent confidence of achieving these returns. Source Enterprise Angels.

First published on nzherald.co.nz 23 March 2016

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Business could take off like Lightning

Life is about to get busier for Virginia Fay – and she can’t wait.

The former Dunedin woman has been selected for Lightning Lab XX, New Zealand’s first-ever female founder focused business accelerator.

Ms Fay, who lives at Mapua, near Nelson, founded Patternsnap, a digital library of wallpaper and fabric samples for interior designers.

Read more

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Angel Investors Pumped $24 Billion Into Startups. Here’s How to Get Your Share.

Angel investors are still the lifeblood of early-stage startups, despite the surge of activity in crowdfunding and an increasing early interest from venture capitalists. According to the Angel Capital Association, at least 300,000 people have made angel investments in the last two years, totaling $24 billion in the U.S. alone. These are all accredited investors who risk their own money.

As an active angel investor myself, I understand how the process works, and I see the disappointment in the eyes of entrepreneurs who approach angel groups for funding and often get turned away for not being timely or prepared in the minds of potential investors. In the interest of getting you off on the right foot, here is my priority list of recommended preparation activities.

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“The job is by no means done yet”: Marcel van den Assum defends the NZVIF

Angel Association Chair, Marcel van den Assum, applauds a decade of progress and sets out what’s needed to continue to build on it.

It’s great to see increasing interest and discussion about the importance of commercializing innovation for our economic wellbeing. There is a massive passion for NZ Inc.

The creation of the NZ Venture Investment Fund a decade ago is a reflection of that passion and it’s been a powerful catalyst for the creation of a growing early stage venture capital community.

Read more

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Increase in IPOs on the cards, says report

After 15 years and $150m of taxpayer funding, Venture Investment Fund boss Franceska Banga is leaving. Where to for her — and the fund? asks Liam Dann.

Venture capital is a brutal game. The most dangerous end of the capital markets, an environment where few investors dare to tread.

It is an unlikely space for taxpayers to invest but, say supporters, if we want to develop a high growth, start-up sector in a small market, it is also one where companies need government support.

“It is high risk but always with the expectation that the business could deliver a good return for investors,” says outgoing New Zealand Venture Investment Fund (NZVIF) chief executive Franceska Banga.

“We know that not all of them will, probably only a small number of them will. We also know that it is a numbers game. If you want 10 Xeros or Orion Healths then you are going to have to invest in hundreds of companies. But you are talking about high risk/high growth investment.”

READ MORE:
• Creating our own Silicon Valley
• Trailblazing venture fund future in limbo
• Franceska Banga: Angels on our shoulders
Banga, NZVIF’s founding CEO, steps down next month after 15 years spent steering some $150 million of taxpayer money into 190 start-up and early stage companies.

There are some big names among the NZVIF alumni — NZX listed Moa, Xero, and Orion Health among the best-known.

The fund hasn’t yet delivered a massive return, although it hasn’t cost taxpayers money either.

Its portfolio is valued at about $180 million but it has partnered with private venture capital funds which have invested $1.7 billion into the fledgling sector.

Given that the original brief — drafted in 2001 at the height of Helen Clark’s Knowledge Wave fervour — was never to make a financial return, most people in the sector are comfortable describing it as a success, albeit a qualified one.

“We now have a rapidly maturing venture stage market,” says NZ Venture Capital Association executive director Colin McKinnon.

But the mid-tier space is still extremely tough, he says.

“It is maturing from the angel level up rather than from the VC level down.”

When looking at NZVIF’s performance, it is important to consider its main venture capital fund and its smaller Seed Co-Investment Fund (SCIF) individually, he says.

Everybody in the industry would acknowledge that the activity, the leadership and the best practice market development that VIF has done with the seed fund has helped us come on a lot faster than we would have done if left to our own devices.
The latter, which can invest up to $4 million in angel stage start-ups, had been considerably more successful than the former, which can invest $25 million in a company.

“Everybody in the industry would acknowledge that the activity, the leadership and the best practice market development that VIF has done with the seed fund has helped us come on a lot faster than we would have done if left to our own devices,” McKinnon says.

The seed co-investment fund has a total of $40 million available and invests alongside accredited investment partners, with NZVIF putting in up to $4 million per co-investment partner, with the potential for another $4 million subject to a partnership review.

But in the next stage, the true venture capital space, the job is far from done.

New Zealand, along with almost everywhere else in the world outside of Silicon Valley and Boston, is still struggling to get scale in the venture capital market.

“Taken overall, both programmes have been successful,” he says.

“Did we get the outcomes we expected? With SCIF, yes we have and with VIF, probably not. With hindsight did we get value? Yes for both.”

Banga doesn’t disagree about the difficulty of the job in the mid-tier market.

“I think there is still a challenge there,” she says.

The problem for high growth companies in New Zealand comes once they move past the first phase, having raised $2 million or so, “when they realise they need $5 to $10 million but they’re nowhere near ready for the NZX,” she says.

“We have always said that it is a 25-year game plan so I think we’ve made pretty good progress — we’ve probably got another 10 years to run.

“When you look to other countries — and the US is the standout — we know that when they started out almost 50 years ago now … it takes a long time to build an ecosystem.

“A fundamental view I have is that government support for very early stage investment is an ongoing thing. It doesn’t matter where you look in the world, even the US — that idea of providing funding for early or angel stage business is an accepted part of the role of government.”

If we are serious about keeping high growth companies in New Zealand then some level of commitment from government is crucial, she says.

“We would do well in New Zealand to get past the should we/shouldn’t we [debate]; the end game is you are trying to bring through some significant companies and that doesn’t just happen out of thin air.”

But it remains to be seen how committed this Government is to NZVIF in the long term.

Minister of Economic Development Steven Joyce has said his officials are reviewing the fund’s performance and looking at its structure. It could be that there may be no more taxpayer funding and it moves to a self-sustaining model, or even an orderly government exit from the investments.

A fundamental view I have is that government support for very early stage investment is an ongoing thing. It doesn’t matter where you look in the world, even the US — that idea of providing funding for early or angel stage business is an accepted part of the role of government.
Banga says she accepts that the fund could become self-sustaining, with new investments being made with returns from the fund.

That has always been one of the long term goals, she says.

There are several international precedents for a self-sustaining approach, notably the Small Business Investment Company in the US, 3i and CDC, both originating in the UK, and YOZMA in Israel.

Each of these funds started off as a government backed initiative intended to increase capital for small high growth businesses in their home market.

That said, she is in no doubt about what she’d do if she held the political power to write the budget.

“Personally, I’d put some more money into this programme if it was up to me,” she says.

“It has been an incredibly cost- efficient programme for taxpayers.”

Short of stumping up more cash, Banga would also like to see some fresh policy developed to foster investment in the high growth end of the market.

In particular, she would she would like to see some more focused targeting of migrant investment.

“We could do so much better in how we utilise the capital that comes in,” she says.

“In the $2 million and $10 million categories … we know that most of that money goes into low risk capital. Even just the interest off that money would make a significant difference to the early stage end of the market. There is always nervousness about migrants coming in and losing money … but there are ways to ensure that some of the money goes to growth and that engages them in the local market.”

Personally, I’d put some more money into this programme if it was up to me.
For the record, Joyce, who confesses he is philosophically no fan of government involvement in start-up investment, has plenty of praise for Banga and what she has achieved.

“The early stage capital market was certainly not as healthy before VIF was there. It doesn’t necessarily mean that VIF has catalysed that although I think the presumption is that it has,” he says. “The hard part is working out what would have happened anyway.”

Perhaps, as one market player who asked not to be named says, there is a concern that the fund can’t maintain momentum without someone of Banga’s calibre driving it.

Certainly, Joyce feels the departure of Banga after 15 years marks an appropriate time to take another look at its structure.

The Venture Capital Association’s McKinnon thinks that is fair enough.

“VIF was best practice at the time,” he says. “The problem hasn’t been fixed but we understand a lot more about it.”

The industry still needs some help but the help is not necessarily just capital, he says.

“I don’t know what the answer is but I do think we need to keep some sort of government liaison role in that post-angel space,” he says. “If we don’t keep having that leadership then it will fragment and the market failure will become more apparent again. I just think we have to finish the job.

Over 15 years Banga had been a huge asset to the sector, he says.

“I’d say she has been outstanding. They’ve struggled with some big challenges and she has been an exemplary leader in this space and we’re going to miss her.”

As for what’s next , the former Treasury and Reserve Bank economist is keen to make her mark in the private sector as a company director.

Franceska’s advice for startups seeking money:
• Talk to entrepreneurs who have gone before. What does that mean for their company? A weakness in NZ is we don’t learn from others’ mistakes.

• Get really focused on the right sort of investors for your company. Avoid the scatter-gun approach.

• Don’t waste time talking to investors who are not going to invest. Do your homework.

• Get your story right, your business plan. Be clear. You can’t just go on raw emotion about how good your invention is.

• If your specialty is the technology or science side, make sure you’ve got access to the business expertise in your team. If you can’t afford to employ people, look for people in your wider network who can help.

First published on nzherald.co.nz 26 February 2016

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Startups are finally revealed for the 2016 Auckland Lightning Lab Programme

Today, New Zealand’s premier digital accelerator has announced the ten digital startups that will embark on the 2016 Lightning Lab Programme in Auckland.

Reyedr, Wireless Guard, Foodcourt Online, Sonnar Interactive, WayWiser, Pheonix Audio, SeekStock, Dexibit, Slick Software, and Rock.ai all made it through the extensive application process to be the ten teams to receive $20,000 seed funding, intense mentorship, and the opportunity to work on the business 24/7 through the four month long Lightning Lab programme.

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NZVIF Investment Report

The investment performance to 30 June 2015 highlights both the volatility of early stage investing and the reliance on a few ‘outlier’ investments to generate the bulk of the returns.  The overall portfolio result is positive based on a very conservative valuation assessment.  While it is down on the previous year, this is due mainly to the volatility of listed portfolio companies, which now comprise over 40 percent of the value of NZVIF’s portfolio.  The volatility is illustrated in that – post the reporting period – the portfolio’s value rebounded from $156 million to over $181 million at 31 December.

Click here to download the NZVIF Investment Report for the year to 30 June 2015.  It is the second such report on the performance of NZVIF’s two funds – the Venture Capital Fund and the Seed Co-investment Fund.

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Video giant Vimeo picks Wellington startup Wipster for global partnership

Wellington startup Wipster has struck a partnership with United States technology giant Vimeo in a “David and Goliath” deal that could be worth many millions of dollars to the three year-old firm.

Vimeo will market Wipster’s software as a paid add-on to its video-sharing suite, promoting it to the 700,000 people who already pay to use the paid version of Vimeo’s app.

Read more

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Wipster video success in US triples revenue

From day one, the aim of Wipster was to be international, says its founder.

Now the cloud-based, collaborative video review platform boasts 40,000 users in 120 countries and its revenues are rapidly growing.

Former filmmaker Rollo Wenlock started the business as beta in 2013 and launched it at the end of 2014 with a team of creative media tech experts in Wellington.

Read more

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As Angel Investors Pull Back, Valuations Take a Hit

Agreeing the valuations is often a spicy discussion. In this Wall Street Journal article some of our US-based colleagues – Bill Payne, Rob Wiltbank and Allan May – set out their views on data showing valuations are taking a bit of a hit.

A dose of reality may be hitting angel investing.

After valuations for young companies seeking funding soared to five-year highs last year, some angel investors—or wealthy individuals who buy stakes in startups—are starting to pull back.

On AngelList, a crowdfunding site aimed at such investors, the average valuation for a company receiving funding reached $4.9 million for two quarters last year, its highest level in five years. But valuations dropped to $4.2 million in the fourth quarter, the lowest level since early 2012. Dow Jones VentureSource data shows that deals involving angel investors fell by 16% last year.

Read more

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How to start investing in tech and innovation startups

Some tips and tricks in this story which you might like to share with those exploring angel investment by Idealogue’s Henry Oliver.

We talk to Suse Reynolds, executive director of the Angel Association of New Zealand, and Greg Shanahan, managing director of the Technology Investment Network, about how to start investing in early-stage tech and innovation companies in New Zealand.

One of the consistent threads running through the history of this publication is that New Zealand needs to get over its obsession with housing, dairy and tourism, and start investing in technology and innovation.

Sounds great! some readers have said. But how? How does a ‘mum and dad investor’ help fund, and (let’s be honest) profit from, the high growth of those sectors are experiencing in New Zealand?

Read the full interview here

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Lightning Lab accelerator programme increasing investment in 2016

An enthusiastic review of one of New Zealand’s most successful “angel food generators”

An accelerator programme which has helped startups raise millions of dollars in investment is sweetening its offer in 2016 to attract more entrepreneurs.

Founded by Wellington incubator Creative HQ, Lightning Lab is a business incubator which mentors digital startups over three months.

Read more

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A STQRY of our times: How a Kiwi start-up’s soaring valuation shows we may be entering an investment boom time

In this interesting article, angel-backed StQry, now called Area360, talks about raising capital in the US with observations from NZTE’s Quentin Quin and well known NZ angel, Chip Dawson.

Taking advantage of a US-tech sector awash with cash, Wellington-born start-up Area360 raises $5.5 million from US-based venture capitalists and opens its US headquarters.

“This is the best time to raise money ever,” Stewart Butterfield told the New York Times recently. Butterfield is CEO of Slack, an instant-message-based team communication company, whose valuation rose from $US1 billion to $US2.8 billion in little over a month early in 2015.

Read more

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FLNT’s ideas app named top startup

Eight teams took part in this month’s successful tech-focused Startup Weekend for entrepreneurs in Tauranga, with the winners FLNT already signing up beta testers during the 54-hour session.

More than 40 individuals took part, pitching their ideas, then forming into teams to develop their proposals. FLNT’s idea was for an app to revolutionise employee engagement and spark employee innovation. The support of the potential beta testers helped validate the potential value of the concept.

The judging panel was made up of Carl Jones, head of local innovation incubator WNT Ventures, Suse Reynolds of the Angel Association, Jodie Tipping from local firm Cucumber Media and Dr Simon McDonald from Rhondium, a Katikati-based innovator in the global dental products market. All the judges were glowing in their praise for this year’s pitches, with three teams narrowly finishing as joint runners up.

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(Dr Simon McDonald (left), Carl Jones, Suse Reynolds, Jodie Tipping. Image: Claudia Silva)

Dr McDonald said it had been really difficult for the judges to decide on the winner.

“I thought it was fabulous event and the quality was very high,” he said.

“The FLNT app is an online suggestion box where anyone can suggest an idea, which would then transcend the multiple layers of management bureaucracy that often kill good ideas.”

FLNT team member Clayton Morgan said the original concept was for an app called “Tinder for Ideas” where each suggestion was voted on, much like someone on Tinder.

“A team was formed around this concept, made up of talented people with diverse backgrounds. FLNT then developed when we started our research and validating. We determined that applying this concept to businesses would engage employees and enable senior manages to tap into feedback and creative ideas from their workforce.”

Mr Morgan said the team had several organisations signed up to take part in testing FLNT.

“Going from idea to a full-formed business is thrilling and team FLNT is looking forward to working hard to create another successful Tauranga business.”

A high-calibre group of mentors supported all the teams throughout the weekend, which was being organised for the fourth year.

Held again at Basestation, the tech focused co-working space, Tauranga Startup Weekend was this year also part of the Global Startup Battle, with events running in more than 200 cities worldwide over the weekend.

Clever concepts

In addition to FLNT’s employee engagement app, the other pitches included:

* U! Get Off the Couch’s app to help parents get their kids out of the house

* Flapp’s system for connecting backpackers

* Be There Too’s easy live streaming solution for large family events

* Safe Out’s smart emergency evacuation system

* Happy Sprout’s kitchen garden starter kits

* Arrive Social’s carpooling app for students

* Tap’s social recruitment model, which rewards referrers and successful applicants

First published on nzherald.co.nz 25 Nov 2015

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Angel advice for Tauranga’s entrepreneurs

Making the most of the recent conference, we tour some of our rock star angel visitors around the country.

Leading American angel investor Bill Payne will be part of a panel at next week’s [email protected] event in Tauranga for aspiring entrepreneurs.

Organised by the Venture Centre as part of its buildup to next month’s Tauranga Start Up Weekend, the event aims to expose people embarking on start-ups to how angel investors think, said Venture Centre co-founder Jo Allum.

“We want to give entrepreneurs a good idea of all the different elements involved in the journey of building their start-up company,” she said. “Getting capital into the business is an important part of it and one of the ways of doing that is through angels.”

Ms Allum described the event as a “reverse” Dragon’s Den.

“Instead of entrepreneurs pitching ideas, they will be able to question the angel investors on how they can contribute to their business and what they require.”

Mr Payne sold his first company to Du Pont and for the last three decades has invested in more than 55 start-up companies. From 1995 to 2007 in his role as Entrepreneur-in-Residence with the Kauffman Foundation (Kansas City), he worked on educational programs for entrepreneurs and their investors.

In 2010 he concluded a five month stay in New Zealand at the BNZ University of Auckland Business School advising investors and entrepreneurs.

A frequent visitor to Tauranga, Mr Payne told NZME during an interview in 2013 he thought Kiwi deals and pitches had improved significantly. “There are all kinds of opportunities here,” he said. In addition to Mr Payne, this year’s panel will include investment adviser James Beale, lawyer John Gordon and power engineer Deion Campbell, who are all members of Tauranga’s Enterprise Angels, the country’s biggest start-up funding angel group. Since launching in 2008, Enterprise Angels has facilitated the investment of more than $14 million in more than 40 early stage and established businesses.

[email protected] is from 5.30 till 8.30pm on Wednesday, October 28, Tauranga Art Gallery.

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App developer gains $5m in US funding round

Congrats to StQry Inc – now Area360 – who have raised US venture funding. Terrific to see the acknowledgement they have given to the wider ecosystem including angel investors in their success to date.

Wellington startup Stqry (pronunced “story”) has closed an initial $5.5 million funding round and announced a name change as it expands off-shore.

Now named Area360, the company’s software allows organisations such as museums, art galleries, airports and hospitals to engage with customers through geo-location technology – including beacons, GPS and WiFi – helping them to discover, connect and engage with what’s around them.

The startup was formed in 2012 by Chris Smith and Ezel Kokcu and now counts more than 400 customers worldwide – including Emirates, Te Papa, Seattle-Tacoma International Airport and the Smithsonian Museum in Washington D.C.

Read also:
Mentors help hotelier develop new app
Crimson Consulting flush with new funds

“We started AREA360 to give organisations the ability to enhance their customer experience by providing navigation as well as relevant information and unique opportunities along their path,” Smith said.

“Using beacon and other location data, our platform enables customers to create a broad portfolio of useful services.

“For example, airports can deliver navigation to and from gates, along with a stop at the nearest Starbucks, museums can bring to life that new piece of art by presenting a video on the artist’s inspiration, and an operations manager can track their most valuable assets in real time.”

The funding round was led by US technology venture group Madrona Venture Group and comes as they were expanding their Wellington office and opening their US headquarters in Seattle, Smith said.

Area360 had received support in New Zealand from advisors Gareth Morgan, Dion Mortensen, Alan Gourdie and Sven Baker, as well support from organisations including the Callaghan Innovation, NZTE, Grow Wellington, and the ICE Angels.

“The support from New Zealand’s startup community helped us to thrive and our customer response has been overwhelming,” Smith said.

“We look forward to continuing to grow our business in the US, New Zealand and the rest of the world.”

New Zealand Trade and Enterprise (NZTE) customer manager Mike Evans said the company was a great example of an ambitious New Zealand tech company growing internationally by entering new markets.

“Their partnership with Madrona is an important endorsement of their already considerable success.”

First published on nzherald.co.nz 3rd September 2015

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Small Business: Brand partnerships – Unovent

One of the most powerful things angels can do for a venture is provide commercial introductions. In this terrific story by Caitlin Sykes, John Wadsworth of Unovent provides a terrific example of this…

John Wadsworth is the inventor of home ventilation system Unovent, which launched on the market last year. Unovent has a brand partnership with Showerdome – a company that produces a moisture reduction product for bathrooms.

How did you first connect with Showerdome to form a brand partnership?

In August last year I decided I needed to get some serious investors on board for Unovent, so I did a presentation to the Enterprise Angels angel investment group in Tauranga.

From that experience I ended up connecting with Maurice O’Reilly and Dan Keller – people who I thought could make a big difference to the business, not only as shareholders but in terms of contributing their skills and experience to the development of the company.

Maurice was already a shareholder and director of Showerdome, and he could see we were chasing the same customers, so he and Dan came on as shareholders of Unovent, and Maurice also came on as a director.

Because we had this common shareholder and director, and we had this market link with Showerdome, it just made a lot of sense for us to listen very carefully to what Maurice had to say about how they had developed the Showerdome business, and to look at their business plan.
Showerdome is in the business of moisture reduction in the bathroom to reduce mould and other nasties, and we’re in the business of reducing moisture in the other living spaces like bedrooms, lounges and dining areas so the complementary nature of what we were doing was obvious.

What kinds of things do you do to work together?

The first is that at the bottom of certain pages of our website we’ve got the Showerdome logo, commentary about putting in a Showerdome and a link to the Showerdome website that opens in a new window. They also do the same on their website, and we know from Google Analytics that around 8 per cent of the people who look at our website have come there from clicking that Unovent link on Showerdome’s website.

Also, throughout the country Showerdome has a network of resellers and in some parts of the country they’ll also have a master distributor who the resellers in that area draw from. From time to time we get asked by those people if they could also represent Unovent. We’ve only made a small start on following those leads, but that’s another way we’re picking up on their network and brand.

And thirdly, we both have a DLE promotional brochure for our product, and Showerdome will put one of ours in with their goods when they send them off and we do the same.

Given your company is young it must be a benefit to leverage off a more established brand?

Exactly. They’ve been around for 11 years or so and they’re a proven success story. A big part of their success is due to the way they’ve made advertising and marketing of the product the engine of the business, and today it’s pretty much a household brand name.

I don’t think it’s any secret that every Showerdome year has been a record year, and in the short time we’ve been operating every month for us has pretty much been the same. We’d definitely like to copy their record. Like any business they will have made some mistakes in their early years in terms of how they’ve promoted the business for growth, and by aligning ourselves with them we’re gaining huge benefit from their learning.

What are some future opportunities you’re looking to explore in terms of brand partnerships?

Throughout the year both companies have been running prize giveaways in various publications, and recently for the first time we completed the draw of a large prize comprising an Unovent system and a Showerdome. That’s a combined activity that we should develop further.

Also, for every house to be effectively made comfortable and healthy, there needs to be effective heating, effective insulation, and effective ventilation plus a Showerdome to get rid of moisture. If you take away any one of those three elements the overall result isn’t as effective. So there is potentially the opportunity for us to do a range of things with organisations that work in those other areas as well.

First published on nzherald.co.nz 12 August 2015

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Angel connections help ideas grow wings

This great story illustrates “the eco-system in action” with Enterprise Angels and WNT Ventures working together to create the angel food of the future…

The boss of Bay of Plenty startup funding group Enterprise Angels says it is working closely with WNTVentures.

“We’re able to refer opportunities that are at too early a stage for Enterprise Angels to WNTVentures, and we’re able in all kinds of ways to be able to give more certainty to that next round of funding at the angel stage,” executive director Bill Murphy said.

Enterprise Angels is a shareholder in the incubator through its sidecar fund EA1, and sits on its investment committee. That involvement could include providing expert guidance and appropriately qualified directors for the incubated company.

Mr Murphy said the Scion nanofibre research was at too early a stage for angel investors because the commercial possibilities were still being worked out.

“We’re really pleased to see Scion is able to take some of its really cool research into WNT and give us the opportunity to invest in it at a later stage.”
WNTVentures chief executive Carl Jones said the incubator to date had three companies that had received the full $600,000 available from a combination of Callaghan Innovation repayable grants and the incubator’s 1:3 matching funding.

Bay of Plenty-based Onesixone has developed a software-hardware solution, which bridges the gap between industry standard DJ software and entertainment lighting systems.

IPO, based in Dunedin, is developing a point-of-care bovine mastitis diagnostic test, which will guide antibiotic treatment decisions. The technology only requires minimal laboratory requirements through vet practice or on farm, a simple sampling procedure.

Mr Jones said he was not yet able to provide details of the third company, which was in the software sector, for reasons of business confidentiality. There was also an agri-tech company at the same pre-incubation stage as Scion’s nanofibre project.

First published on nzherald.co.nz 12 August 2015

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Angel Association attracts major global investors to NZ

Hosted by the Angel Association of New Zealand, the 2015 Asian Business Angel Forum takes place in Queenstown, New Zealand, 14 – 16 October 2015.

The event, an expertly curated, three day and completely investor-centric summit subsumes the AANZ’s annual summit this year.

It brings together leading investors from around the world to share their knowledge and join together in celebrating this small country’s big contribution to early stage investment.

The AANZ is pleased to have attracted a stellar line-up of international speakers who bring with them hundreds of investment experiences and personal involvement in the most significant international investment funds and angel groups.

Their combined portfolios include some of the biggest, most important and well known early-stage companies in the world.

Thought-leaders gathering to present at ABAF in New Zealand’s beautiful Queenstown’s include:

Jayesh Parekh – Jungle Ventures, 500 Startups and Mumbai Angels

David Chen – AngelVest

Sasha Mirchandani  – Kae Capital and Mumbai Angels

Nelson Gray – LINC Scotland, Firth Ventures and winner of the Queen’s Award for Enterprise Promotion for individuals who have played an important role in promoting enterprise skills and supporting entrepreneurs,

Bill Payne – ACA, Hans Severiens Memorial Award for Outstanding Contributions to Angel Investing and 2010 New Zealand Arch Angel Award for his impact on angel investing in New Zealand

Jon Medved – OurCrowd

Ian Sobieski – Band of Angels

Jamie Rhodes – ACA, Central Texas Angel Network (CTAN) and Texas into the Alliance of Texas Angel Networks

Marcia Dawood – ACA Board member, MD, Golden Seeds and Blue Tree

Allan May – Life Science Angels, Emergent Medical Partners

and Carolynn and Jon Levy – the legal team from the United States most successful incubator – Y Combinator, which has launched the likes of Airbnb, Dropbox and Stripe.

Register-now

To see the entire stream of social media as Angels actively connect New Zealand to the globe, the latest from international guests, hashtags and other social networks in one place click here.

Using twitter you can follow the Angel Association of New Zealand at @AngelAssn, and keep up to date with the Asian Business Angels Forum news and the event itself as it unfolds by using the hashtag #ABAFNZ15.

To meet and hear from New Zealand’s largest gathering of global investment thought leaders, along with a host of angels from New Zealand’s angel investment community in person secure your seat now.

There are only 30 places left at one the southern hemisphere’s largest and exclusive investor events Asian Business Angels Forum, Queenstown, New Zealand, October 14-15 2015.

 ABAF2015, NZ

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#ABAF15NZ Speakers – Marcia Rick Dawood, Jamie Rhodes

Meet the speakers #ABAF15NZ – Marcia Rick Dawood, Jamie Rhodes

A truly international trio rounds out an exceptional line-up of speakers at the 2015 Asian Business Angel Forum (ABAF) hosted by the Angel Association of New Zealand. ABAF event plays a pivotal role in bringing together speakers and delegates from 12 of the most active and connected early-stage investment ecosystems in the world.

Marcia Rick Dawood, Sasha Mirchandani, Jamie Rhodes all come to ABAF with intent to share a combined 100 years of experience in founding, finding, screening, funding, growing and exiting startups.

It’s an honour to welcome all three to Queenstown, New Zealand, from 14th until 16th of October to share their insights at #ABAFNZ15.

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Marcia Rick Dawood is on the Board of the Angel Capital Association (ACA) in the United States an organisation which represents over 12,000 accredited investor members, 220 angel groups and accredited platforms who have invested in well over 10,000 entrepreneurial companies.

Marcia is also Managing Director of Golden Seeds, an investment firm dedicated to delivering above market returns through the empowerment of women entrepreneurs and those who invest in them. The firm’s nationwide angel network is the fourth largest and most active in the US with 250 members. Its venture capital group has $35million under management. The firm, headquartered in New York, also has groups in Boston, San Francisco, Dallas and LA and has invested over $50million into 52 companies since 2005.

Syndication of deals between Golden Seeds and BlueTree Allied Angels is also lead by Marcia where she is also a member and Chairman of the Education committee. BlueTree’s focus is investing in regional, early-stage companies.

Not content with the ACA and 2 angel funds Marcia is Managing Director of OneHEEL Partners in Greater New York too. She focuses on helping businesses grow, through direct investment and expert consulting services. The firm also offer a laboratory with resources to grow, develop and encourage business ideas and investments, identifying those concepts with the highest potential, and providing the financial and business expertise required, leveraging the background and network diversity of its partner members.

She supports women led, impact as well as tech/life sciences and overall fun companies and is passionate about education as well as investment. In her 16+ year career prior to becoming an active investor she gained experience and success in operations, sales and marketing with Kaplan Higher Education Campuses (KHEC). She has also walked the road of an entrepreneur as a founder, owner/operator of a professional sports franchise.

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Jamie Rhodes is a serial entrepreneur and investor with deep experience in science and technology. He is co-founder of National NanoMaterials, manufacturer of Graphenol™, a functionalized form of graphene and previously founded Perceptive Sciences Corporation.

He brings over 30 years of experience managing investment in technology with him to his presentation at ABAF based on nine years in management at IBM, being co-founder of a venture capital funded start-up focused on the telecom industry (which IPO’ed in 2011) and, in the early years of his career, working with numerous start-ups, most notably National Instruments in its early stage. He holds both a Bachelor’s of Science degree and a Master’s of Science degree from the University of Texas at Austin.

A leader in his community in Texas, Jamie has been named one of ‘The 30 Most Influential People in Central Texas in the Last 30 Years’ by the Austin Business Journal and ‘Technology Volunteer of the Year’ by the Greater Austin Chamber of Commerce where he previously served on the board.

Among other advisory and governance roles Jamie also counts his position on the board of the Central Texas Regional Center of Innovation and Commercialization and the Texas Tri-Cities Chapter of the National Association of Corporate Directors, St. Edward’s University, Texas State University and the University of Texas. He is also an IC2 Fellow.

With the support of the GACC in 2006 Jamie founded the Central Texas Angel Network (CTAN), which provides funding and support to Texas entrepreneurs across a broad spectrum of industries. Jamie, along with a group of local investors and community leaders, were among the early adopters who believed that early-stage investing could provide a meaningful return for investors while also spurring local economic growth and so CTAN was formed as a not-for-profit corporation. Like most angel groups CTAN began with individual members of the organization volunteering their time and expertise to review potential investments, assist entrepreneurs and take care of administrative duties.

Jamie has also organized angel groups around the state of Texas into the Alliance of Texas Angel Networks, which represents over 300 investors and investment in over 60 companies in 2012. He is vice chair of the board of directors of the Angel Capital Association, a national organization spun out of the Kauffman Foundation representing seed stage investors.

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Meet the trio in person, along with a host of angels from New Zealand’s angel investment community and the world at the Asian Business Angels Forum, Queenstown, October 14-15. Seats are now very limited. Be quick to register yours. ABAF2015, NZ

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#ABAF15NZ Speakers – Carolynn and Jon Levy

Meet the speakers #ABAF15NZ – Carolynn and Jon Levy

Hosted by the Angel Association of New Zealand, the 2015 Asian Business Angel Forum brings together leading investors and early stage business specialists from around the globe to share their knowledge make their New Zealand connection.

They join a carefully curated audience of investor members of Angel groups, network and fund members from across this dynamic country bought together by the AANZ to celebrate this small country’s big contribution to early stage investment and build international relationships.

Among the highly experienced line up of speakers AANZ is extremely pleased to be able to bring Carolynn and Jon Levy from Y Combinator, one of the most successful incubators in the US to ABAF to share their insights and experience at #ABAFNZ15.

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Carolynn Levy is a partner at Y Combinator (YC). She was previously at renowned West Coast US firm Wilson Sonsini Goodrich and Rosati, where she helped hundreds of startups with legal questions and acted as Y Combinators counsel for 6 years. She has a BA in political science from UCLA and JD from the USF School of Law, and is a member of the State Bar of California.

Jon Levy, is also a partner at Y Combinator and previously counselled public and private technology companies as an attorney for Wilson Sonsini Goodrich and Rosati. He ran ThinkEquity’s private placement department and worked as a Managing Director at Merriman Curhan & Ford. Jon earned a J.D. from the University of Michigan Law School, and a B.A. in English Literature and Religious Studies from Wesleyan University.

Both Carolynn and Jon are skilled and experienced in dealing with entrepreneurs at all stages of the lifecycle, offering services to those beginning their ventures, those exiting and experiencing the process of merger or acquisition and those that recycle their capital investing in the new. They make themselves available for office hours at YC and Carolynn is active in entrepreneur education via Stanford University providing insights to founders Finance and Legal Mechanics for Startups helping them to get the structure right at the start.

Joining YC was a natural move for the couple, Carolynn says “YC was becoming bi-coastal and needed legal help on the west coast.  So for years, as an associate at WSGR, I helped YC’s portfolio companies with formations, fund raising, etc.  YC kept getting bigger, and my husband Jon joined YC as a legal consultant.  Jon was (is) so happy working with YC because of the people and the culture.  So eventually, since YC kept getting bigger, I decided to leave WSGR and come to YC as a full time partner.  It was a great decision.”

She councils startups with pragmatic guidance, for instance “It doesn’t matter who thought of the idea, who did the coding, who built the prototype, or which one has an MBA. It will feel better to the whole team if the allocation is equal because the whole team is necessary for execution. The take away on this point: in the top YC companies, which we call those with the highest valuations, there are zero instances where the founders have a significantly disproportionate equity split.

Y Combinator itself has an impressive track record, so in their time as independent and in-house council Carolyn and Jon have been involved in some of the biggest deals and best known companies in technology today, including: Airbnb (valued at approx $10B), Dropbox (valued at approx $10B), Stripe (over $1B and growing), Twitch, Heroku and Reddit. Twitch (formerly known as Justin TV) was acquired by Amazon for $970M, Heroku was acquired by Salesforce for $212M.

As detailed by investors following YC’s progress tens of other YC companies have been acquired, those “based on reports had a price greater than $10M were Parse (Facebook, $85M), SocialCam(Autodesk, $60M), Xobni (Yahoo, $48M), Cloudkick (Rackspace, ~$50M),Loopt (GreenDot, $43M), Wufoo (SurveyMonkey, $35M), Omnisio(Google, ~$15M), 280 North (Motorola Mobility, $20M), and Appjet(Google). Parakey‘s acquisition by Facebook likely involved Facebook stock which is now worth a greater amount also. Others that were smaller but non trivial and were likely deemed successes by the founders were Auctomaticand Zenter.

Meet Carolynn and Jon Levy, along with a host of angels from New Zealand’s angel investment community and the world at the Asian Business Angels Forum, Queenstown, October 14-15. Seats are now very limited. Be quick to register yours. ABAF2015, NZ

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Steve Blank – Angels and the Lean Startup #ACAAngelSummit15

Angels Connect NZ series – Bill Murphy from Enterprise Angels reports from ACA Conference 2015

A major highlight of the American Capital Associations annual conference was Steve Blank’s presentation of his customer development methodology – a process which has had an impressive impact on the teaching of enterprise creation in the last decade.

Steve, an academician, serial entrepreneur and investor with over thirty years experience in the technology industry who has founded or worked within eight startup companies, (four of which have gone public), is recognised for being one of three founders of the Lean Startup movement.

His contribution was recognising that commercialisation is a process of testing a series of hypothesis. He currently shares his theories at Haas School of Business, University of California Berkeley, Columbia University and the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). His methods are now being taught in more than 200 universities worldwide, and are recommended by the National Science Foundation and National Institutes of Health in connection with federal grants.

Prior to the lean startup movement and wide spread use of Steve’s customer development methodology investors assumed because they funded a company the entrepreneur would follow a set plan and the board simply monitored it. Investors were treating startups like they were big companies – work out a business plan and then simply implement it.

Great tools were built for execution against plans in large corporations and then used in early-stage ventures and it was assumed this was enough. People who didn’t execute were fired.

Steve proposed that while large companies execute known or proven business models, startups don’t. What angels and other early-stage investors thought they were funding – execution – was actually the search for a scaleable business model that created true value. Instead of assuming entrepreneurs were ‘doing it wrong’ the question that should have been asked was ‘are the critical assumptions about the business plan wrong’?

He has gone on to show that a large percentage of the time entrepreneurs are just guessing about execution. There are no models for early stage venture execution – and no-one is executing in that first year. They are in fact just burning cash conducting a search for that business model – performing a series of experiments to test a problem, solution, a product and a market.

He then went on to create a much-needed methodology to do this work in a robust and repeatable way.

The customer development methodology is now well documented. A good place to start learning more about it is at www.steveblank.com or on his free Udacity Lean Startup course.

Here are the key points Steve shared with angel investors at ACA:

  • Customer development is a process – founders need to get out of building and turn hypotheses into fact by testing the problem exists, the solution is valuable, the product will work and the market wants it.
  • Only then should they build a minimum viable product.
  • Founders need to do the work themselves so that they hear first hand that ‘this or that’ is a bad idea or ‘I wouldn’t pay for it’, read non-verbal signals and pick up on leads to alternatives that might prove to be the solution, ‘Oh we don’t want that – but if you could invent X we would…’
  • Talking to a minimum of 10 to 15 customers a week is the role of everyone working on the startup, with a goal of talking to 100 to 150 potential customers being the benchmark. This number is shown to produce the best results.
  • Then the founder can report back, ‘here’s what I thought, here’s what I learned, here’s what I’m going to do’.

At the conference Steve also pointed out a great thing about this process is tech founders already understand it. The process of defining hypothesis and testing it is used in their work to create and test software and hardware. Striving for evidence based commercialisation is similar to the process engineers go through to work towards deploying programmes and technologies that work.

Its a proven process for minimising time, money and resources.

So, what should angels learn and do that’s different in light of the lean startup movement and in particular customer development methodology?

  • Recognise that often all the entrepreneur has in reality is a hypotheses – ask for evidence or at least what the plan is to collect the evidence.
  • Understand that a startup is a temporary organisation designed to search for repeatable and scaleable executable business model – it is not a business yet.
  • Know the goal is not to stay a startup, but rather to build something which has real value to a set of customers – a sustainable enterprise – and if it scales too you are going to increase the speed of growth and hopefully the size of your returns.
  • Don’t fund people to execute on an idea, that shouldn’t be done on angel money. Before investing check what evidence the entrepreneur has collected that who they say are customers, really are the customers of the product or service they propose. Ask who they have talked to (and how many) and how they have tested their hypotheses. Rather than angels finding out by funding entrepreneurs ideas and blowing $500k, get the founder to go out and do this validation work themselves. Take the time.
  • Then insist you get access to all those conversations and get the founders perspective on the evolution of the idea.
  • Work with founders who are passionate about doing the quantitive and qualitative validation of facts themselves, using a marketing research company to validate the market is not as effective. It is critical is that the people with skin in the game validate whether anything a marketing company tells you is true.
  • Get out of the building yourselves as angels too, make validation your work too – the purpose being to inform the founder’s vision.
  • Your job is not to fund someone to just do focus groups which come up with superficial data such as ’47 say one thing 3 say another’ the skill you’re investing in may be a founder’s ability to pick up on the feedback from the 3 and testing the opportunity to build a business model around them. (47 say sell it for $9.99 – 3 say its an enterprise play and we’ll pay $200k).
  • Once you have a marketing plan aim to test it yourself and see what you learn that’s different from the entrepreneur’s plan.
  • Celebrate the fact that the startup is a search for that executable business model rather than focus on the original business plan and its implementation. Be glad when you and the entrepreneurs learned these new important things instead of beating up the founder for not delivering on a plan.
  • Do the customer validation test yourselves. When you hear ‘I want to order now’, say ‘OK give me $20 I’ll hold it and give you the product when its done’.
  • Invest with the full understanding the initial goal of a startup is to maximise learning not revenue. Returns come from real value-creating scaleable, sustainable business models that are born from that learning.

Bill Murphy

For more highlights from attendees who attended the conference clik.vc/Angels_connectNZ

To meet and hear from international angels and leaders in New Zealand’s angel investment community secure your seat at one the southern hemisphere’s largest international exclusive investor events Asian Business Angels Forum, being held in Queenstown, New Zealand, October 14-15 2015.

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#ABAF15NZ Speakers – Jayesh Parekh

Meet the speakers #ABAF15NZ – Jayesh Parekh

Queenstown, New Zealand, is gearing up for 2015’s Asian Business Angel Forum. The event runs from 14-16 October 2015 with an impressive line-up of business angels from all over the world.

Among the investment experts coming to New Zealand to share their knowledge and networks is managing partner of Jungle Ventures, Jayesh Parekh.

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Mr Parekh has accumulated an extensive portfolio of technology, media and social impact investments with over ten exit or acquisition events among them.

He is also well placed to provide attendees of #ABAF15NZ with an authoritative view on funds and the benefit of angel networks, incubators and accelerators as a partner in a wide range of early-stage business growth and investment vehicles including Jungle Ventures, 500 Startups and Mumbai Angels.

Jayesh is a Singapore citizen and lives there with his family where he is actively involved in the ecosystem. He is Chief Mentor at the Hub Singapore, an Entrepreneur-in-Residence at INSEAD, an Executive Advisor to NUS (National University of Singapore) Enterprise and a TiE (Tech In Asia) Charter Member. As a judge at TiE’s Startup arena in Jakarta in 2014, Tech in Asia’s biggest Startup Asia to date with 2,202 participants, Jayesh was on the judging panel coaching founders to clearly articulate their monetization strategies.

Drawing on his background as an engineer with a Bachelor’s degree in Electrical Engineering from MS University in Baroda, India, a Master’s degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin, USA and over 12 years at IBM based in Houston and Singapore, he supplies valuable guidance around product believing “best of class product is extremely important and that means the user experience fits across all regions.”

Jayesh also works with existing businesses to help them apply a more entrepreneurial mindset and approach to their enterprises. He delivers in-company presentations and often facilitates deep discussions with sales and marketing and business development teams to help them embrace corporate entrepreneurship as a way to identify new business opportunities.

In his long list of achievements Jayesh counts being a co-founder of Sony Entertainment Television, a major network launched in collaboration with Sony Pictures Entertainment and his board membership of One Animation, Shemaroo, Milaap, and investment in Asvathaa (gaming & animation), Game Ventures (online gaming) and eBus (TV commercial digital distribution).

He is also a passionate advocate and investor in ventures which give back to the community with roles on the Boards of social enterprise focused ventures such as the Investment Committee of Aavishkaar India, which invests in enterprises active in the social infrastructure sector in rural and underserved India. He was on the board of SONG, a fund owned by George Soros which invests in SMEs in India that meet social objectives. He served on the Board of United Way International for six years and is a founder of ProPoor, a non-profit portal for Non-Governmental Organizations in South Asia, and now a service of CharityFocus.

You can follow Jayesh on Twitter and meet and hear from him in person, along with a host of angels from New Zealand’s angel investment community and the world at one the southern hemisphere’s largest angel investor events Asian Business Angels Forum, Queenstown, October 14-15. Seats are now very limited. Be quick to register yours. ABAF2015, NZ

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Lead Partners

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AANZ Summit Sponsors

Callaghan Innovation “UniServices” Kiwinet “Spark”