To VC or not to VC
Much has been written about the
challenges many startups face in finding seed and early-stage investors for
their ventures. The Internet crash indeed scared away many Angel investors
while forcing many venture funds to shift their focus to investing in more
mature companies. Even to this day, Canadian VCs who call themselves
“early-stage” investors are more likely to gravitate towards companies with
experienced management teams, a mature product and a business model with a
proven path to revenue and profits. To me, this does not define “early-stage”
investing.
Entrepreneurs often find themselves
frustrated with the financial community and the lack of risk tolerance that
comes hand-in-hand with the startup process. Are there other alternatives? Do
the risk-takers still exist? I’ve always tried to get out our message out that
a viable financing alternative does exist. Our team strives to find these very
early companies with passionate entrepreneurs or technologists who believe in a
market opportunity. Do we need an experienced management team? Not initially.
Do we need a completed, scalable solution? Not yet. Do we need a proven
business model? Eventually. That doesn’t sound like a typical VC talking, does
it? I’m proud to say that our firm is far from
typical.
At Brightspark, our bets are placed
on world-class technology which, we believe, forms the heart of any great
software startup. The reality of focusing on seed investments is that we quite
often meet domain experts who are world-class experts in technology, but who
don’t often have the skill or the desire to be the CEO of a company. Without a
management team or a revenue stream, these experts are generally turned away
from traditional venture capitalists for being “too early”. I like companies
that are “too early”. To me, that is what our whole business is about - finding
and supporting the best and the brightest and helping them to get
started.
We need the next Canadian success
story…and it all starts by taking a risk and placing a bet. We’re up for it…are
you?

Sounds like the perfect kind of attitude to me. Almost comes back to "find the right team, help them find the right market and they'll deliver the right product."
Not a Canadian VC type of perspective, but certainly one that's becoming more and more pervasive.
Good stuff :)
Posted by: Jeremy Wright | April 19, 2006 at 09:47 AM