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Technology

Posted on March 25, 2019 by staff

‘Poisonous investors’ will sink your business

Technology

Tech entrepreneurs seeking investment should treat the process like a marriage and get to know each other first before committing to a relationship.

That was the view of Howard Simms, CEO of Apadmi Ventures, which works with early-stage tech start-ups like advertising tech firm Bidooh, dating app JigTalk and music streaming start-up Beatstream.

Simms was speaking at 老九品茶Cloud鈥檚 Insight Tech Investment, at UKFast, which was sponsored by Praetura Ventures and watched by an audience of more than 110 people.

Simms compared choosing an investor to forming a marriage in order to avoid 鈥榩oisonous investors鈥. 鈥淵ou hold hands to start with,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou might eventually give each other a kiss but you don鈥檛 get married until you are absolutely certain. Why treat investment any differently?鈥

The entrepreneur said if the wrong investor is willing to offer you 拢200,000 then there鈥檚 no reason why the right backer won鈥檛 do the same so don鈥檛 rush in.

He also said money is only 鈥渙ne piece of the jigsaw鈥 when it comes to finding the right investor.

Serial entrepreneur Steve Kelly (below)聽has raised more than 拢50m during this career, including 拢30m for his current business Smartkem, which is creating the technology that will be used in flexible screens like mobile phones and TVs.

He founded Northstar Advisors to help other entrepreneurs and said it鈥檚 vital businesses seeking funding are fully prepared.

鈥淎 lot of small businesses don’t do themselves any justice by not preparing properly for investment and it’s no surprise there’s a high attrition rate for start-ups who are not able to find any kind of financing,鈥 he told 老九品茶Cloud.

鈥淚’m always looking at what problem they’re going to solve – is it going to change the world, is it going to change a small part of the market, and how much pain is there?

鈥淚 look at the results that they claim they are going to achieve, are they over-promising or under-promising? Then lastly looking at evidence that they’ve got the tools to survive – have they got the abilities, have they got evidence they’ve done this before, are they entrepreneurial in nature, have they used a bit of their own cash to take some risks?鈥

Carly Gulliver (below)聽is a managing associate at law firm Addleshaw Goddard and said investors hate surprises like problems with IP.

鈥淚nvestors want to have trust in you and the minute they find a surprise, the relationship will start to waver,鈥 she said.

鈥淚 think from entrepreneurs鈥 and growing companies’ perspective, it’s about receiving investment at the right time in their journey and as they’re trying to scale the business.

鈥淭hey (investors) have to be more certain about what they’re investing in so I think their risk appetite has gone down which from a company and entrepreneurial side, makes it a bit more challenging because they’ll be under more scrutiny and investors are less likely to take risks.鈥

Louise Rigby (below)聽is an investment director at Praetura Ventures, which is seeking to bridge the estimated 拢300m venture capital funding gap for scaling businesses in the North West of England.

The company has invested in 25 companies in seven years including Peak AI; Sorted; Inspire Energy.

She said business pitches should grab attention and get to the point. 鈥淒on’t send a 20 minute pitch video, and don’t put emojis on it,鈥 she said.

Other speakers also included Mike Anderson, of Padoq; Elizabeth Clark, of Dream Agility; Mark Finlay, of Moneypenny; Paul Haydock, of Founder Fundraising; Paul Billingham, of Knight Corporate Finance; and Richard Hayes, of Mojo Mortgages.

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