I work at Angelsoft which also runs Open-Deals.com
If you are looking for funding your first stop should be your local Angel group. There is no substitution for that. Our CEO, David S. Rose, Chairman of the New York Angels, would give you the same advice.
After 4 years in the Angel Investment industry, we have consolidated most of the worlds groups onto a single platform called Angelsoft. Go to most any Angel group website and click apply, you will be brought to an application page powered by Angelsoft.
We received hundreds of emails from entrepreneurs asking us how they can apply to all of the groups using our system. In response, we created open-deals.com which allows you to do just that. It is an open directory built into Angelsoft that allows Angels to browse through deals, and refer ones that interest them into their own group for further review. You can see what open-deals.com looks like from an Angel prospective here: http://blog.angelsoft.net/2008/04/17/sneak-peek-what-does-op...
The challenge came in protecting the Angels that use our system from an avalanche of poor quality deals. Angel groups told us that one of the ways they filter out poor quality deals is by charging a submission fee. The theory is that if you are serious enough to pay $250, you are more likely to be a serious entrepreneur.
I hope that clears up some confusion. Feel free to ask questions, I will be monitoring this discussion,
Could be that it looks dubious, but it's actually really legit.
I'm a startup (BricaBox.com) in the incubator downstairs from AngelSoft. My roommate has been working on their biz dev for the past two years (I found him the job on CL actually) -- so I know first hand that they really did go out and spend two years and get all these big, legit angel groups on their platform (think: Basecamp for Angel networks).
Anywho, now that they have these groups using the platform, they're opening it up for us to be submit deals, solving the problem I'm sure many of you feel: networking outside your local network (I know tons of angels in NYC, but even as close as Philly I know no one!).
I tend to be skeptical about almost any of the pay-to-play things like this. The Angel scene seems to be very much about personal connections and face time. I don't think you can replace that with a $250 a month service. It seems like if you were really bent on dropping money on this sort of thing that you'd be better digging up one of the consultants that pimps your product for you to their investor network.
[+] [-] Jschwa|18 years ago|reply
If you are looking for funding your first stop should be your local Angel group. There is no substitution for that. Our CEO, David S. Rose, Chairman of the New York Angels, would give you the same advice.
After 4 years in the Angel Investment industry, we have consolidated most of the worlds groups onto a single platform called Angelsoft. Go to most any Angel group website and click apply, you will be brought to an application page powered by Angelsoft.
We received hundreds of emails from entrepreneurs asking us how they can apply to all of the groups using our system. In response, we created open-deals.com which allows you to do just that. It is an open directory built into Angelsoft that allows Angels to browse through deals, and refer ones that interest them into their own group for further review. You can see what open-deals.com looks like from an Angel prospective here: http://blog.angelsoft.net/2008/04/17/sneak-peek-what-does-op...
The challenge came in protecting the Angels that use our system from an avalanche of poor quality deals. Angel groups told us that one of the ways they filter out poor quality deals is by charging a submission fee. The theory is that if you are serious enough to pay $250, you are more likely to be a serious entrepreneur.
I hope that clears up some confusion. Feel free to ask questions, I will be monitoring this discussion,
Jason Schwartz Community Manager
[+] [-] pg|18 years ago|reply
Never pay to pitch, basically.
[+] [-] innonate|18 years ago|reply
I'm a startup (BricaBox.com) in the incubator downstairs from AngelSoft. My roommate has been working on their biz dev for the past two years (I found him the job on CL actually) -- so I know first hand that they really did go out and spend two years and get all these big, legit angel groups on their platform (think: Basecamp for Angel networks).
Anywho, now that they have these groups using the platform, they're opening it up for us to be submit deals, solving the problem I'm sure many of you feel: networking outside your local network (I know tons of angels in NYC, but even as close as Philly I know no one!).
[+] [-] wright|18 years ago|reply
That's just good advice generally!
[+] [-] STHayden|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] wheels|18 years ago|reply
[+] [-] babyshake|18 years ago|reply
In my experience, angels don't usually think of themselves as "angel investors", and definitely wouldn't join any program like this one.