Posts

Help the Bakers – Crowd Funding Video

The Hornbeam Bakers’ Collective needs your help to set up the first community bakery in North East London, just off Blackhorse Road. They have space, will an…

Please Donate What Ever Amount You Can For Our Feature Film “Steel Chamber” To Be Completed And Distributed To The Top Film Festivals. Click Link To Donate! http://steelchamberthemovie.com…

Appia Secures $4.5 Million in Debt Funding Led by North Atlantic Capital


Durham, NC and San Francisco (PRWEB) November 14, 2013

Appia, the leading mobile user acquisition network, today announced it had secured an additional $ 4.5 million in debt funding led by Portland, Maine-based North Atlantic Capital. The investment will accelerate Appia’s continued advancement in building the largest app install ad network, assist with company expansion and drive product innovation.

“We’re excited to continue Appia’s strong partnership with North Atlantic,” said Jud Bowman, CEO of Appia, of the re-investment following North Atlantic’s April, 2013 infusion. “This investment further strengthens Appia’s leadership in mobile app marketing, and we look forward to accelerating our growth.”

Appia, ranked #22 on the Wall Street Journal’s Top 50 Venture-Backed Companies List in 2012, outpaced its 2012 total revenue in the first half of 2013 and is still gaining speed. Appia has sponsored more than 63 million app installs to date and continues to build value for publishers, advertisers and developers by connecting the right apps to the most valuable users every time.

“We recognized Appia’s solution as distinctive, bringing the tremendous value of app discovery to publishers and advertisers in what’s become a crowded mobile app landscape,” said David Coit, Managing Partner at North Atlantic. “Appia has a clear vision and the team to execute it. They deliver app marketers and developers with significantly longer lifetime value users, added revenue generation and a vital partnership as the robust app market continues to expand.”

Recently Apple announced the App Store had surpassed one million apps. Android’s Google Play store passed that mark in July. With more than two million choices, app discovery has become as important to developers and marketers as an app’s performance itself. Appia provides these unique and innovative mobile performance solutions for developers, publishers and advertisers.

About North Atlantic:

North Atlantic Capital is an expansion stage venture capital firm based in Portland, Maine, investing primarily in B2B technology service companies. North Atlantic provides both equity and subordinated debt investment structures to high growth companies with unique technologies that address large market opportunities. Established in 1986, North Atlantic is currently investing its fourth fund, capitalized at $ 100 million and raised in 2006. Other current investments in the fourth fund include Autotask, ConnectEDU, OnForce, Synacor, Tangoe, Triggit and Zmags.

About Appia:

Appia is the leading mobile user acquisition network, delivering mobile app downloads to over 1 billion users across more than 200 countries. Ranked #22 on the Wall Street Journal’s 2012 Top 50 Venture-Backed Companies, Appia provides non-incentivized performance mobile ad solutions for developers, publishers and advertisers. With offices in San Francisco, New York City, and Durham, as well as global sales locations in the UK and Mexico, Appia has quickly become the largest, non-incentivized app install network. For more information, please visit http://www.appia.com.







Find More Venture Capital Press Releases

Placebo Teaser with Crowd Funding Pitch

Make Placebo happen: http://www.wishberry.in/Placebo-15875 http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/placebo–3/x/2227191 Follow us on twitter at https://twitter.com…
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Movie Stars – Crowd Funding Massivemov

Movie Stars - Crowd Funding Massivemov

http://www.massivemov.com/moviestars EP do projeto musical de Ivo Soares – Movie Stars.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Venture Capital Knowing Your Funding Options

Entrepreneurs and business experts have defined venture capital as a financing style between a capitalist and entrepreneur with a common goal of a handsome return in a short period of time, maybe 3 to 5 years. But while there are several resources on the definition and characteristics of this topic, few have actually discussed the options that this kind of business set-up has.

Before taking the plunge, know what these options are and how they can be applied to your current business plan.

The funding option depends on the stage of the company’s progress. Investment firms can invest from $ 50,000 up to $ 20 Million. If the company is still at its earliest stage, where a concept or invention is still to be developed or proved, the option is called seed financing. Here investment is spent on marketing and product development. Product ingenuity and market research are the areas being focused.

When the company has already developed its product and marketing strategy but needs money for the actual production and initial marketing, the funding option is called start-up financing. This is the common option for new entrepreneurs and inventors. Here funds are spent for the production and initial marketing. Amounts can range from $ 50,000 to $ 1 Million.

Sometimes a company already has its products and may have initially introduced them to the market, but receives little or no revenue at all. In this case, the entrepreneur may need financial assistance at this stage, called the first or early stage. The amount usually ranges from $ 500,000 up to $ 15 Million, depending on the extent of the changes that need to be made. It could be that the product needs to be revised or developed to make it more saleable, or it can be a mere repackaging or change in advertising strategy.

The next option is called the second or later stage. Here the company has its products and may have received revenues, and has the potential of making it big in the near future, but for some reason has no funds at hand. It could be that there are some loans that need to be paid, or other financial schemes that need to be complied with. That is why venture capital firms invest from $ 2-15 Million to help the company.

Some profitable companies want to expand, but does not want to put in more capital out of their own money. Their goal is not to keep the company for many years but for it to quickly grow in order to make an IPO within a few months, say 3-18 months. This option is called the third or mezzanine stage. Amounts range from $ 2 Million to $ 20 Million.

Similarly, this next option needs an investment before an IPO, but the time frame is within 3-12 months. This is called the bridge. Investment is also between $ 2 Million to $ 20 Million.

Remember that there is a specific option for each stage that your company has. The key is to know what options to use. Similarly, you must know where to find these venture capital firms. You must also develop a concise but comprehensive business proposal to present to them. Lastly, keep in mind that venture capital is not the end-all but just the beginning of more challenging things to come.

Start-Up Business Financing ? Look To Crowd Funding

Over the last few years we have heard ad nauseum about small business struggles with accessing capital for growth. 

But, even harder hit then your typical Main Street business has been those companies that have yet to open their doors – Start-Up Businesses.

Start-ups have always struggled at getting capital before launching their businesses.  They have no revenue, no real prospects, no assets and no brand name.  In fact all they really have is a hope and a prayer.

Thus, no lender or investor in their right mind would touch a start-up business – and they usually don’t.

But, year in and year out, some 600,000 + new businesses are started each year; according to the Small Business Administration.

These businesses have to get funding somewhere.  The question becomes, where?

Each business is different and as such each may find a different or unique way to scrape together the capital needed to launch their company.  Some new businesses have to either cash out all their personal resources like home equity, stocks and bonds, deplete savings accounts while some may find investors in their local area or tap their friends and family.

Whatever they do, the bottom line remains the same; small, new start-up businesses can’t get outside capital from traditional business loan resources like banks or other financial institutions.

But, over the last decade or so, there have been some really ingenious and innovative entrepreneurs stepping up to fill this lending gap.

By now you might have heard of peer-to-peer lending where members of a network borrow and lend to each other – cutting out the banks or professional investors.

And, recently there has been a renewed push for a similar form of start-up business financing, termed Crowd Funding.

With the huge popularity of social networking and the reach that this direct interaction can bring to one person’s idea, crowd funding is getting a new foothold in the business world – really picking up since 2008.

Now, crowd funding is not going to provide your new business with millions of dollars in capital like a venture capital deal would or will it provide you with hundreds of thousands of dollars like a bank loan would.  But, it could (should if used right) provide your start-up business with enough initial capital to get launched and begin to generate customers and revenue – because, once your new business does start to show some promise or begins to generate actual business, other financing options will open up to it.

Think about the typical start-up business – a business that is only an idea at this point.  What expenses will it really face before opening its doors?

Most new businesses have the following start-up costs:

Legal – For incorporating your business or filing for your business registration – usually around $ 300,

Rent / Lease – $ 500,

Leasehold Improvements – $ 600,

Office supplies and office equipment – $ 1,000,

Web design and marketing materials to include logo design and brochures – $ 550,

Utilities / Insurance – $ 250,

Inventory – $ 300.

That totals about $ 3,500.

Moreover, for those businesses that don’t need inventory or a building to operate out of in the beginning (online businesses), their start-up costs are much lower.

Now, many new business owners end up putting this amount on their credit cards then open their doors and start to build their company.  But, given our recent recession and slow recovery, you just might not have the available balance on your credit cards to do this.

In steps crowd funding:  Use your social network – those people you know and those you don’t but are friends, followers or fans with – to raise that needed start-up cash.

According to VC Deal Lawyer, based on several reputable publications like the Wall Street Journal and the Economist, crowd funders can typically raise between $ 2,000 and $ 10,000.

While this amount will not let your business push a national marketing campaign with a Super Bowl ad this coming February, it should be enough to cover those initial start-up costs – allowing your new business to open its doors and begin to get after paying customers.

Further, and as another solid benefit, most crowd funders are not giving away large portions of their company like they might do with local or angel investors or even with strategic partners like CPAs and attorneys.

In fact, very few crowd funding businesses are giving away equity.  Why, because it runs up against the Securities and Exchange Commission’s rules regarding equity investment in private companies (think Reg D).

Instead, these companies are providing their donors or contributors some type of perk or reward – something tied to the business after it gets up and running – like a coupon or sample or even a personal phone call from the owner.

Just image that you get a personal call from the next Mark Cuban before he becomes a household name – pretty neat!

So, while crowd funding won’t provide your start-up with millions of dollars – the type of money that our main stream media companies likes to profile – it should at least cover your very basic start-up costs – getting you out of that start-up mode and into that small, growing business stage.

Further, given our current economic environment, who could really ask for more?  After all, if you don’t have to really give away anything for it – it is just free money for your new, start-up business!

Joseph Lizio holds a MBA in Finance and Entrepreneurship, is the founder of Business Money Today, has a strong commercial lending background and is regarded as an expert in business and finance.

Find More Crowd Funding Articles

Venture Capital vs Bank Funding

Ron Reed, of Seneca Partners (a venture capital firm), discusses the difference between venture capital and bank funding for start-up companies and what stag…

Last week, we brought you Mark Suster’s exclusive speech to the students of NYU. (http://youtu.be/hfSzfrSPVas). This week, we follow up the speech with a Q&A…

Capital Medical Venture Whom To Approach For Funding

Capital medical venture or angel investor? Most entrepreneurs are confounded with this all-important question today. Who will invest money in their business or, more importantly which sort of investment should they approach? What would suit their business better?

Capital Medical Venture

A really good way of gauging this is by gauging your business venture. If you are confident of the ability of your business venture to provide good returns really soon, then go for venture capital firms. If you want to start large, then this is for you. These firms invest a whole lot of money, yes Im talking big money here their starting investment is five hundred thousand dollars and it goes into millions! But, they also charge a really high rate of interest more than twenty percent per annum. Plus you need to give them quick returns, which generally is not a problem in the medicine field.

A capital medical venture is a venture which is quite challenging to finance because it is a type of venture which requires an extensive expertise of the industry and a very, very methodical form of planning. The good news is nowadays, venture capital firms are actively on the lookout for companies like manufacturers of diagnostics, radiation systems of the intracoronary kind and surgical instruments which are minimally invasive. So if you are starting out on a business in the medical field, a capital medical venture, then this is the best time to start.

There are groups of venture capitalists who are very generous indeed and are willing to provide an entrepreneur with two hundred million dollars on (hold your breath!) a single transaction. What is more they are willing to consider many different kinds of investment structures such as management buyouts, recapitalizations which are leveraged, minority equity positions as well. So they are willing to be flexible.

Whom To Choose?

Coming back to the main point. What are the differences between an angel investor and a venture capital firm?

An angel investor generally has his own pricate money which he is willing to invest in a business. But a venture capitalist gets their money from a collection or rather, a group of wealthy individuals. Thus there is a big difference in the motivations of these two kinds of investors and the reasons behind why they invest.
A venture capital firms main motivation is to get good returns. Moreover, competition for their limited kind of funding is extremely keen. Many firms fund only about five companies out of say, every thousand business proposals they view per year so they are extremely cautious.

Angel investors have, on the other hand, experience in building a company. Sometimes, it gives them a high to invest in new startups and that is their sole reason for investment. Sometimes an idea catches their fancy and they invest for the heck of it.

A capital medical venture is often a risky business, so opting for an gel investor in this case is the best course of action for a new entrepreneur.

Are you planning to startup your Capital Medical Venture? Visit http://www.ventureworthy.com/capital_medical_venture.asp to get the latest tips, and helpful resources.

Find More Venture Capital Articles

ANTHONY JOSEPH CROWD FUNDING VIDEO

Crow funding video for the next Anthony Joseph album with Meshell Ndegeocello. PARTICIPATE TO THIS CAMPAIGN ON KISS KISS BANK BANK http://www.kisskissbankban…

Der Kunde entscheidet hier, welche Projekte mit seinem Geld unterstützt werden: Baukastenähnlich kombiniert er z.B. das Startup eines Freundes und ein Regen…
Video Rating: 0 / 5

Quattlebaum's Cutting a Record! Official Crowd Funding Campaign Video

Austin Quattlebaum needs your help funding his new solo debut CD, The Ghost Tangled in the Oaks. The Indie GoGo Crowd funding campaign has launched! Please c…
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Thank you for showing an interest in our film. If you’re feeling generous visit our crowd-funding page here: http://www.sponsume.com/project/hummingbird-demo…