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What Investors are Looking for in a Startup Venture

Investors look for two main things as they evaluate startup companies.
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Latest Business Startup Ideas,Blog News

The Secret To Landing A Job At A Hot Startup
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The Government's Secret Million Fund For Innovation
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Gust Presentation – Innotribe Startup Challenge 2012

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10 Business Ideas with (Almost) No Startup Costs

10 Business Ideas with (Almost) No Startup Costs
Larger firms can hire an agency or full-time staff member to run their Facebook, Twitter and blogs, but small businesses often have to take care of their own social media marketing. With so many other responsibilities, business owners may be too busy …
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Mark Polon, national "Instructor of the Year", to present at ACREcon on
small-polon-2013ccim-denverjpg-e879ff414e4c4c09.jpg Mark Polon, CCIM Instructor of the Year, will … Getting what you want is more dependent on how you present your ideas than about the ideas themselves. Your ability to effectively communicate will …
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SEO Firm, Avital Web, Helps Dental Office Find New Patients with the Help of
Top area dentists and those who are recently established can both benefit from targeted Internet marketing strategies. Internet marketing company, Avital Web, helps dentists build their practices by providing them with innovative marketing solutions …
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Cancer Network Announces a New Mini-Series Dedicated to the 50th
Improving the effectiveness of healthcare through information and education, UBM Medica US provides unbiased clinical, practical, and business information for physicians, providers and payers resulting in improved quality of care for patients around …
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CU-Boulder Students Invest $30,000 in Startup Through Real-life Venture Capital Program

Boulder, CO (PRWEB) November 26, 2013

Elihuu, a startup company whose slogan is “meet your manufacturer,” has met an investor — a group of University of Colorado Boulder graduate students.

The students last week put $ 30,000 into Elihuu, an online software platform that connects product designers with manufacturers who can make their wares.

The students turned venture capitalists direct CU-Boulder’s Deming Center Venture Fund (DCVF), which was launched by a donor in 1997 and is a program of the Leeds School of Business.

Selected from across campus to be part of the fund, the students manage everything from scouting new companies to vetting business plans, negotiating the terms of agreements, making final decisions on investments and supporting investees with ongoing resources and advice.

“I think it’s brilliant and that they’re doing all the right things,” said Dorian Ferlauto, founder and CEO of Elihuu, which is based in Denver as well as Oakland, Calif. “I really didn’t know that there is a university fund like this run by students. It’s very unique and I think it’s a great thing in this area where there are a lot of startups.”

The $ 30,000 investment will go toward development and expansion of the Elihuu tool, which Ferlauto says is similar to a matchmaking website except it’s for designers and manufacturers working to line up with the right business partners.

One appeal to the students as they carried out their research on the company is that Elihuu supports the cutting-edge “makers movement.” The makers movement, which is growing in popularity, is comprised of people like artisans, techies and inventors who create small-scale products on their own.

While investee companies benefit from seed money from the DCVF, the student directors gain professional experience and unique insights that could give them an advantage as they pursue their own ventures.

“By going through the capital investment process and by being on the decision-making side, the students know what questions will be asked of them as entrepreneurs,” said Bret Fund, faculty director of the DCVF and assistant professor of management and entrepreneurism. “They themselves will build better companies or be better able to do whatever they want when they move forward.”

Nearly all DCVF alumni have landed employment in technology companies, venture capital firms or other professions related to entrepreneurship, according to the team.

About 10 to 12 CU-Boulder graduate students from business, law and engineering fields are part of the DCVF at a time. They apply for a position on the interdisciplinary team and serve for about 18 months.

“Students almost never get the opportunity, even through internships, to make venture capital decisions,” said Julie Simmons, director of legal management for the DCVF and a graduate student in both law and business administration. “The fund is completely ours to direct. We bring in the deals, we make the relationships and we make the decisions. The challenges are ours to figure out and the successes are ours to celebrate.”

Some of the student directors receive externship credit from the CU Law School for their DCVF participation; however, many students earn no credit from their respective degree programs.

Investments by the DCVF typically are in technology startups. In addition to Elihuu, the fund’s portfolio currently includes Birdbox, an online platform that organizes individuals’ social media content; Flixmaster, a cloud-based video editing and publishing tool; and SpyderLynx, a mobile marketing and technology company.

The student team works with five faculty directors and a board of professional advisers

Since 2009, the DCVF has deployed more than $ 200,000 in investments. Returns on DCVF investments typically come when bigger companies buy the startups. At that time, the DCVF’s ownership and the value of that percentage based on the acquisition is calculated. The acquiring company pays the DCVF its share.

One goal of the DCVF is to accrue enough in returns to put a percentage of profits back into the CU-Boulder campus and programs in addition to maintaining the fund.

“There are a lot of mock competitions out there that give students the chance to think through scenarios and put their skills to the test,” said Chris White, director of outreach for the DCVF and a graduate student in both law and business administration. “But I think this is the only situation where students are investing real money. The possibilities are incredibly real.”

For more information about the Deming Center Venture Fund visit http://cudcvf.org/.

-CU-







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A start-up run by friends takes on shaving giants

A start-up run by friends takes on shaving giants
Employees assemble razors at the Feintechnik factory in Eisfeld, Germany, Jan. 17, 2014. As of Monday, the factory, which has been making razors for 93 years, now belongs to Harry's, an Internet shaving start-up that was not even open for business 10 …
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U.S. Census Bureau Facts for Features: Super Bowl XLVIII
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Startup Insider: What Entrepreneurs Should Know About Angel Investing

On this episode of Startup Insider, we tackle the topic of what entrepreneurs should know about angel investing. Our panelists on this episode are: Don Golin…
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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.

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Organization gives startup businesses a head start

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Q&A with Holly Katko: Lisle entrepreneur lays out guide to start-ups
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Free SBA Consulting for Maui Business in May
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