Tag Archive for vc

Entrepreneurship Club Mannheim lädt zum Pre-Easter Come Together

Technology Ventures Elevator Pitch Speed Dating Sieger Leaf Republic

Am Freitag, den 15.03., fand im Mannheimer Technologiezentrum Mafinex das achte Elevator Pitch Speed Dating statt. Aus 50 Bewerbungen wurden von einer Jury 20 Gründer ausgewählt, die ihre innovativen Ideen Unternehmen, Investoren und Venture Kapital Gebern vorstellen konnten. Mit „sehr gut“ beurteilten die 25 Business Angels die Gründungsidee von Leaf Republic, die mit Ihrer ökologischen Lösung von Einweggeschirr überzeugten. Auch die Gründer von Opasca konnten begeistern und lagen in der Beurteilung nur knapp hinter den Erstplatzierten. Ausgerichtet wurde das Pitching vom Gründerverbund Rhein-Neckar und der Adtelligence GmbH. Ein weiteres Pitching ist für Herbst diesen Jahres geplant.

Entrepreneurship Club Treffen

Nach der Arbeit das Vergnügen. Aufgrund starker Nachfrage lädt der Entrepreneurship Club am 26.03. erneut zum ungezwungenen Afterwork-Netzwerken im Strümpfe in Mannheim ein. Ab 19h öffnen die Türen ausschließlich für Clubmitglieder. Nutzt die Chance, befreit von Anzügen und zeitlichem Dating-Druck, in netter Atmosphäre andere Gründer, Kreative, Unternehmensvertreter und Investoren kennenzulernen. Investoren und Gründer können sich auf der Seite des Entrepreneurship Clubs für eine Mitgliedschaft bewerben!

Nic Brisbourne of DFJ Esprit on differences between European and US VC and Startup scene

Is European VC really out-performing the US, or is this wishful thinking?

There’s been a lot of debate about the role of VC backing for startups in Europe recently, not least because we’ve been pushing the issue to try and provoke a response from European VCs who – with notable exceptions of course – tend not to come out fighting quite as much as their US peers. The majority of European VCs tend to blog less, tweet less and, as a result much of the debate about VC comes from disgruntled European entrepreneurs. But now one really has come out fighting.

German VC firm Earlybird has produced a long slide presentation and written notes – written by Hendrik Brandis and Jason Whitmire – that argues that although the European venture industry is a quarter of the size of the U.S. market, proportionally speaking it is outperforming the US VC industry in returns. As a result, Limited Partners (LIPs) – the funds that invest in VCs – should start sitting up and taking notice. It has to be said of course that as VCs across the globe battle for funding, it is in their interests to come out swinging from their corner to fight for these funds.

Read the original article here

Social and adtech dominate VC funding

The graphic below gives a sector breakdown of US VC investment for Q1 this year (thanks to Udemy) and as you can see all the interest is in social and advertising.  Perhaps not surprising given the LinkedIn IPO, Groupon filing, progress at Facebook and rude health of the online advertising market.

See the original article here

The things to say when pitching a VC

Yesterday I wrote about the best way to approach a VC as part of the 50 Questions Series I am co-authoring with Nicholas Lovell, so when this morning I saw a post on Business Insider titled Five VCs explain what they REALLY think about your pitches I tapped straight through to read it.

Once inside I found some refreshing honesty and some good content which I think makes for a good follow on from my post yesterday.  Some of the points re-affirm what I wrote yesterday, whilst others delve deeper into the things that should be said to maximise the chances of getting a meeting.

  • Introductions matter. Josh Kopelman of First Round Capital says that the person introducing the entrepreneur is a big deal — if he doesn’t trust the referral, he won’t even take the meeting.
  • Keep it short. Rothrock has seen more than 10,000 pitches, and the best ones are short and to the point. Kopelman also told about his successful pitch for Half.com, which gave users an online marketplace to sell used books — he simply asked how many people had read a book by a popular author. Nearly every hand went up. Then he asked how many wanted to read it again. Nobody raised their hand. Done. The rest was details.
  • Answer questions quickly without getting defensive. Both Rothrock and Bill Maris of Google Ventures said that entrepreneurs need to answer questions quickly and simply. VCs are trying to assess risk, and if you don’t help them, they can’t help you. Maris is particularly turned off by people who get defensive during Q&As — he ends up concentrating on their attitude instead of the company.
  • Be a good storyteller. Kopelman says that most successful entrepreneurs are great storytellers — they have to be able to get investors to believe in their crazy idea, then convince employees to sign on and press to write about it. Senkut agreed — it’s easy for entrepreneurs to inspire their first few employees with stock options or founding titles. But inspiring the 50th or 100th employee requires a great story.
  • Avoid buzzwords. Lots of buzzwords are immediate death, says Kopelman. As he put it, he didn’t pitch Half.com by saying it was an online peer-to-peer marketplace for monetization of underutilized printed matter assets (or words to that effect). If he had, it wouldn’t have worked.
  • Know the people you’re pitching. Rothrock said that entrepreneurs should know everything about the VCs they’re pitching to — where they live (“as long as you don’t drop by”), their dog’s name, their hot button issues. Senkut agreed — do your research and try to make personal connections.
  • Don’t forget the financial info. This may seem obvious, but Rothrock said that he sees a lot of pitches with no financial information about the company. Big mistake.
  • Think big or don’t bother. Howard Hartenbaum of August Capital points out that VCs need to be convinced that they’re investing in a company that has the potential to be huge. A business might be perfectly successful if it gets to $80 million in revenue in five years, but it won’t help the typical VC fund return its investors’ money. If you can’t convince yourself that your company has huge potential, seek money elsewhere.
  • “Stay in touch” means “no.” So says Maris.
  • Forget saving the world. One audience member asked whether the VCs give a little slack to startups that are trying to do good. “I discount them,” said Maris. It’s not that VCs are all individually callous — although some are — but their job is making good investments for their limited partners. For this goal, there’s only one fair way to measure the value of a company, and that’s the discounted value of expected future cash flow. There are other sources of funding, like the Gates Foundation or Google.org, for companies that are more socially oriented.

                      Source: http://www.theequitykicker.com/2011/06/16/the-things-to-say-when-pitching-a-vc/

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