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This post is intended for aspiring or beginning angel investors.
‘I’m an angel investor’. It can be a serious endeavor, a path to fortune or merely am expensive hobby (like racing cars on weekends). Is it a hard-won Purple Heart, or a chocolate medal? And are there better ways to succeed?
No worries: it’s vegan. The is your own choice. Some people invest because , while others like or pretty much stopped to ‘make better use of their time’. I did my first angel investment 10 years ago — sort of ‘before it went mainstream’ — and am mostly ‘mission-driven’: I only invested in startups whose mission and founders I was proud to support.
Since then, I’ve invested in ‘only’ a dozen companies and have ‘on paper’ a positive ROI (I just chose not to sell shares that would have made it a net positive). None has fully exited, but I sold some shares at up to 75x. So far, 1/3 are doing great, 1/3 are closed and 1/3 are ‘in-between’ with uncertain futures. This is not so common for any type of investment (as an asset class, VC are said to be underperforming), and even rarer for angels.
The focus of this post is to help new angels understand the social side effects and market dynamics, so they know better than I did what they’re getting into (though I’ve been fortunate enough I can’t complain).
First, it suggests that you have **significant disposable income**In the U.S. you generally need to be an ‘accredited investor’ (= $1M in assets, or income >$200k). But it might be cheaper than you think!
Great power can lead to abusive behavior
Precogs can’t wait 10 years to know if they’re right
“Angel investing is a priceless way for entrepreneurs or executives to get to know the other side. In the age of being able to invest 5–10k, most tech leaders with money should do it at least once.”— Itai Damti
Half a Bitcoin won’t give you as much class
How do you do that?
Minimalist angel gear costs $1.89 on Taobao With AngelList syndicates, equity crowdfunding, and now , it can even be as low as $1,000 for one company, or $5,000 for a whopping… 30 companies!
So you can go el cheapo…or be the real deal and do like Fabrice Grinda: on the side of your startup founder job before turning pro.
Can it make money?
Note that if you’re very lucky (it happened to me) or are a certified precog, even a tiny investment can turn into something significant if:
For example, to get $1M out of $5k (200x), it requires a startup to go from — dilution included — a $2M valuation to… $800M (2x200x2). Not so common in a world where a 10x return on a single deal is celebrated ^^
The reality — you’ve heard it before — is rather to:‘Assume you’ll lose everything. Because you probably will’ — Itai Damti
Uh oh. You’re sending me mixed signals.
Multiples Masquerade #1: You will hear about multiples, but only of ‘successful’ (though illiquid) individual deals.
It’s just like financial analysts who repeat endlessly the one prediction they got right to gain social proof, and never mention again the many they got wrong.
This would come in handy
Multiples Masquerade #2: Even multiples are sometimes meaningless if based on the last valuation but not today’s fair value.
The startup raised a series C at $100M? Great! It’s about to close doors? Not so great. VCs and LPs report fair value. Angels? It’s often more freestyle.Millionnaire on paper
Multiples Masquerade #3: The fine print might bite you. For instance, I recently sold some shares in one startup to a new investor at 1/3 the price of the last valuation (not the new one).
Why? Because I had early shares with less privileges than later shares (and thus were less valuable). But also because most startups don’t really have a secondary market, so the buyer names its price!Many angels would say “I invested at X valuation and now it’s Y” and let you miscalculate, not mentioning dilution, or bad terms. Optics rule!
Don’t worry!
Multiples Masquerade #4: Some angels might even — like some VCs do — ‘buy the logo’ late, at series B/C/D/E, and still call themselves ‘angels’ since they put in a personal check.
The trick is that it suggests they were smart enough / had the clout to get in early (it might still be non-trivial to come in at later stages, but it’s not the same level of heroism), where they in fact didn’t.
She has the logos but the car doors don’t open quite right yet
What you really want to know is the cash-on-cash return on their portfolio, or an estimate with fair valuations. Social norms and taboos help people obfuscate it.
The reason is NOT a general “spread risk” or “gain experience”. Those are mere correlations to something more important: improving your deal flow.
It is NOT the cost of getting ‘smarter’ as in ‘better at picking deals’.
Again, the problem is NOT how good you are at finding the needle in the haystack, but rather:
So as an angel you will start with deals everyone else has passed on, or from founders who have no network. They are the riskiest out there.
Lots of needles = better results
In fact, thinking you’re good at picking is probably the #1 risk.
Your effort is better spent seeking the better haystacks, making sure they’re full of needles, and tagging along with experienced needle-finders!Sadly, you can’t seat at this table
Then, as you start broadcasting your angel investor activity, maybe you will establish some deal flow and a bit of expertise in a domain or geography, and you will gradually see better deals.
That’s what happened to me. I found my best deals at the source. In accelerators, or via high-profile networks that it took me years to build via goodwill, information exchange, and by maintaining as good a reputation as possible in the markets I operated in.
They know what they’re doing
Especially in niche markets that you believe in (hardware & crypto, for example). If you know someone well enough you might get access with $50k–$100k, which is what you would put on 2–3 deals anyway. They’re going to do a better job than you do (although I’m not saying they’ll provide a great return…) — Itai Damti
Also, ‘I’m an LP in a16z’ sounds 1,000x more baller than ‘I co-invested with a16z’.
Regardless of returns, you’ll get data room access, private newsletters, and will be invited to all those cool LP parties where they do all those cool things. The info and network alone might be worth it — better than your local Country Club or Church group!The first checks have to be small. It took me 4 years to expand my network to people like the fintech partners at 500 who have access to deals I really want to back (even in small scale). I spent a little too much on the way there.
It’s also easy for these checks to add up to a significant sum. Never put more than 10% of your net worth into this, no matter how good it makes you feel. And if you choose to do it, I recommend to spread it along 5 years: 1%, 1%, 2%, 3%, 3%. It’s very easy to invest 10% of your net worth into startups in 1 year. It’s a terrible mistake. — Itai Damti
**Exit partially every couple of rounds rather than keep risk all the way to the end.**That’s my view today. Many startups can pass seed and A but never get to the end (look at the stats). As an angel you generally can’t play like a VC (with a 10-year timeframe) and follow-on or double-down (it’s not your game). What you can do is sometimes take money off the table before the table disappears. If you invest $20k at $2M into a startup that raises an A at $20M, selling half your shares will bag $100k (discounted to 50% with dilution + terms). And you still have half of your shares! Unlike VCs, you don’t need a unicorn to get returns, and your carry is 100%!
De-risk your deals by taking some early partial exits
Grit and resourcefulness > Branded degrees and experience Beware of fancy offices and Silicon Valley costs. Frugality also improves odds of survival during tough times. Maybe Sequoia’s Mike Moritz .
**‘Buy logos’ early**I’m not a fan of this but it does work. In fact, many VCs (especially new entrants) do it too. If you can, put some tiny money into trendy startups. Regardless of their results you will be able to trade on their reputation to access better deals for some time. If they tank later you’ll already be onto the new trendy deals. Hopefully one of them will work out, and you only need one to look like a genius (like early investors in Skype, Facebook, Twitter, Xiaomi, etc.). I turned down a few opportunities to invest in iconic companies I didn’t believe in at an early-ish or later stage. They didn’t end up doing well but had I invested, my network would have grown and my profile risen to give me access to more ‘inner circle’ deals. Maybe I missed out on good deal flow by turning down some ‘logos’.
Such big wings must fly for real!
One the one hand, rank-and-file angels fund the messy super-risky early stages of startups who don’t have the network to raise from VCs or more experienced angels. Mathematically, the average return of such deals can’t be good (as an asset class, even professional VCs have negative returns).
VCs pick up the startups that survive, and tolerate/welcome angels unless they have too large shares (a frequent problem in emerging markets where early investors are sometimes very aggressive).
So angels could — by and large — be considered the foot soldiers of investment, while VCs have the armored vehicles (or ).
Angels take risks
There are less risky paths when working with VCs: some angels help scout deals for VCs, or organize syndicates. AngelList even offers to help founders to become angels.
Yet, angels sometimes do compete with VCs. For instance, if angels pour millions in an immature startup, it might make it unattractive to seed-stage VCs. Then if the startup doesn’t clear key milestones using this angel funding, it might also discourage later stage VCs. Too much angel money too early can be dangerous, especially if said angels can’t give support toward the next milestones, nor top up during hard times (your investors are your first calls when money might run out).
A lovely angel-themed animation