Saturday, May 29, 2010

Startup@singapore 2010

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Belle <belleyeh@gmail.com>
Date: Sat, 29 May 2010 10:28:04 +0800
Subject: Startup@singapore 2010
To: yinglan@thewayofthevc.com

Was a judge at startup@singapore 2010
Jollyphony - a crowdsourced board game manufacturers developed by a
group of singaporean youths - got me thinking about the future of
games.

Suppose there was a wireless manufactured dice for users to play on an
ipad platform (an app with a developed rule engine). Players would
have the face to face interaction of board game experience while
tapping on the future technology.

Another wave is to leverage on the prosumer wave. Traditional model of
selling board games is flawed. time to shift the financial burden from
consumers to producers of games. publisher pay to produce customised
games on a highly-faciliative and collaborative platform which helps
to distribute the games, with downstream royalties for the producers.

Bottle-ups, another finalist, proposes a new drinking concept.

This also set me thinking. Drinking games tied to drinks (provided
simple instructions and facilitator) combined with technology,
allowing customisation of drinks (drink creation made by X)and offer
after-bar services. This can create an interlocking referral system
with network externalities

anothe thought is franchising as a viable growth model vs venture
capital. That is for a different post

--
- Best, Tan Yinglan

The Way Of The VC - Top Venture Capitalists On Your Board (On Amazon)
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofthevc

Blog: http://www.wayofthevc.com

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Monday, May 24, 2010

Fwd: echelon 2010 - Special early bird price for your friends

Dear echelon participants,
Thanks you all for registering. We are now only one week away from echelon 2010 and we just can't wait to meet you all and have a great time.

A few updates from our side, e27 is bringing together a great match of quality content, renowned speakers, innovative products and of course, most importantly - You!

We are looking forward to some great insights, heated discussions and conversations that go beyond the event as well. We now have over 500 RSVP's from 20 countries and it's truly going to be a Pan-Asian event.

Some of you have written to us, saying you would love to bring your friends along. So, we have decided to provide you with a special offer to bring along your partners and friends. Please use this code "echelon2010BringAFriend" at www.echelon2010.com to revert to the early bird price(S$100)! Please note, this offer is limited and is on first come first-serve basis.

So, hurry up and register now.

Do check out our 40 exhibiting products at www.echelon2010.com and keep yourself updated with echelon 2010 happenings by following us on Twitter @e27sg and Hashtag: #echelon2010

Looking forward to meet you all in 7 Days!

Regards,
Team e27

e27 asks you to click on the following link to open the event:
http://www.amiando.com/echelon2010?uid=q6p2FmLSADzY3Rzw

Date: Tuesday, 01/Jun/2010 08:00 AM
Event venue: Matrix@Biopolis, 30 Biopolis Street, 138671 Singapore, SG

---
e27 uses amiando -
the award-winning online tool to organize your events
http://www.amiando.com



--
- Best, Tan Yinglan    

The Way Of The VC - Top Venture Capitalists On Your Board (On Amazon)
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofthevc  

Blog: http://www.wayofthevc.com

Join Us On Facebook:
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofvc
 
Follow Me: http://twitter.com/yinglantan
LinkedIn:
http://www.linkedin.com/in/yinglantan

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Fwd: e27's Echelon 2010: IDM investors for SE Asia's Largest Web tech Conference

Dear valued friends,
 
I highly recommend this event - worth attending if you are in town then:
 
Conference Summary:
Echelon 2010 is a 2-day technology conference (June 1-2) organized in Singapore. Our prominent speakers this year include A-list angels such as Dave McClure (Founders Fund, the Facebook early investor), Joi Ito (Twitter board member, CEO Creative Commons) and startup management stars such as Bret Terrill (Zynga, #1 social gaming startup), Vishal Gondhal (IndiaGames, India's #1 game portal) among other prominent representatives of the wider media and web industry. Last year, our event (link) attracted 500 attendees for a 1-day event which saw startups from over 10 Asian countries pitching to a renowned panel of investors. 

Register Here: http://www.amiando.com/echelon2010.html

Key topics in 2010 will include:
  • Mentorship, Investments and New Funding Models
  • Cloud Computing and Enterprise Web
  • Social Gaming and Social Networking
  • Mobile Applications and Location Based Services
  • Product Management and Marketing
  • Social Media and Online Marketing
  • Startup Cultures and Lessons
  • SocialTV: The Emergence of Social Networking and TV

- Best, Tan Yinglan    

The Way Of The VC - Top Venture Capitalists On Your Board (On Amazon)
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofthevc  

Blog: http://www.wayofthevc.com

Join Us On Facebook:
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofvc
 
Follow Me: http://twitter.com/yinglantan

Friday, March 5, 2010

The Way Of The VC at Borders, University Ave, Palo Alto

The Way Of The VC at Borders, University Ave, Palo Alto

I received the following email which is heartening for Singapore's entrepreneurship movement. 

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: (email address removed for confidentiality)
Date: Sat, Mar 6, 2010 at 11:09 AM
Subject: The Way Of The VC at Borders, University Ave
To: yinglantan@stanfordalumni.org


Hi Yinglan,

Hope you have been good. I think we have met during the course of Start-Up@Singapore biz plan competition, for which I was part of the organizing team.

I am now doing an internship under the NUS Overseas College Programme at Silicon Valley, and while I was at Borders in Palo Alto this afternoon, I saw your book on the shelves (See picture below). Way cool!


Regards
(Name removed for confidentiality)

?ui=2&view=att&th=127316cf9b0da1a7&attid=0.1&disp=attd&realattid=ii_127316cf9b0da1a7&zw


Monday, March 1, 2010

Angels vs. Venture Capitalists

 
 

Sent to you by Tan Yinglan via Google Reader:

 
 

via blog.pmarca.com by Ben Horowitz on 3/1/10

[This blog post is by Ben Horowitz, the Horowitz of Andreessen Horowitz.]

At our new venture fund, we've been spending time looking into new ways that will make the lives of entrepreneurs seeking funding easier. To that end, we've linked up with Ted Wang who has been working on an open source legal project called the Series Seed documents. We're impressed with his work and are going to use these standard funding documents as part of our seed stage investments wherever appropriate. 

We have to give a big shout out to Ted: he nailed this. It's exactly in step with our intention of letting entrepreneurs focus on building businesses in today's environment, without having to follow old VC rules.

In a nutshell, entrepreneurs and the businesses they are starting have evolved. Start ups today don't need to build a manufacturing plant (as DEC, the very first high-tech VC investment, did in 1957) to start a business. They need less money to build a product and prove that it works before scaling the business. Yet, the paperwork involved in funding entrepreneurs hasn't changed to meet these needs. Series Seed is the first to establish this new way of supporting funding suited for today's entrepreneurs – and we're big fans. 

Let us know what you think: check out the Series Seed documents, and share your thoughts. 

Here's more background on our thinking behind how entrepreneurship has changed, creating the need for these simplified funding documents. I'm speaking here from the point of view as both an angel investor and a venture capitalist, two very different kinds of investors. 

Angels vs. Venture Capitalists

Why do angel investors exist?

Before answering these questions, it's useful to ask and answer a related question: why are there angels and why have they become more prominent in the last 10 years? After all, doesn't the definition of venture capital include all of the activities that angels perform? 

The answer lies in the history of technology companies and the differences between how they were built 30 years ago and how they are built now. In the early days of technology venture capital, great firms like Arthur Rock and Kleiner Perkins funded companies like Digital Equipment Corporation (DEC) and Tandem. In those days, building the initial product required a great deal more than a high quality software team. Companies like Tandem had to manufacture their own products. As a result, getting into market with the first idea, meant, among other things, building a factory.  Beyond that, almost all technology products required a direct sales force, field engineers, and professional services. A startup might easily employ 50-100 people prior to signing their first customer. 

Based on these challenges, startups developed specific requirements for venture capital partners:

  • Access to large amounts of money to fund the many complex activities
  • Access to very senior executives such as an experienced head of manufacturing
  • Access to early adopter customers
  • Intense, hands-on expert help from the very beginning of the company to avoid serious mistakes

In order to both meet these requirements and build profitable businesses themselves, venture capitalists developed an operating model which is still broadly used today:

  • Raise a large amount of capital from institutional investors
  • Assemble a set of experienced partners who can provide hands-on expertise in building the product and then the company
  • Evaluate each deal very carefully with extensive due diligence and broad partner consensus
  • Employ strong governance to protect the large amount of capital deployed in each deal. This includes requisite board seats and complex deal terms including the ability to control subsequent financings
  • Manage own resources effectively by calculating the amount of capital/number of partners/maximum number of board seats per partner to derive the minimum amount of capital that must be invested in each deal 

It turns out that building a company has changed quite a bit since the early days of venture-backed technology companies. Building a company like Twitter or Facebook is quite different from building Tandem. Specifically, the risk and cost of building the initial product is dramatically lower. I emphasize product to distinguish it from building the company. Building modern companies is not low risk or low cost: Facebook, for example, faced plenty of competitive and market risks and has raised hundreds of millions of dollars to build their business. But building the initial Facebook product cost well under $1M and did not entail hiring a head of manufacturing or building a factory. 

As a result, for a modern startup, funding the initial product can be incompatible with the traditional venture capital model in the following ways:

  • Lengthy diligence process. Venture capitalists take too long to decide whether or not they want to invest because they are set up to take large risks and have complex processes to evaluate those risks. 
  • Too much capital. Venture capitalists need to put too much capital to work – often a VC will want to invest a minimum of $3M. If you only need 4 people to build the product and get it into market, this likely won't make sense for your business.
  • Board seat. Venture capitalists often require a board seat and, for that matter, a board of directors be formed. If 100% of the company is building the product and the team knows how to do that, then a board of directors may be overkill. In addition, it may be too early to decide who you want to be on the board. 

As a result of the above, a venture capitalist usually requires a serious commitment from the entrepreneur to pursue an idea that is highly experimental. If the product doesn't stick, it might make sense for the entrepreneur to pursue a totally different idea or drop the business altogether. This is much easier to do if you've raised $300,000 than if you've raised $3,000,000. 

As entrepreneurs needed someone to bridge the gap between building the initial product and building the company, angel investors stepped up. 

Angel investors are typically well-connected, wealthy individuals. They generally use their own money and come with none of the above VC constraints describe above: they don't go on boards, they don't need to put in lots of capital (in fact, they usually don't want to), they prefer dead simple terms (as they often don't have legal support), they understand the experimental nature of the idea, and they can sometimes decide in a single meeting whether or not to invest. 

On the other hand, angels do not manage huge pools of capital, so entrepreneurs need to find someone else to fund the building of the company (as opposed to the product) and most angels do not plan to spend a great deal of time helping entrepreneurs build the company. 

One more thing before answering the original question

Before getting back to the need for the Series Seed documents, it's important to distinguish venture rounds and angel rounds from venture capitalists and angel investors. It's possible for a venture capitalist to invest in an angel round and vice-versa. Sometimes this is a great idea and sometimes it's tragic. We'll first examine the rounds and then the investors. 

When should you raise an angel round and when should you raise a VC round?

This question really comes down to the company's development. If you are a small team building a product with the hope of "seeing if it takes" (with the implication being that you'll try something else if it doesn't), then you don't need a board or a lot of money and an angel round is likely the best option. On the other hand, if you've developed a strong belief in your product or your product idea and you are in a race against time to take the market, then a venture round is more appropriate. You will benefit from both the extra capital and extra support that comes with a serious and large commitment from your investors. 

So who is qualified to invest in each?

Obviously angels can invest in angel rounds, but what about VCs? Is it safe to have them participate? The answer turns out to be "if and only if they behave like angels." What does it mean for a VC to behave like an angel? Well, they must:

  • Be comfortable investing a small amount of money, e.g. $50,000. 
  • Be able to make an investment decision quickly, e.g. in one or two meetings
  • Be able to invest without taking a board seat
  • Not require control of subsequent funding rounds
  • Not impose complex terms

If the VC wants to be in the angel round, but refuses to behave like an angel, then entrepreneur beware. Having a VC who behaves like a VC in the angel round can jeopardize subsequent financings. 

Angels can be great participants in venture rounds, but it's generally better to have a VC lead those deals as they have more financial and other resources required to build the company.


What does this mean about Andreessen Horowitz and the types of investments we'll do?

As I stated above, at Andreessen Horowitz, we invest in both venture rounds and angel rounds. When we invest in angel rounds, we behave like an angel. As angel investors, we can invest as little as $50,000, we do not take board seats, and we do not require control. 

Rooted in this desire to help germinate quality ideas, our support for Seed Source legal docs will allow both us as investors and the entrepreneurs we fund to focus on building a winning product rather than scrutinizing legal docs. 


 
 

Things you can do from here:

 
 

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Thanks for your support - Book has reached #69,461 (even before formal release)

The Way of the VC: Having Top Venture Capitalists on Your Board (Hardcover)

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley (February 2, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0470824999
  • ISBN-13: 978-0470824993
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #69,461 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)


--
- Best, Tan Yinglan    

The Way Of The VC - Top Venture Capitalists On Your Board (On Amazon)
http://www.tinyurl.com/wayofthevc  

Blog: http://www.wayofthevc.com

Featured On Covestor: http://cv.im/models/profile/yinglan-tan


Thursday, January 14, 2010