Dave McClure

Angel Profiling (4): The Wild and Wooly (and Expanding) Angel Universe

 This is part of my Series on Angel Investing.

In the first post of this mini-series I pointed out that the landscape of angel investing is quite sprawling and diverse with many constituents. In fact, many are calling 2010 the "Year of the Angel", although this is often uttered ironically by those who believe we are witnessing (and participating in) a seed-stage bubble these days with requisite inflated valuations. During my recent interview with him, Mark Suster made the classic remark that "everyone is an angel today" and it's true. The Venture Hacks Angel List seems to be adding new angel investors by the hour!

So bubble or not, as promised, below is an infographic that illustrates this rapidly expanding and overlapping angel universe in a tongue-and-cheek manner. The entire wild and wooly cast of characters are represented below including the aforementioned "Susterian Mugs", the ubiquitous Friends and Family investors, the two varieties of Maniacs, the Celebs and of course, the so called "Pro-leaguers" or nearly extinct "SuperAngels" (most of whom are now running their own micro-funds).

The full dramatis personae are as follows:

  • Friends and Family supporting "our own": The largest contingent of all pumping $60B/year into startups
  • "Mugs" who don't know what the heck they are getting into and don't realize it (me circa 2001)! 
  • Maniacs Tilting at Windmills who don't know what they're doing, realize it, and don't care
  • Maniacal Wisemen Tilting at Windmills Although these guys are maniacs, there is a method to their madness. They are trying to fund companies that will make a massive and positive difference in the world and solve important problems and carry their checkbooks with them. Paige Craig is one such dude.
  • "Weekend Warriors" of varying skills and motivations, (this includes participants in Angel Groups)
  • Entrepreneurs Giving Back and supporting the younger generation
  • Celeb Angels Ashton Kutcher, Will.i.am, etc.
  • VC Angels VC's who do some angel investing on the side
  • Professional Angels (the pro-leaguers or "super-angels" who more and more are becoming micro-VC's)
  • What I call "Dark Angels" These characters are not often seen in the light of day. They are elusive, shun the spotlight, and yet appear somehow through various corporate vehicles on the cap tables of many of the top-tier funded companies out there. The further I've descended into the rabbit hole of angel investing the more I run into these figures. It's amazing really as the few I've met are serious bad-asses with deep domain expertise that just like to keep a low profile for whatever reason. The last "dark angel" I met showed up at an evening meeting the CEO had arranged a few weeks ago wearing darkly- tinted glasses and hardly said a word. To me this is the most fascinating category of all.
  • Angel-profiling-e

    Angel Profiling (1): A Moveable Feast of Mugs, Maniacs and Masters of the Game

    Ronconway and william     Kutcher and twitter    Aydin4

     Clavier and Calacanis  Chris sacca Maples

    Hooligan cartoons  Hool fight
     
    This is part of my ongoing Series on Angel Investing.

    Mark Suster, one of the best VC bloggers out there, recently put out his own five-part series on Angel Investing. As usual, (despite running a big VC fund, Launchpad L.A., hosting This Week in Venture Capital and being a family man), this latest series of his was totally comprehensive and got to the very heart of the subject.  As one who has been an angel since 2001 and an author of my own much more primitive series on the subject, I devoured Mark's efforts and had much the same experience as Howard Lindzon- who likened reading these posts to being on a roller-coaster ride!   

    Prior to the posting of his recent series, I always got a kick out of Mark's various off-the-cuff comments about Angel Investing in which he referred to it as a "Mug's Game". I knew from first-hand experience what he was talking about but it wasn't until he authored his series that he elaborated on this general opinion. Anyway, he lays out five major pre-requisites for becoming a great angel investor. Without the following, Mark is essentially saying- you are either sh*t-out-of-luck or a plain Mug. (yes, this is meant to be tongue-and-cheek).... Here they are:

    • Access to the best dealflow... (being at the "right poker table")
    • Possessing the requisite domain knowledge
    • Having strong relationships with VC's
    • Possessing deep pockets (so you can follow-on and avoid being crushed)
    • Having access to the eventual buyers of these companies

    He is no doubt correct, though I pointed out to him that one also needs to account for a wide swath of angels who are involved for different reasons. He agreed and elaborated on this towards the end of this post.

    Anyway, his series and our exchange inspired me to provide you with a fuller picture of the angel community. Therefore, in this mini-series of my own I intend to elaborate on the subject of angel investing and to give fledgling angels and others interested in this space the opportunity to learn more about who we are, (it's extremely varied and diverse!), how you become an angel, and what the general options are in this landscape.

    So let's commence some Angel Profiling, shall we?

     To begin, cast your eye over the photos above that headline this post and in the upper levels you will see the faces of some of the "pro-level guys" as I call them. Many of these guys all have the qualities and attributes that Mark laid out in his series, which, for reference purposes, we'll call the "Susterian qualities". I'm talking about Ron Conway, Aydin Senkut, Mike Maples, Jason Calacanis, Jeff Clavier, Chris Sacca and others. Just in the last few days some of these elite "super-angels" have been accused by TechCrunch's Michael Arrington of holding secret gatherings in order to collude and drive deal terms in the Valley. Dave McClure denied it here, but Ron Conway, who was not at the dinner, unleashed on some of his fellow elites with this email TechCrunch recently got ahold of. The press is calling this fascinating episode: AngelGate!

    But who are the people in the photos on the bottom row below? No doubt, here are the "Mugs" that Mark refers to... I, for example, am the guy getting his ass kicked in the bottom right-hand photo and the people "cramming me down" are some venture capitalists joined by some angry co-investors on a British deal circa 2001 when I first got started.

    (yes- any first-time readers- (and Mom perhaps)- I am kidding...)

    The reality is that angels come in all sizes and shapes and with varying motivations and goals. There is actually massive diversity in our ranks. Are there some Mugs among us? Sure there are. I was one myself when I got started no doubt. Are there some maniacs out there as well? Damn right there are! But there's a whole swath of angels in the middle, many of whom have a good idea of what they are doing and why they are doing it and, though not in the pro-leagues- are "in control of themselves" so to speak.  Here are some News Flashes for you that the mainstream press hardly ever takes note of:

    • Not all angels live in Silicon Valley!
    • Not all angels are interested in consumer internet companies!
    • There are vibrant angel communities in NYC, Boston and in other cities around the US!
    • Angels account for 90% of all start-up funding in the US!
    • Angels put up $20 Billion a year into approximately 50,000 startups!*
    • Friends & Family put up an estimated $60 Billion a year into startups!*
    • There are an estimated 225,00 angels in the United States*
    • There are currently ~300 active angel groups in the United States*

                *Source: Angel Capital Association

    Furthermore, Angels have all kinds of reasons and motivations for investing. You can pretty much categorize us as follows:

    • Friends and Family supporting "our own"
    • "Mugs" who don't know what the heck they are getting into and don't realize it (me circa 2001)!
    • Maniacs Tilting at Windmills (who don't know what they're doing, realize it, and don't care)
    • "Weekend Warriors" of varying skills and motivations, (this includes participants in Angel Groups)
    • Entrepreneurs Giving Back and supporting the younger generation
    • Celeb Angels (Ashton Kutcher, Will.i.am, etc.)
    • VC Angels (VC's who do some angel investing on the side)
    • Professional Angels (the pro-leaguers I have mentioned above)

     

    In the coming mini-series I am going to round-out this fascinating landscape with various posts which will include but are not limited to a map of the overlapping and concentric circles of the angel landscape, a list of angels who blog, and a description of the ones I call the "Dark Angels". Stay tuned!

    For Part 2 of this mini-series, click here.