The Generalist - How to Be a Top 1% Angel
Friends, There are many good reasons to angel invest and one quite bad one. Some good ones: you get to learn from great founders, meet interesting people, discover new technologies early, build a valuable network, hone your investing abilities, and burnish a reputation. A bad one: you hope to make life-altering money. We have all heard stories of small checks turning into multi-million dollar windfalls. It can happen, yet no one should expect such an outcome. Investing in tech companies is highly competitive. To access promising deals as an angel, you need to move quickly, avoid overcomplicating the process, and prove your worth. Even then, the asset class’s inherent risk means your chances of returning your capital, let alone multiplying it, remain slim. All of which is to say that if you want to angel invest, do it with intelligence, intention, and rigor. Doing so may save you hundreds of thousands of dollars of incinerated capital and will give you the best chance of maximizing the far-reaching benefits of engaging with the private markets. For those interested in exploring angel investing, we have spent months assembling a 17,500-word guide. It’s informed by interviews with 14 highly effective angels – both past and present. This group includes startup founders, executives, operators, and fund managers, several who have backed exceptional companies like Canva, Oura, Reddit, Glean, Ro, Affirm, Mint, and Meter as individuals. What to expect
This guide is the result of months of interviewing and research. It is designed to deliver the best advice and strategies from elite angels in a single edition. Table of contentsStep 1: Lay the foundations
Step 2: Know your motivations
Step 3: Make a plan
Step 4: Start sourcing
Step 5: Play to your strengths
Step 6: Build a tribe
Thank you to Art Levy, Aydin Senkut, Brett Berson, Charles Hudson, Charley Ma, Chris Quinn, Cristina Cordova, Matthew Roberts, Neil Parikh, Nikunj Kothari, Pranav Sood, Rohini Pandhi, Sohail Prasad, and Terrence Rohan for sharing their insights for this issue of the Investors Guide series. Step 1: Lay the foundationsIt is probably not a good idea to begin angel investing without meaningful interest and knowledge about the world of startups. If you’ve spent your years as a successful investment banker, management consultant, or doctor, for example, but have the vague sense that backing young tech companies might prove lucrative, pause before putting your money to work. Monumental windfalls are certainly possible but very unlikely, especially without a sense of the terrain. To test whether angel investing is likely to be worth your time, take a few basic steps first. Given that Generalist readers tend to have spent years working in tech, building companies, or investing in them professionally, we’ll cover this step in brief:
Perhaps you have not mastered this pre-work (many of these are infinite games), but a degree of familiarity with the space and facility navigating it will save you both time and money. Now, onto the real work. Step 2: Analyze your motivationsWhy do you want to angel invest? It is worth asking yourself this question and interrogating your response deeply before deploying personal capital. There are many more prudent and, likely, more lucrative ways to invest. In interviewing past and current angels, a range of different motivations arose. Making moneyIn an appearance on Conan, comedian Bo Burnham shares his advice for young people who want to emulate his success. “Well, you’ve got to take a deep breath and just…give up,” he says with a mix of perfect sincerity and comedic timing. “The system is rigged against you: your hard work and talent will not pay off. Don’t take advice from people like me who have gotten very lucky – we’re very biased. Taylor Swift telling you to follow your dreams is like a lottery winner saying, ‘Liquidize your assets, buy PowerBall tickets – it works!’” If you’re interested in angel investing, it is at least, in part, because you have heard tales of fabulous wealth created from relatively small sums. Andy Bechtolsheim’s early bet into Google that minted billions. Peter Thiel’s $500,000 that secured 10.2% of “The Facebook.” Jason Calacanis’ $25,000 investment in Uber that turned into $100 million by 2017. Though seductive, you should treat these stories with the same degree of wariness with which you would survey Bo Burnham’s PowerBall winner; yes, it can happen, but the odds are not in your favor. Aydin Senkut, Felicis
Simply breaking even on your angel investing would put you far ahead of most other practitioners. And locking up your capital for a decade or more, in a high-risk asset, for a 0% return is not particularly attractive to most people. Unless you have an established track record, a distinctive edge, or the Midas touch, you should expect to lose money – even if you hope to make a lot. Rohini Pandhi, Mercury
A financial advantage of angel investing is that it can diversify your exposure. Founders and operators often have the majority of their wealth tied to a single company or sector. Although personally investing in startups further concentrates your capital in high-risk tech investments, it does offer access to other industries. This was what initially drove Casper and Slingshot AI founder Neil Parikh to begin investing: Neil Parikh, Slingshot AI
StatusFor at least 10 years, angel investing has connoted high status in tech circles. In a 2015 New York Times article, Sam Altman, then President of YC, summarized the observed as much. “Seed investing is the status symbol of Silicon Valley,” he said. “Most people don’t want Ferraris; they want a winning seed investment.”... Subscribe to The Generalist to unlock the rest.Become a paying subscriber of The Generalist to get access to this post and other subscriber-only content. A subscription gets you:
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