Archive for the 'venture capital' Category

Venture Funds for Central Florida Start-Ups Continues to Trickle

While I haven’t posted anything about the venture capital scene in Orlando for a while, a few things popped up recently that are worth sharing. Most notably, the Sentinel ran a story this morning titled Venture Funds Drying up in Central Florida.

While Burnett’s diagnosis confirms the assertions I made in a previous post: Orlando’s early-stage venture capital needs, I didn’t really want to be right, especially now that I’m leading the charge for a start-up that will need VC or Angel investment within the next 6 months.

The venture capital environment in Orlando has seen a dramatic shift towards investing in more conservative and maturing businesses and away from the cutting-edge start-ups whose payout potential is higher but whose risk/reward ratio is hard for Central Florida VCs to swallow.

Venture Labs workshop Early stage start-ups are, therefore, at a loss for a dependable and local source of institutional financing. This leaves them the option of self funding or seeking aid from Angel investors and while Orlando does have its fair share of wealthy individuals, apprising them of the growth opportunities that funding early stage ventures provides, presents its own set of challenges. Even our local Angel firm the Winter Park Angels prefers to invest in companies whose maturity and capital requirements approach the 2 year and $2 million dollar mark, leaving the early stage and seed money needs of area star-ups underfunded.

There does however seem to be a desire on the part of these high net worth individuals to gain a better understanding of this opportunity, evidenced by the oversold status of an upcoming workshop entitled: Investor Overview Seminar for Accredited Investors. This UCF Venture Lab sponsored event has the stated goal of “sharing best practices and tips for angel investors to form angel investment groups, conduct proper investment due diligence, and implement policies and infrastructure to support a successful angel investor group or network.”

UCF Venture Lab Logo

The UCF Venture Lab is an incredible resource for those of us striving to breathe life into a new venture. Their team has been instrumental in helping me develop our business strategy, pointing us in the right direction for market analysis, helping us shape our pitch and has even sat with me and had a round table brain storming session. The fact that they diligently serve the start-up community from the inside and also work to educate the outside world to our value, is worthy of my applause.

In my typical contrarian fashion, the more bleak the outlook becomes the more optimistic I am that we in start-up businesses are at the right place at the right time. Five years from now, and maybe as soon as 3, I can foresee a vibrant venture capital environment, in which the valuable entrepreneurial and technological capital of the local start-up garners both the attention and funding it requires to stay planted in Orlando’s fertile soil. As more companies find profitability and longevity in the Central Florida sun the gravitational pull of VC funds to area start-ups will only grow stronger.

Loic.TV - Vlogging the start-up process

Having recently accepted the CEO position for an Orlando start-up, I’ve been looking for other entrepreneurs in the early stages of the start up process to learn from and dialog with. One such CEO who shares my passion for videoblogging is the “serial entrepreneur” and blogger Loic Le Meur.

Loic.TV

He has begun a daily videoblog of the start-up process of his new company. I think he has some exciting ideas about using crowd sourcing as part of the business development process. His Day 4 post has a interview with the vlogging legend Steve Garfield whose work I mentioned at BlogOrlando. I also love that his office is in a co-working space - jealous.

Anyhow give Loic a look if you want to hear some fresh ideas about developing a new business concept and join the conversation. Check out his Day 3 post which includes a conversation with Robert Scoble. The discussion about videoblogging 2.0 is an interesting one.

Orlando’s early-stage venture capital needs.

Besides spending time as a commercial real estate developer, I also try to stay up on the trends of Central Florida’s technology growth. In talking with the up and coming Web 2.0 developers in town they have all voiced a similar concern. There appears to be a lack of viable capital for tech start-ups in the early stages of their development. Companies in this early stage are typically seeking what is commonly referred to as seed money or a friends and family round of financing. Ranging anywhere from $10,000 to $200,000, this seed money isn’t large enough to get institutional venture capital firms salivating, but it is, nonetheless, a vital component to the growth of these small entrepreneurial companies.

Now, Florida does have a handful of successful venture capital and private equity firms that invest in emerging technologies once there are in later stages of development, but where does that leave the computer science whiz kid coming out of UCF with the next killer web application. I can tell you where. Flying west to San Francisco, Portland or Seattle and into the arms of willing and able early-stage venture capital firms like Garage Technology Ventures, whose own investment criteria states for a company to be considered for funding it must be based in California or Western US.

Can you blame them? I don’t own land further away than 100 miles from my home. I, like other investors, want to be able to keep an eye on my equity. With that rule in mind it is clear that in order to retain the best and brightest programmers, computer engineers, web developers and creatives coming our of our local schools we need to establish an early-stage venture capital firm that focused on Central Florida. To that end, I and a few partners will be spending time over the next year working to build a firm equipped to empower, educate and fund the young talented entrepreneurially minded tech-heads of Orlando.

It appears others are becoming aware of the need for early-stage venture capital in Central Florida as well. As Beth Kassab of the Orlando Sentinel pointed out today, Florida Venture Forum, the organization that hosts an annual conference for start-ups and venture capitalists, is going to host their first-ever early-stage venture capital conference in our fair city in May of ‘08. Florida Venture Forum’s goal since its first conference in ‘92 has been to help ensure the success of entrepreneurial ventures by offering expert counsel, educational advice and managerial assistance, and to provide a venue where start-up companies can brush shoulders with firms looking to invest in the next big thing.

It is exciting that a group like FVF is focusing on Central Florida. I hope that the buzz of their conference and the continued voices of those in need of early-stage financing help create an environment in Orlando for the development of a healthy and vibrant technology corridor. Ultimately I’d love to see the best and brightest tech-heads ditching the soggy climate of the Pacific Northwest and adding their considerable talents to Orlando’s digital future.