Serial IT & Energy Sector Entrepreneur
- 5 years in many marketing roles at HP laser printer business
- 6 years in general management at Extended Systems (network hardware, database software) prior to IPO
- Founder. 10 years in executive management at ProClarity (enterprise business intelligence) prior to selling to MSFT
- 2 years at Microsoft (integrating the ProClarity team and technology)
- Founder. 7 years as CEO at Inovus Solar
Fundraising
Serial IT & Energy Sector Entrepreneur
If you think the value over time is very high, don't spend time optimizing the valuation now. Use the credibility of these advisor/angels to build the story of why you are going to be able to take advatanage of this large opportunity and spend more time optimizing the round following them. They also know there is likely to be additional dilution in the future, so you want them to have a meaningful enough chuck of the business to stay motivated and helpful. This is all an arguement for keeping the valuation low now and increasing it post angel investment.
angel investing
Serial IT & Energy Sector Entrepreneur
Typically, establishing milestones and the credibility you can accomplish them is what enables an investment. People want to know what you are going to accomplish with their money. I find it's usefule to report your progress toward milestones and as well as any new information that would be useful in suggesting that new milestones may be more important than those on the current plan (pivots, new strategy pending, etc). I always assume you want your current investors to be future investors and that you should treat them the way you would wish to be treated in their shoes. On one hand its' seriously not OK to offer milesstones you have no intention of working to hit. On the otherhand, it's not OK to continue to work toward milestones you have learned will lead nowhere. Be forthcoming in what you want to achieve and put investors on notice that learning may change the milestones.
Fundraising
Serial IT & Energy Sector Entrepreneur
I'd need to understand a bit more about your business, but I suspect one answer is to work toward getting an accounts receivable-based credit line. Amazon is a good company that pays it's bills. Lenders will either loan against the Amazon receivables or buy them from you at a discount. This approach is expensive but if cash flow is your issue, worth exploring.
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