From Zero To 60
Investor Angels offer seed capital and support for start-ups.
By Paul DeCeglie
| July 18, 2000
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/money/financing/angelinvestors/article22904.html
Business Start-Ups magazine, January 2000
Would $100,000 help get your Internet-based business off the
ground? Investor Angels (IA) is offering seed capital and
high-powered support to start-ups whose proposals are selected for
development. IA launched its Web site (www.investorangels.com) in
1998 in search of a few viable concepts. "We were hit with
hundreds of proposals from visionaries all over the country,"
reports David Cook, founder and CEO of the Hollywood Beach,
Florida, company.
Cook, a seasoned entrepreneur with management and high-tech
experience, says IA will select proposals with the best potential
and provide those businesses with everything they need--like
start-up funds, business plans and help going public. "If your
plan is sound, Internet-focused, and you're committed to making
your business a success, Investor Angels will be there for
you," Cook promises.
To maximize the number of start-ups financed and developed, Cook
is taking IA public with an SEC Regulation A offering. "We
plan an IPO of 5 million shares in [December 1999]," he said
at press time. "Each shareholder will be able to vote on which
business proposals to pursue." At the initial virtual proxy
meeting, the first 40 proposals to win more than 51 percent of the
votes will be financed and developed. "Shareholders may also
purchase pre-IPO shares in each venture, affording them the
opportunity to participate financially in ground-breaking
businesses without the need for the traditional [investments of]
$100,000 to $200,000," Cook adds.
Once a proposal has been selected by IA's angels, IA forms a
subsidiary corporation to develop the concept. IA streamlines the
incorporation, bylaws, minutes, tax registration, corporate-banking
facilities and Employee Stock Ownership Plan. After receiving the
seed capital, the management of the new subsidiary completes the
business and marketing plans; registers the trademarks, patents and
copyrights; and registers a prospectus to raise operating
capital.
"Each step of the way, [entrepreneurs] are guided by angels
on an accelerated path more compatible with the growth demands of
Internet-based businesses," says Cook. "On their own,
most Internet visionaries don't [know] how to start or run a
company."
Cook should know: In a previous life, he performed due diligence
for major investment banks. In three days, Cook would do a
top-to-bottom technology assessment and determine the
start-up's chances for survival in the marketplace, then spend
three weeks on corporate due diligence to determine who owned the
company--or if a company even existed at all. He uncovered a
variety of blunders, such as misfiled incorporations, negligent tax
registrations, use of the wrong business name, and--his personal
favorite--articles of incorporation that banned the company from
operating in its existing business.
Says Cook, "Our goal is to do all that messy corporate
stuff and do it right the first time so the visionaries can focus
on winning the race. We like to think of it as `Business incubation
at cyber-speed.' "
Paul DeCeglie (MrWritePDC@aol.com) is a former
staff reporter for Journal of Commerce and American
Banker.
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