Scorecard Helps Angels Value Early-Stage Companies

Marianne Hudson, executive director of the Angel Capital Association (the trade association for angel investors in the US) wrote this article on a growing techqniue used by angels to evaluate companies. Her full article (with her permission) appears below:

Scorecards are ubiquitous in baseball, helping coaches, players and fans understand the factors that led to a victory or defeat.  It turns out that scorecards come in pretty handy for startup business investing, too.

This past October, I enjoyed watching my hometown Kansas City Royals become the World Champions of baseball. Their scorecard was easy to understand, what with runs, hits, and great pitching stats.  Those stats were the factors that led to their World Series win.

Angel investors are using a similar concept for determining the value of the startups that approach them for financing.  They look at the factors that make a new business more or less valuable in a valuation scorecard.  The factors are just different, like industry sector, market size and quality of the management team.

Before we jump into the details of the scorecard, it’s important to understand first why company valuation is so important to angels and entrepreneurs.  The bottom-line is that it is part of the critical calculation of determining how much of the company the investor owns for their investment.  Marcia Dawood, an experienced investor and board member of the Angel Capital Association, walked new investors through the important calculations in a recent webinar.

Dawood explains there are two types of valuation – ”pre-money” is the company’s value before an investment and “post-money” is after the investment.  And an investor’s percent of ownership equals the size of the investment divided by the post-money valuation.  We use both to determine percentage of ownership.

For example, if a company has a pre-money valuation of $2 million and raises $500,000, then the post-money valuation is $2.5 million.  The investors own 20 percent of the company (by dividing the $500,000 by $2.5 million).

Sometimes entrepreneurs back into a valuation when they know how much they want to raise and how much of their company they are willing to give up.  Investors can do this too.  Dawood says, “Think about Shark Tank.  Mr. Wonderful says ‘I’ll give you $200,000 for a 10 percent stake in your company.’  Divide the $200,000 by .10 and you get a $2 million post-money valuation and after subtracting the $200,000 investment, you get a $1.8 million pre-money valuation.”

The numbers in the calculation can have a huge impact on your success in an investment, so it is important to be comfortable with the final pre-money valuation and the elements that get you to that number.  You don’t want to buy company stock for too high of a price.  So how do you do that?

Keeping Score

There are several ways to value startups, but the most popular method used by angels to determine a pre-money valuation is the Scorecard MethodBill Payne, a long-time angel who also led the webinar, uses a real estate analogy to explain the method:  it appraises startups using comps.

The Scorecard Method is used for comparing target companies to similar startups, such as business sector, stage of development and geographic location.  You compare your target company to the norm for several factors and then adjust the median by your appraisal of the target.  These days it is easier to find data on investments and valuations of entrepreneurial firms on the Internet.

The main parameters, or criteria, of the Scorecard Method, in order of importance, along with their respective weights, are: entrepreneur, team, board (30%), size of opportunity (25%), product/technology (15%), sales/marketing (10%), need for more financing (5%) and other (5%). You can change the percentages according to your own preferences about what is important to a startup’s potential.  Put them into a column.

Next , approximate how the company you’re trying to determine a valuation for stacks up in each of those parameters against similar startups. If you think the management of the target startup is 20 percent stronger than the other similar companies, for example, then use the number 120 percent in the comparison column for the parameter. Do the same for the other criteria. When you are finished, multiply the two numbers in the row and post that number in an adjusted weighting column.

Tally the numbers in the adjusted weighting column and multiply that sum by the pre-money valuation for similar startups.  You end up with a chart with a final valuation scorecard like this:

Valuation Chart

This should be fairly accurate as long as you have a good starting value and use a similar stage of development, a comparable business sector and a like location.

Obviously, you want to keep in mind that if the seed stage valuation is too low, entrepreneurs are going to eventually be diluted after multiple rounds. As a result, their interest in driving the company is going to be diminished. If the seed stage valuation is too high, the entrepreneurs and the investors have undervalued the financial contribution.

Other Options

The Scorecard Method, along with the Venture Capital Method and the Dave Berkus Method, are only three of the many methods used by angels in appraising a pre money valuation of a startup company. It is best to use multiple methods, then make a decision from there as to what you think is appropriate for your company and the company you are investing in.

Besides these methods, the Angel Resource Institute offers other ways to learn valuation.  There are also some ACA webinars which are chock-full of good information.

Payne recommends that angels try multiple valuation methods for each investment opportunity.  Essentially, establishing benchmarks helps make something that is very subjective more objective.

Angels who get a 10X plus exit return have hit one out of the park.  Hitting it out of the park goes a long way toward establishing a winning portfolio. And, with a quality business model, good management and a scorecard, it is a whole lot easier to tell if you are winning, in finance – or in the World Series.

terested in angel investing? Consider applying to join the River Valley Investors.

How Angels Can Enjoy The Best Returns — Financial And Otherwise

Marianne Hudson, executive director of the Angel Capital Association (the trade association for angel investors in the US) wrote an article making the case for wealthy to consider becoming angel investors. Her full article (with her permission) appears below:

With angel investing being so risky, eventually most smart angels wonder – is there a way to increase my odds for good returns?  And how else do I make investing a good experience for me?

Here’s the good news.  Studies show that angel investors can make good returns, on par or better than VC or other types of private equity, when they follow some good investment practices.  The studies put proof behind what was previously just common sense. On top of that, many angels are having a blast investing in startup companies and are happy to share their secrets for fun.

Let’s start with the largest study and what we can learn from it to enhance financial returns.  Rob Wiltbank, CEO of software company Galois and professor at Willamette University, collected data on exits – good and bad – from hundreds of angels in the Returns to Angel Investors in Groups.  The study found that the overall return for the 1,100 plus exits in the dataset was 2.6 times the invested money in 3.5 years, or about 27% gross Internal Rate of Return.

More important than the average return for this “portfolio” of 1,100 exits, was the very wide and unbalanced distribution of the exits, with 52% of the exits losing some or all of the investment and 7% providing nearly all of the return.  This means the average in the study didn’t describe the performance for most of the angels who participated.  But there are some good takeaways that can lead to better returns:

  • Look for the home run opportunities.  As Wiltbank says, “The returns are massively skewed.  Ten percent of all of deals produce 90% of the returns.”  Really sophisticated angels have paid attention to this.  A few top angels have told me they started out looking for singles and doubles, thinking they could make most of their returns in those deals.  Now they have changed their game – it’s all about hitting home runs.
  • Diversify your investments.  Not only does a small percentage of deals deliver the biggest returns, but there a 50-50 chance that each individual investment will be a failure or a success, so you need to make many investments to find the one that will be a home run.
  • Take your time and be patient but persistent.  The 52% of the exits that lost money did so in an average of three years, while the big returns took an average of six years.  As you wait for the bigger returns, learn from your experience by watching others and enjoy the process and the angels and entrepreneurs you meet.  (More on this later.)
  • Do due diligence.  Just looking at amount of time in due diligence, angels who did more than the median amount of diligence on a deal (20 hours) did significantly better than those below the median.  The overall multiple difference was almost six times – 5.9X compare to 1.1X! This is mostly about reducing failures.  Said another way, 65% of the below-median due diligence angels lost money, compared to 45% for the above-median group. Now, there’s a reason to roll up your sleeves to check the companies out!
  • Invest in what you know.  Putting your specific industry expertise into your investing is common sense.  The study showed that when the investor had expertise in the company’s industry, the exit was three time higher than for others (3.7X compared to 1.3X, both in around four years).  Use your entrepreneurial experience too.  Wiltbank says that “angel investors are well suited to early-stage investing because many have been entrepreneurs themselves.”
  • Stay connected to the entrepreneur after you invest.  Investors who met with company leaders often to mentor, coach, or offer strategic consulting and that monitored the company’s progress saw an overall multiple of 3.7X in four years.  Conversely, those who took a more passive approach reported an average lower multiple of 1.3X in 3.6 years.

Angel investing is about financial returns, but it is so much more than that.  As top angel David S. Rose wrote in his recent book, “…investing in startups has so many other dimensions that, for quite a few angels, the external rewards may be even more important than then financial ones.”  He sees a number of non-cash benefits that come with your “angel wings,” from “entrepreneurship without responsibility” to giving back and developing life-long friendships.

My organization, the Angel Capital Association, gives an annual award to one person who makes a big difference to angel investing and one of my fondest memories is watching the first winner receive his award in 2005.  Bob Goff, leader of the Sierra Angels in Nevada, won not only for his active investing and support for the entrepreneurial community, but for his total embodiment of angel investing as “doing good, having fun, and making money – not necessarily in that order”.

That phrase has stuck with me and so many other angels I know.  Many angels enjoy spending time with other smart investors, meeting remarkable entrepreneurs and learning about interesting and innovative ideas.  Beyond the personal experience, it’s wonderful to know as an angel that you’re helping build the economy, creating jobs and life-changing innovations, and giving promising new businesses a chance.

And I can’t leave Rose’s “entrepreneurship without responsibility” without another comment.  One of my favorite angels has said how much he loved starting his very successful company and selling it for a great return, but not so much the part in the middle (running and growing the company).  As angel investors, we know the responsibility for the company’s success is with the CEO and we can enjoy being involved with the company without taking the responsibility “in the middle” of getting to a great exit.

Angel investing offers many returns.  What could be better than doing good and having fun while employing good investment practices that make money at the same time?

Interested in angel investing? Consider applying to join the River Valley Investors.

Startup valuation, the Seraf Method

The Angel Capital Association put out this interesting piece on a new method for startup valuation, the Saraf Method.

Short Version:

Full article

Want to Transform the Local Economy?

Good News: Western Massachusetts is home to one of the top 100 startup accelerators in the world and has a rapidly growing entrepreneurship ecosystem. We have dozens of exciting young companies being born every year right in our back yard. WHAAAAAA WHOOOO!

Bad News: Those companies need access to high-risk capital but we don’t have nearly enough angel investors (AKA wealthy people who put their own time & money into startups). Too few angels means too little capital. Too little capital means many of our region’s greatest companies will have to move to where they can find the money.

The Opportunity: If you believe, as I do, that entrepreneurs are our best hope for growing the jobs and prosperity of our region, and if you have an income of at least $250k a year (and/or have a high net worth), I invite you to become an angel investor for our region. Doing so gives you the opportunity to help entrepreneurs with your money and your expertise. Startups are hard. Most fail and in so doing lose their investors money. But the ones that succeed create economy-saving jobs & prosperity. Their founders and investors earn enough to become the philanthropists of the future.

It truly is an opportunity to do well by doing good… and have a blast doing it.

If this sounds like interesting, I invite you to come to a meeting of the River Valley Investors, meet the crazy people betting on the innovators of the future, and consider joining us. To get meeting details, email me paul@angelcatalyst.com.

 

The Case For Being An Angel Investor

Marianne Hudson, executive director of the Angel Capital Association (the trade association for angel investors in the US) wrote an article making the case for wealthy to consider becoming angel investors. Her full article (with her permission) appears below:

The other day I was listening to an entrepreneur pitch his company to a group of potential investors and it hit me how great it is to be an angel investor. I’m admittedly biased, but I think being an angel investor is one of the best things high net worth investors can do.  Supporting great entrepreneurs is a real kick – and it can bring significant financial returns.

The rewards are many, assuming you can check yes to these basic caveats: Legally, you must have the wealth or income to be an accredited investor. Personally, you must be willing to lose your investment money, should have a portfolio strategy, and use good investment practices.  This high risk, high reward kind of investing isn’t for everyone, but for every article I read encouraging people not to get into angel investing, I see more reasons to do it.

First, consider the potential financial returns.  A study found that the overall return on 1,100 plus angel exits was 2.6 times the money in 3.5 years, or about 27% gross Internal Rate of Return.  Not bad compared to other types of equity investments. Even so, it’s important to look into the details.  More than 52% of those exits lost some or all of the investment and 7% provided nearly all of the returns.  This means that angels need to start with a strategy to make multiple investments to minimize risk and increase the chance of good returns. Angels should also educate themselves on good angel investing processes via eventsreading and networking with experienced angels.

Angel investing can also help diversify your overall investment portfolio.  Ryan Feit, CEO of SeedInvest, put it this way: “Allocating 5% of your overall portfolio into angel investments can increase returns while lowering volatility.  This is because early-stage, private companies generally have a low correlation with traditional asset classes, such as stocks and bonds.  A recent SharesPost whitepaper concluded that allocating 5% to private growth companies could increase the returns of a traditional portfolio by 12%.”

While returns are the measuring stick for any kind of investment, investing in early-stage companies provides a whole set of additional, hard to find, personal rewards:

  • Meet interesting people with fascinating ideas – Top entrepreneurs are the best communicators I’ve ever seen, getting across their technology or medical innovations in ways nearly anyone can understand while also explaining their business models very well. You can feel their tremendous passion and see how fast the wheels in their brains are going.  Through angel investing I have also had the pleasure of meeting other investors. Often we have highly different backgrounds, yet we share a common core that builds great bonds, leading to long-lasting, true friendships. And let’s not forget the great food and beverages we enjoy as we analyze and debate our next investment.
  • Support what you care about – Since angels decide which companies they want to invest in, they can put their own money in the kinds of businesses that are the most important to them. This might be industry sectors you have experience in, or entrepreneurs who are alumni of your university, or supporting a demographic you care about such as women entrepreneurs.
  • Know you’re doing good – As Feit says, “Unlike any other type of investment, startup investing provides the opportunity to invest in innovation and to feel real ownership in the companies that you invest in. Every year, angel investments create thousands of revolutionary and life-changing technologies.” I’ve met so many angels who are also proud that the companies they invest in create new jobs.
  • “Entrepreneurship without the responsibility” – Super Angel David S. Rose coined this phrase in his 2014 book“Angel Investing: The Gust Guide to Making Money and Having Fun Investing in Startups.” Entrepreneurship is exciting.  As I wrote a few years ago, one of my favorite angels has said how much he loved starting his very successful company and selling it for a great return, but he didn’t really enjoy the part in the middle—running and growing the company.  As angel investors, we know that the responsibility for a company’s success lies with the CEO and we can enjoy being involved with the company without having the responsibility of leading “in the middle” to get to a great exit.
  • Learn new skills – Angel investing offers something new for everyone. Learning new things like deal terms, the most effective way to mentor entrepreneurs, or how to be a good board director can be lots of fun. Sometimes gaining these skills can also lead investors on new life paths. For instance, one reason angel investing is attractive to women is because it’s a fast track to learning about being on boards of directors, getting board experience, and then leveraging this to become better candidates to serve on corporate boards.
  • Apply current skills in new ways – Angel Barbara Clarke is an example of how an investor’s background can contribute to the angel process. As she told me recently, “Everyone on a due diligence team has their own unique expertise and experience. For example, angels with journalist backgrounds are good at research and interviewing. My background is management consulting, and I’ve found that I am comfortable with competitor and market analysis, even in industries and fields I am unfamiliar with.”

When you add the financial benefits with the personal perks, how can’t you make a case for angel investing? My advice? Continue to learn as much as you can about angel investing before diving in, but know up front that it is one of the best things you can ever do.

8 Steps To Becoming An Angel Investor

The Angel Capital Association put our a great starter guide for people who are Angel Curious (my term, not theirs :)).

The Short version:

  1. Make sure you meet accredited investor standards
  2. Understand the risks of investing in startups
  3. Educate yourself
  4. Ask experienced angels for advice
  5. Join an angel group or angel platform (like the River Valley Investors)
  6. Develop an initial investing strategy
  7. Actively participate in Q&As
  8. When ready, write that first check

Get the full details from the original article here.