Ending Soon! Save 33% on All Access

Why Now Is the Time to Seek Startup Funding Never before have there been so many places for those seeking and those providing capital to connect.

By Jay Turo Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

sitemaker.umich.edu

We are entering a golden age of small-business and entrepreneurial finance. Between the crowdfunding boom (both donations and soon-to-be investment-based) and the surging growth of peer-to-peer lending sites like Lending Club and Prosper.com, never before have there been so many places for those seeking and those providing capital to connect and transact.

As a result, more entrepreneurs and businesses have access to outside capital than ever before and for the first time, investors can efficiently build diversified portfolios of private equity and debt investments.

Compare all of this freshness and innovation against the ongoing dreariness of the public markets. While the Dow Jones increased 409 percent from 1990 to 1999, since 2000, it has only gone up approximately 39 percent. During that same time, inflation has reduced the dollar's purchasing power by almost exactly that same amount (38 percent).

So basically: 14 years and zero real investment return. Also, as returns declined, Wall Street trading volume exploded by over twenty-fold since the 1980s.

So the earned public markets returns have mostly gone not to traditional "buy and hold" (usually smaller) investors, but to traders using leverage and derivative strategies to "game" returns.

These two fast diverging worlds -- the increasingly innovative and transparent one of private investing on the one hand, and the flat and more opaque than ever one of the traditional public market returns on the other are good news for both entrepreneurs and smaller investors.

For the investor, this means access to high returns. Research from the Kauffman Foundation Angel Returns Study and the Nesta Angel Investing study, compiled by Robert Wiltbank, have demonstrated that the average angel investor produced a gross multiple of 2.5 times their investment, in a mean time of about four years.

For entrepreneurs, this means faster and cheaper access to more capital, especially in smaller amounts.

Jay Turo

CEO of Growthink

Jay Turo is CEO of Growthink, a Los Angeles-based consulting firm that has helped more than 500,000 entrepreneurs and business owners develop business plans, raise funding and grow their businesses. His column appears on the Growthink blog on Mondays.

Want to be an Entrepreneur Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Career

Is Consumer Services a Good Career Path for 2024? Here's the Verdict

Consumer services is a broad field with a variety of benefits and drawbacks. Here's what you should consider before choosing it as a career path.

Business News

'Creators Left So Much Money on the Table': Kickstarter's CEO Reveals the Story Behind the Company's Biggest Changes in 15 Years

In an interview with Entrepreneur, Kickstarter CEO Everette Taylor explains the decision-making behind the changes, how he approaches leading Kickstarter, and his advice for future CEOs.

Business Ideas

87 Service Business Ideas to Start Today

Get started in this growing industry, with options that range from IT consulting to childcare.