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Angel Investing: Matching Startup Funds with Startup Companies -- A Guide for Entrepreneurs, Individual Investors, and Venture Capitalists
 
 
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Angel Investing: Matching Startup Funds with Startup Companies -- A Guide for Entrepreneurs, Individual Investors, and Venture Capitalists (Paperback)

by Mark Van Osnabrugge (Author), Robert J. Robinson (Author) "We begin with a tale of two entrepreneurs and their angels..." (more)
Key Phrases: one business angel, business angel market, business angel funds, United States, Van Osnabrugge, Apple Computer (more...)
4.6 out of 5 stars  (23 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
According to Robert J. Robinson and Mark van Osnabrugge, so-called business angels--those generally unheralded private investors who usually specialize in high-growth fields and often involve themselves directly in the endeavors they fund--now provide 30 to 40 times more financing each year than their more famous counterparts, venture capitalists. In Angel Investing, Robinson and Van Osnabrugge use personal interviews, anecdotal evidence, and more than 300 research studies to show exactly who these financiers are, how they operate, and where they can be found. Robinson, an international management consultant, and Van Osnabrugge, an associate professor at Harvard Business School, also compare various financing options, explain precisely how angels and venture capitalists function differently, describe proven ways to attract them, and provide relevant resources. "The vast size and power of the business angel market in the United States is not well understood but is of incredible importance to our entrepreneurial sector and, indirectly, to maintaining our economic growth and standard of living," the authors write. They pack their book accordingly with valuable information for serious fund-seekers who have exhausted the traditional three F's (founder, family, and friends), as well as those who are considering entrepreneurial investments of their own. --Howard Rothman

From The Industry Standard
Quick, take a guess. Which source of funding has seeded more companies in the past 20 years: angel money or venture capital? If you chose the latter, you'd be wrong. "Venture capitalists get all the press today, but the majority of entrepreneurial firms are actually funded by business angels, especially those firms in their earliest stages," say Mark Van Osnabrugge and Robert J. Robinson in their ambitious new book, Angel Investing.

The authors argue, convincingly, that angels - private investors who take a long-term interest in early startups - fund 30 to 40 times as many companies as venture capitalists every year. The sum total of $50 billion in annual angel investment is three to five times that of total VC investment.

Both figures need a bit of footnoting. First, angel money naturally goes to a far greater number of companies than venture money. That's because angel investors put relatively small amounts into more companies at the early stages - long before VCs typically pledge their funds and expertise. And as for the size of the overall investments: Venture investments leaped to $17 billion last quarter, according to research firm Venture Economics. But don't let this blur the real story - the surge in VC investment has only reinforced the importance of angel investing. As the stakes of venture capitalists increase (the median stake doubled to $12 million last quarter), the importance of angels in nudging fledgling companies along (anything from healthy private companies to IPO candidates) is all the more critical.

But be warned: This book, which is packed with charts, tables and academic citations, probably won't keep you awake past eight at night. But then again, it doesn't claim to be a thriller. What it does do is deliver on its promise to tell you everything you need to know about one of the most overlooked and underanalyzed sources of investment capital in the economy.

The authors detail how the rise in angel activity is intrinsically linked to the surge in entrepreneurial activity over the past two decades. They compare the value of business angels to venture capitalists. And they provide more than 100 pages of information designed to help angels, with everything from a list of known networks to tips on writing a business plan.

The book's subtitle reveals one of its greatest strengths: It shows how to match a source of finance to your entrepreneurial venture. There is no single financing solution for every company, but this book does a thorough job of guiding entrepreneurs to the appropriate source. Van Osnabrugge and Robinson depict the startup process as a continuum, an entrepreneurial evolution comprised of distinct phases with specific funding and support needs, and they clearly show how to identify which phase a given company is in at a given time.

Angel Investi