Remove Aggregator Remove Angel Groups Remove Entrepreneur Remove Syndication
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How Private Equity and Venture Capital Investors Are Eating Their Own Dogfood

David Teten

Advances in machine learning, specifically natural language processing, have made generating these baseline, aggregate datasets possible, at scale, with high accuracy. Sources like Crunchbase , Angel List , and Seed Invest even give this data away for free or very low cost. 3) Originate investments.

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ProfessorVC: Touched by an Angel

Professor VC

I think the title of this post is a TV show, but fitting as there has been much debate in the venture community as to the whether angel investors are good or bad for entrepreneurs and VCs. What would the VC corollary to Touched by an Angel, be. One group charges entrepreneurs "an administrative fee" to present to the group.

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VCs eating our own dog food: Using technology and analytics to make better investments

David Teten

Small investment firms often have interns and entrepreneurs in residence passing through, each of which is a security risk. A major angel group uses Influitive , an advocate management tool, to track, activate and motivate their members. See Bessemer Venture Partners’ A comprehensive guide to security for startups. 2) Market .

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Asset Management Is A Bizarre Industry Ripe For Disruption

David Teten

But, the traditional wealth management industry does not make fees on angel investing, so it’s an underpublicized opportunity. In aggregate, angels are significant investors. Over the past decade, angels have averaged more than $20 billion annually in the US. Photo credit: JD Hancock. Previously published in Forbes.