Posts Tagged ‘startups’

How to Get Your Info Into Investor Hands

Monday, May 7th, 2012

Our “Ask ActSeed” team recently received a question from an entrepreneur who wanted to restart his company, find angel investors and be prepared to provide investors with the info they want. Here’s what we told him:

“The information below is an important part of the story that an investor will want to know for sure. It seems there are two parts to your question:

  1. How to find investors and
  2. What to present to them when you find them.

ActSeed Q&A About Investors and InvestingFirst, how to find them:

While there is no single “exchange” to find all prospective investors, there are many venues and approaches to finding them. The best is personal networking – talking to people you know and finding out if they, or someone they know, might be interested in your deal. The other end of the investor-search spectrum is to do Google searches and cold call banks and investment firms to gauge their interest. This is a very low probability approach. In the middle are communities like ActSeed that help bridge an entrepreneur’s lack of personal investor network with connections to investors and investor groups. Some communities are free (e.g. LinkedIn), but investors don’t dwell there as free sites attract half-baked deals and lots of “noise”. Some have membership fees (like ActSeed), are more concentrated, and have a higher quality. None can guarantee a successful deal, but the good ones can help you reach investors you wouldn’t find otherwise.

However, reaching prospective investors is only a part of the equation…

Most professional angel investors, VC and other equity investors see hundreds, if not thousands, of deals each year. Most invest in 2-6 deals each year. This leaves 97%+ of all deals unfunded. The remainder get bootstrapped (e.g. self-funded through self-directed IRAs, savings, etc.), through debt (e.g. bank loan) or likely shut down or go dormant.

The second part is what information you present to the prospective investor.

  • If an investor believes the information being presented to them is incomplete, they will stop reviewing.
  • If an investor doesn’t “get it” very quickly – i.e. understand the business opportunity before then – they will stop reviewing.

Through ActSeed, entrepreneurs prepare the information that investors want to see using a scored profiling system. ActSeed scores the “completeness of preparation”, not whether the idea is viable. ActSeed’s scored profile enables the investor to have a uniform comparative against other deals that signals risk of successful implementation of the business model. It’s kind of like a FICO score for early stage companies. Here’s a link to a brief white paper about the ActSeed profile and scoring process.

ActSeed’s 1-page “Business Snapshot” template is an excellent framework for an entrepreneur to introduce their business highlights on a single page; if an investor “gets it” on that first page, they will be much more inclined to read further. The scored profile and Business Snapshot are available in ActSeed.com. Once your ActSeed profile is complete, you can search ActSeed’s Investor Group for prospective investors within the ActSeed community. You can also share your ActSeed link with any investor outside of ActSeed.

If you’re interested, you can learn more about the ActSeed Entrepreneur Group and sign up if you want to use these resources by clicking here.  You can also download a free copy of ActSeed’s “Business Snapshot” template when you complete your free registration on ActSeed.

There are other communities and resources available to you that will also extend your reach into the investor community. In addition to ActSeed, we advise all of our community members to also use other networks that can be helpful. The new business creation and small business ecosystem is too fragmented and dynamic to fit one application or one community; however, a balance of communities can together drive value to those who build companies.

Ready to Swim in the Shark Tank on ABC?

Tuesday, May 1st, 2012

Shark Tank Entrepeneur Investor Show on ABCIf you think your startup or product idea can survive an interrogation on national TV, then contact us now.

Yun Lingner is the Co-Executive Producer for a TV series on ABC called Shark Tank, a Mark Burnett Productions show.

If you’re not familiar with this show, entrepreneurs are selected to pitch their businesses to a panel of wealthy investors (e.g.  Mark Cuban and Barbara Corcoran) in order to land an investor. We are helping Yun find some innovative businesses, products, business ideas and of course, entrepreneurs with interesting backgrounds or stories for the upcoming season.

If you’re interested in swimming with the sharks on national TV, send us an email to info@actseed.com with “Shark Tank” or “I want to swim with the sharks” in the subject line and we’ll get you connected directly to Yun.

If your deal needs some polish before jumping in the deep end, join ActSeed’s Entrepreneur Group.

Also, you can test your elevator pitch in ActSeed’s “Inside Pitch” discussion group on LinkedIn (it’s free).

Deadline to submit your idea, startup or small business? Just say “you snooze, you lose…”, and hesitate at your own risk.

Shark Tank Entrepeneur Investor Show on ABC

How to Find More Customers

Wednesday, April 25th, 2012

Three Things You Must Do to Attract People to Your Business

One of the greatest challenges for a young business is getting customer traction. This rarely happens overnight; however, it won’t cost a fortune or take forever when you apply these three practices:

Number 11. Optimize the message. Make sure the message is clear.  The content of the press release, the tweet, the Facebook post must be concise and to the point. We live in an era of multi-media, so the message can also have embedded video and photos. The old way of doing press releases is dead. Press releases are also searchable by keyword phrases. Make sure your press and social media is written so reporters and media professionals can find you.

Number 22. Open a dialogue. Make sure you can listen to your customers as well as you can talk to them. Gone are the days when you use your mouth, but not your ears. When you write a press release, tweet or post a blog or Facebook entry, you need to give your audience the opportunity to reply AND you must have a way to collect those replies. Using your mouth and ears must be followed by using your brain to evolve your message and your business.

Number 33. Be consistent. Be constant. Be patient. One tweet or press release won’t do anything. One thousand tweets or ten press releases in one day won’t either. A steady flow of information reinforces your message and steadily reminds your customers about your business. Trust isn’t built on a one night stand. Trust is built over time, so understand that you must commit time and discipline to your PR and social media activity.

We constantly hear from fellow entrepreneurs who want a winning PR and social media strategy, but they don’t believe they have the time or the money. Well, it doesn’t have to cost thousands of dollars each month or take half of each day to get results.

We found a solution.

Vocus PR and Marketing for Entrepreneurs and Small BusinessesWe found a solution we like so well that we partnered with them to bring it to you. A company called Vocus, based in Maryland, has created a suite of PR and marketing tools just for startups and small businesses.

From a single dashboard, we can

  • Create press releases and deliver them to thousands of reporters and journalists,
  • Track activity in our Twitter and Facebook accounts, and receive suggestions for engaging our audience, and
  • Receive inquiries from journalists and bloggers who are looking to write stories that could feature us.

Vocus and ActSeed partner to help entrepreneurs and small businesses with PR and marketingUsing Vocus, our followers and interaction have increased on Twitter and Facebook and we’re spending much less time while getting better results. Vocus is easy enough to use that you can be completely new to PR or social media and become proficient within a day. Vocus also has great white papers, guides and webinars to educate you on the latest trends and strategies in public relations and social media.

Check it out. They have given us a deal to share with the ActSeed community, and you can see it firsthand in a really compelling personalized demo by clicking here.

 

Marketing That Works

Monday, November 28th, 2011

Book Cover - Marketing That Works - by Howard Morgan, et alThis is one of our favorite marketing reference books for entrepreneurs and startups.

Make sure this book is in your own entrepreneurial library.

This book explains how the good steak can sizzle without leaving you with just an aroma. “Marketing that Works” was written by some of the best minds in startup marketing who have held prominent positions in blockbuster startups, idealab!, Wharton and venture capital: Howard Morgan of First Round Capital, Leonard Lodish of Wharton and Shellye Archambeau, former president of Blockbuster’s e-commerce division.

This book includes practical approaches (not just theoretical!) to developing business ideas, pricing, market validation, distribution and channel strategies, product launches and more.

To buy a paper copy or download a Kindle version from our bookstore partner, Amazon.com, click here.

TEC – How One ActSeed Entrepreneur Group Member is Sparking the Economy

Friday, November 11th, 2011

ActSeed Entrepreneur Group member - TEC Inc.Sometimes, an ActSeed Entrepreneur Group member not only has a promising business, but is also an ally in ActSeed’s mission to assist people in building exceptional companies of all types. The TEC Center is one such partner that has the potential to make a positive impact on our economy.

There are a lot of folks hurting for work and wanting an opportunity to leap out-and-up from their current economic situation. As many big companies sit on the sideline for hiring, a growing number of disenfranchised people aspire to take control of their future and create their own job by starting a business or joining a startup. The trouble is: where do they turn? Where can they acquire the knowledge to be a business owner, a business partner, an entrepreneur?

Entrepreneurship is not a reserved for a “ruling class” or exclusive to the highly-educated. At its core, entrepreneurship is about building something of value that others want to purchase and accepting the risks inherent in the process of moving from “idea to implementation”. This includes butchers and bakers, not just iPhone app makers. Just as ActSeed is dedicated to assisting regular people build exceptional businesses, TEC is committed to training regular people to become business partners.

We interviewed Jack Finkelstein, the co-founder and President of TEC – which is as much a movement for positive change as it is a promising young business. We have provided Jack’s contact information at the end of the interview so you can reach him directly and explore how to get involved.

Q. Describe your “Eureka Moment”. What was the market opportunity that drove your decision to form a company around this product/service?

A. The Eureka Moment came when we realized that every one of our graduates will be guaranteed a job. This is a powerful statement to make in the middle of a recession. We also realized that not only are there millions who need our service, but every year an additional 2 million young adults enter our target market zone.

Q. How did you fund the company to its current state?

My partner and I have self-funded the project till now. We have also formed a 501(c)3 not-for-profit corporation, held seminars with Operation Hope in Harlem to test market our program, acquired an office at 590 Madison Avenue in New York City, and started some of the businesses that our graduates will participate in.

Q. ActSeed champions the need for solid planning and preparation from the very beginning. How important is planning and prep to your company’s success? Can you share an example or two?

A. Planning and preparation is important to the success of any new corporation. The seminars we held at Operation Hope and some of the high schools resulted in the following: Young adults in the inner cities with a high school degree or GED degree desperately want and need the TEC Center Program. Not only will they be guaranteed jobs but they will also become partners in the business that they will work in. Our target market currently has an unemployment rate of close to 20%. The TEC Center Program is a valuable program that can provide them with the type of success they may otherwise only dream about.

Q. How long did it take to get your idea into the market from initial concept to first customer?

A. This has been a 3 year labor of love that not only is about a great business venture – but also a “movement.” From understanding the inner city individual to determining which businesses can be formed and remain successful in the inner city has taken up the majority of our time. The last 6 months have been spent in looking for the right nationally accredited school with the proper accreditation, and Title IV abilities that we require for our program.

The TEC Center is a partner with and Entrepreneur Group member in ActSeed

Q. What influence have the internet and new media had on the way you are marketing, selling and supporting your products/services?

A. An advantage we have is that we know how to reach our target market. Every high school graduating class, every GED class, and even the colleges represent potential students for our program. It is not a surprise that these individuals all have email addresses and a cell phone. We also utilize the internet as a research tool to teach entrepreneurialism to our students.

Q. Describe the challenges you faced as you built your customer base, including defining the customer target, establishing the right price and pricing strategy and of course, closing the first few deals. Any wisdom to share with other entrepreneurs on this subject?

A. Defining and reaching our customer base is perhaps our easiest task. We decided primarily on young adults in the inner cities because they can utilize our services more than college grads. The cost of tuition is covered through Title IV Federal Student Loan Program. Students pay back the loan after they graduate and begin working. Since all students will be working for one of our company-sponsored startups, we do not anticipate any issues in paying back the loan.

Q. What techniques have you used to establish credibility in the eyes of customers, investors, partners, personnel and the general public?

A. The TEC Center Program speaks for itself. Guaranteed government funding for every one of our students (each student gets pre-qualified for the funding). Guaranteed jobs for all graduates. The government spends approximately $100 Billion dollars every year on education and we anticipate that this will continue for a long time. This is virtually a no-risk, low cost business to enter. A classroom of 32 students can be turned around 3 times a day (each class is 3 ½ hours long). This represents enough revenue to support full operations and the company-initiated small businesses. Direct overhead is approximately 20%. Investors salivate over these statistics.

Q. Have government, University, or other community / economic development programs been useful? If so, how?

A. We believe that educators are good at educating but do not make the best entrepreneurs. Most have never owned or operated a successful business. While high schools mostly concentrate on math and science to prepare students for college, we concentrate on entrepreneurship and prepare our students to become partners in a business – a business that they will enter as a partner, without being required to apply any of their own savings. Most inner city economic development offices attempt to convince large businesses to move into their district in order to create jobs (mostly low level jobs). The TEC Center Program provides the tools, entrepreneurial education, training and a myriad of jobs and businesses that students can choose from.

Q. What is the most important thing people never tell you about joining or founding an early-stage company?

A. Most people do not know enough to give sound advice about founding an early-stage company. Entrepreneurs and optimists tell you to “go for it.” Non-entrepreneurs and pessimists tell you that “most new businesses fail.” The real key to success is to keep your expenses down, understand your target market and product (or service) better than anyone else, don’t hesitate to continually challenge all of your assumptions, and have plenty of contingency plans if things do not go as expected.

Q. Is there anything else you’d like to share that we didn’t ask you in the questions above?

A. In addition to an expected healthy financial return to our investors TEC is a shining example of a social value enterprise: a profitable venture that address a major public need and gives back to the community. The success of the TEC Center Program will also help reduce the dramatic high school drop-out rate, especially in the inner cities. Nationally, the high school drop-out rate is 25% to 50%, over 50% in the inner cities. In addition, 50% of college students drop out of college – 30% the first year alone. This dropout rate is called “The Silent Epidemic” because few people are talking about it. These individuals can now learn how to become entrepreneurs and partners in a business. TEC will be instrumental in training the unemployed, single parent families, returning G.I. veterans, and individuals who have been released from a correctional institution as long as they have a high school or GED degree. Something has to be done now. The TEC Center Program takes a major step forward in solving this very serious situation. Having just 1,000 students in each state represents a major contribution to job creation and the economic growth in each stage. We are not in a high-tech business; we are in a high-value business.

Our thoughts about ActSeed: “ActSeed is very professional and I strongly believe that its CEO, Bill Attinger, truly cares about our program. ActSeed has been involved in every aspect of the processes that are required to present the TEC Center Program as good as possible. You can’t go wrong by giving ActSeed the opportunity of matching your program to possible investors.”

For more information about The TEC Center, please contact Jack Finkelstein, founder and President, at jack@theteccenter.com or visit their web site at http://www.tecmembers.com.
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Are You Three Feet from Gold?

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Entrepreneurs, small business owners and founders of startups tirelessly work toward turning their business vision into a commercial reality, and possibly a metaphorical gold mine.  While the destination and even the journey can be rewarding, it’s often lonely and frustrating to the point entrepreneurs often give up.  If this describes you, then read “Three Feet From Gold” before making your final decision to throw in the towel.  It may be a life-changing choice.

There’s no doubt that Napoleon Hill has influenced many generations of leaders with his research and writing that stems from a 1908 encounter with Andrew Carnegie.Three Feet from Gold - Book

Hill’s principals have been artfully brought into today’s business landscape with the book, “Three Feet from Gold”. ActSeed champions books and individuals who can both educate and inspire. Sharon Lechter and Greg Reid do this well.

When you buy this book, buy a notepad, too. This is one of those books that inspire you to take notes and then muster the tenacity you need to pursue your own purpose.

As the book states, the greatest reason for failure is quitting.  Don’t even consider quitting until you have read this book.

 

 

 

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VC Profile – Moore Venture Partners

Thursday, August 4th, 2011

Terry Moore has been building and funding companies for two decades.

TerryMoore-MooreVP As the Managing Partner of Moore Venture Partners, LP, Terry sees up to 500 deals per year. From this list, he may seriously review a dozen of them and make an investment in about four of them.

Moore Venture Partners has established a unique niche in venture investing.  Moore doesn’t seed or lead transactions, but the firm does source and qualify deals that fit the interests of the top VCs in Silicon Valley and beyond. Then, they participate in deals with top VC firms.  Through this approach, Moore Venture Partners enables its limited partners to participate in investment opportunities to which they might not otherwise have access.

The Fund’s focus is technology and life sciences, particularly in southern California - companies with strong intellectual property (e.g. patents) in the early growth stages, and sometimes even in the expansion stage.

Terry has a solid track record of investing with returns coming from both acquisition opportunities and IPOs. His own operational experience helps him assess deals and their management teams.  His extensive relationships with top VC and corporate investors enable his portfolio companies to have the best chance to grow and succeed.  His leadership as Chairman of The VC Roundtable further indicates his commitment to bringing best practices and a collaborative spirit to venture investing.

ActSeed is glad to have firms like Moore Venture Partners involved in its Investor Group.

ActSeed provides Terry with visibility into a community of innovative startups – each having a series of ActSeed Scores that provide an indication of the company’s “investment-readiness”.  The scores calculated for each startup in ActSeed’s Entrepreneur Group enables Terry to immediately get a sense of whether the startup has established a solid foundation on which to grow and where gaps in the business might exist. Gaps won’t necessarily kill an investment opportunity, but not knowing what issues need attention may become quickly fatal for both entrepreneur and investor.  ActSeed’s contribution to the VC process is to bring any issues to the front of the conversation.

Moore Venture Partners is on track to provide great value to both its portfolio of startups and its limited partner investors. Terry Moore leads this effort by leveraging his experience and administering a thorough due diligence.  Each year a few startups may become part of the Moore Venture Partners’ investment portfolio and benefit further from Terry’s guidance and extensive network.  The hundreds of deals that don’t quite make the cut will need to look elsewhere for their capital needs.  ActSeed is glad to help Moore in his quest to find appropriate deals for his fund and provide a resource for the deals he sees that may not be ”investor-ready” and need to find funding elsewhere.

To learn more about Moore Venture Partners, please visit the Moore Venture Partners web site.

To learn more about how ActSeed can help your startup become investor-ready and find VC or individual investors who may be interested in your venture, please

  1. Download ActSeed’s 5-page white paper,
  2. Register on ActSeed.com and
  3. Join ActSeed’s Entrepreneur Group.

 

 Moore Venture Partners logo

 

 

 

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Your Ideal Source of Cash…

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

…is from customers!

A great way to grow your business: find new customers using daily deals from GroupPrice.  ActSeed likes Group Price because they enable you to increase your sales with no upfront marketing expenses while cutting your costs with daily deals from other small businesses.

Problem

One of the growth problems for startups is getting more cash coming in than is going out. Cash is the fuel that powers a business. Not receivables or IOUs, but cash in the bank. You must positively impact your cash two ways:

  • Increase revenues by attracting new paying customers
  • Reduce expenses by finding great deals for the business services you need

SolutionActSeed Partner

ActSeed has partnered with GroupPrice to help you tap this innovative marketplace to boost your business in two important ways:

  • Spark an increase in sales by tapping new customers without any upfront marketing or advertising expense.
  • Find daily deals on products and services aimed at your start up or small businesses with discounts up to 80%.

How to Maximize the Benefits from the ActSeed-GroupPrice Partnership

Two steps.  Both are free.

bug-GroupPrice1. Register with GroupPrice so you can buy and sell on the GroupPrice marketplace.

2. Register with ActSeed where you can access exclusive promotions and discounts from our leading partners like GroupPrice.

 

Like Fox Business TV, we think Group Price is like Groupon® – but dedicated to entrepreneurs, startups and small businesses.

 

Summary

ActSeed and GroupPrice are aligned in a commitment to helping you find sources of capital and streams of revenue. Cash is king. Heck, cash is also queen, prince and the whole royal court.

Forrester Research has identified that “daily deals for business is a persistent and growing trend.” Startups and small businesses – the backbone of the US economy – have been badly weakened by the recession, but sites like Group Price are helping them recover and grow.

Raise your revenue. Cut your costs. Do both using GroupPrice.

…Now that’s an obvious partnership that ActSeed can champion.

GroupPrice logo

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See You Tonight At StartupCircle!

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

If you are in San Diego this evening, please stop by the monthly StartupCircle event. 

Click here for details.

This month, Parand Darugar will be speaking. Parand is the founder and CEO of Xpenser a mobile expense management solution: manage time, expenses, and receipts via email, SMS, voice (call and say your expense), Twitter, iPhone, IM (Yahoo, MSN, AIM, Google Talk), or the web.

Prior to Xpenser he spent 4 years at Yahoo! as one of the core architects of the Panama project, as manager of the platform groups (Yahoo! wide centers of expertise providing Java, Database, and other platform technologies), and as the scaling / grid architect for the Apex/Apt project.

Before Yahoo!, he was co-founder and Chief Architect of Blue Titan Software, a venture backed Web Services infrastructure company. Blue Titan was sold to SOA Software in 2005.

Prior to Blue Titan, Parand was co-founder and Chief Architect of VelociGen Inc, a venture backed Web application acceleration and scaling software company.

StartupCircle-SeeYouTonight

Getting Legal Guidance Should Always Be This Easy and Affordable

Friday, July 15th, 2011

Time Keeping ReportStartups and small businesses are often incredibly hesitant to call a lawyer for advice. Why? Because they want to avoid legal issues? No.  Because they want to avoid the invoice afterwards.

Navigating legal issues is a challenge — a time-consuming and costly component of launching a business.  Small businesses need legal guidance from many angles: corporate law, securities law, employment law, patents, trademarks, privacy, finance, litigation, tax… and the list goes on.

Interpreting and applying the law often deals with “shades of gray” more than “black and white”.  In other words, a handful of very smart attorneys may offer very different perspectives and legal advice on a given issue. 

LawPivot IconSo, wouldn’t it be incredible if an entrepreneur or small business owner could throw out a legal question to 10 attorneys who have a relevant background and receive responses from each – all for just a few bucks? 
The founders of LawPivot thought so, and ActSeed agrees.

LawPivot is one of those “no-brainer” services for a startup or small business budget.  Being able to tap legal knowledge like this is invaluable.  ActSeed is more than a strategic ally of LawPivot; it’s also a happy client.  Consider this a very warm referral for all ActSeed members.

ActSeed PartnerIf you’d like to try LawPivot, they will give you a free trial. 

If you become a member of the ActSeed community (register for ActSeed here to receive the LawPivot bonus code; it’s free!), ActSeed will give a Promotional Code to extend your free LawPivot service through the end of 2011.

Not all of a company’s legal needs can be boiled down to a crowd-sourced response.  Attorneys and legal work will still need to be in the budget, but having access to a breadth of legal minds for a small monthly fee is invaluable.  To receive this service for free during 2011 is, literally, priceless.

 LawPivot-logo

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