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Seed and Angel Financing

Tuesday, May 5, 2015 in Waltham at 6:30 PM
Are you getting ready to raise seed investment for your company? Want to know what goes on behind the scenes when angel and seed investors contemplate whether or not to fund a venture? How do you create an investor-friendly financial model for your business?
On May 5th, ENET will host a panel of leaders from the Boston seed and angel investing community who will answer your questions about how they make investment decisions. Our panel, who all have done it before, will discuss this topic and provide insights on:
  • Who angel investors are
  • Role of angels in the formation of our nation’s start-ups
  • How individual investors complement investor groups such as Common Angels
  • How to identify angels in the Boston Area
  • Best methods for contacting Angel investors
  • Process that angels follow in selecting fundable investments
  • Due diligence on prospective investors - Certified investors, SEC review
  • Valuable sources of more information on the angel investment community.
You will also have the chance to network with other entrepreneurs and to attend a premeeting dinner with our angel investors.
Panel:
Deb Kemper, Angel Investor
Deb Kemper is an active angel investor and a member of two angel networks, Golden Seeds and Clean Energy Venture Group. She focuses on women-led businesses as well as ventures in clean tech, healthcare, and technology. Previously, Deb worked at McKinsey, where she served clients in the electronics, utility, and health care sectors. Her functional experience includes manufacturing, product development, operations, strategy, professional development, and leadership coaching. She has provided leadership support to organizations in China, Peru and the United States, recently working with JUCCCE, a non-profit sustainability think tank in China. She has a BS in Engineering from Cornell and an MBA from The Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth, where she was named an Edward Tuck Scholar. Deb recently returned to the US after 8 years living in Peru and China.
James Geshwiler, Managing Director, Common Angels, LinkedIn | Twitter .
James joined CommonAngels in 1999 and has been an active investor in mobile, cloud, consumer and business software as well as digital media companies. He also has been a leader in shaping the institutionalization of angel investing. He was the founding chairman of the Angel Capital Association, the professional alliance of angel groups that has grown from 46 groups as charter members to now over 145, representing over 7,000 investors. James also was the founding chairman of ACA’s sister organization, the Angel Capital Education Foundation (now called the Angel Resources Institute), in partnership with the Kauffman Foundation. ARI works with angel investors, venture capitalists, academic leaders and entrepreneurs around the country to provide research and educational programs on angel investing.
James is on the Board of Trustees of the Massachusetts Technology Leadership Council and the Board of the MIT Alumni Association. He has written papers and various articles on angel investment processes, and regularly speaks on entrepreneurship and private investing.
He holds a bachelor’s degree with highest honors from the Liberal Arts Honors Program at the University of Texas at Austin and there was elected into Phi Beta Kappa, a master’s degree in political science from UCLA, and an MBA from MIT’s Sloan School of Management. James also is an avid rower and a member of the Cambridge Boat Club.
Ryan Moore, Partner, Atlas Venture, http://www.atlasventure.com/team/
Ryan focuses on emerging web service companies that make the lives of consumers better and help any size business perform better. Since joining Atlas in 2011, Ryan seeded clypd, DraftKings, and Plastiq and also led our investment in Mojo Motors. He also serves on the boards of MOO, OwnerIQ, Secret Escapes, The Currency Cloud, Valore (formerly SimpleTuition) and Globoforce. Ryan was also the initial investor in Rocketmiles, Ubersense (acquired by Hudl) and OYO Sportstoys.
Prior to joining Atlas, Ryan was a general partner at GrandBanks Capital, which he co-founded in 2000. At GrandBanks Capital, Ryan incubated WHERE (sold to PayPal), and led the investment round and served on the boards of Enpocket (sold to Nokia), Nexage (sold to Millennial Media), Savored (sold to Groupon), and Vela Systems (acquired by AutoDesk). Ryan also served as the lead investor in Achievers.com, First Coverage (sold to TIM Group), InsightSquared, and Vivox.
Ryan started his venture career as an associate at SoftBank Venture Capital (Mobius Venture Capital) as well as SoftBank Capital Partners, a strategic late stage investment fund. Before that, he worked in investment banking with Robertson Stephens in San Francisco. He received an AB in economics from Princeton University.
Linkedin: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/ryan-moore/2/337/719
Moderator:
Jonathan Stiebel, CEO, Founder, and Executive Director, is an international serial entrepreneur who creates innovative software companies, in educational technology (such as language learning, speech/language pathology and literacy), music discovery, and data security. He has savvy business skills paired with a solid technological understanding position him distinctively as a startup founder who builds businesses. He taught internet marketing on behalf of an entrepreneur (Eben Pagan) who sold over $100m in information goods over the internet. Jonathan led the official mastermind groups for internet marketing in health/fitness and relationships. He manages an educational technology startup in the language-learning space, which can double teaching effectiveness particularly for children with special needs. Jonathan is an MIT $100k Business Plan Semifinalist and a Business Plan Competition Distinguished Finalist at Harvard Business School. He holds a Masters Degree in Computer Science with a focus in Speech Recognition/Machine Learning as well as a Bachelors Degree with a specialty in Hebrew Bible (Tanakh) and Jewish Education. If you wish to join a mastermind group, please email him at [email protected].
Co-Moderator:
Greg Dawe, https://www.linkedin.com/in/gregdawe, is ENET's Vice Chair of Operations and has been working in the software industry for over 30 years, first as an engineer, and later, in management. For over 10 years, he held senior management positions in the computer network security industry including experience with RSA Security, Inc.
Greg specializes in establishing and growing new organizations directly linked to improving company results.

Price: 
Our regular, first-Tuesday-of-the-month events are free to members and $20. to non-members. Venues and pricing for special events, such as the July Boston Harbor Cruise, are posted separately.
Time and Location(s): 

Pre-meeting Self-pay Dinner:

5:15 PM
Bertucci's Restaurant
475 Winter St., Waltham, MA (exit 27B off Route 128)

This is a "pay-as-you-go" dinner

Meeting & Presentation

6:30 - 9:45 PM

MEETING LOCATION

Constant Contact

1st Floor Great Room

1601 Trapelo Rd., Waltham, MA

(From the north: Exit 28 off Route 128 / I95 onto Trapelo Rd. Take first right into driveway)

(From the south: Exit 28B off Route 128/I95 onto Trapelo Rd. Cross over highway, take first right after interchange)

Once in the complex, head back toward the highway, turn left, and park in front of the building. Entrance is below the large clock that faces the highway.

Detailed directions

Public Transportation Option

For those who wish to attend the ENET Waltham meeting via public transportation, there is an option available to arrive at the meeting.

There is a shuttle bus service by the private 128 Business Council from Alewife subway station on the MBTA Red Line to 1601 Trapelo Road, Waltham. You would need to arrive at the bus stop at 525pm. You want bus #142 for the Alewife (AWF) – Route A. This bus leave Alewife at 530pm and reaches 1601 Trapelo Road at 623pm. The one-way fare is $5.00 for this private shuttle ride.

The last shuttle from 1601 Trapelo Road back to Alewife leaves at 725pm. So assuming you stay for the full ENET meeting which typically ends 930pm you will have to find a ride back or call a taxi to take you back to Alewife station.

For more information on the shuttle service, go to http://128bc.org/shuttle-schedules

Reservations: 
No reservations are needed for the dinner. To expedite sign-in for the meeting, we ask that everyone -- members as well as non-members -- pre-register for the meeting online. Pre-registration is available until midnight the day before the meeting. If you cannot pre-register, you are welcome to register at the door.