Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Angel
Investors: 7 Online Business Plan Scams
and 1 Real Deal |
by:
MaryAnn
Shank |
We've
all seen the hype: "We'll put your plan
in front of thousands of investors!" "We'll
write you an award-winning online business
plan!" "Only $3,000 for thousands of investors
to learn about your company!"
I cringe every time I see one of these ads.
Vultures are preying on honest business
people who want to fund their businesses.
Here are some ways to spot them:
1. "Only qualified investors see your business
plan." Yeah, sure. And who "qualifies" them?
Have a friend try to sign up as an investor
(that part is usually free). How is she
"qualified"? Is there a background check?
Does she submit a financial statement? Odds
are that she will be asked to do nothing
more than sign a statement that she has
a certain net worth. That's no "qualification"
in my book. So who are these "investors"?
Who knows. One could be your strongest competitor.
2. "You approve anyone who sees your business
plan." Okay. So what are you going to do
to qualify the potential investor? Are you
going to run a background check? ask for
ID? ask for tax returns? or just be so happy
that anyone wants to see your business plan
that you jump on the idea? (That's how these
scams get away with charging thousands of
dollars -- too many entrepreneurs are desperate
for funding.)
3. "It's only $500 (or $300 or $100) to
register." What does it matter if it's free?
If it is diverting your time and energy
and resources away from finding a viable
investor, it's not worth it.
4. "Your idea is great, but we need to put
it into our format. This will only cost
$800." Don't walk -- run from these guys.
5. "Your idea is so great that we want to
invest $2,000 in it." (That's after you
spend $5,000 to put it into "their" system.)
Do I really need to comment on this?
6. "Talk with a satisfied customer, or 2
or 3." Here's this entrepreneur who just
got $2 million in funding, and he has nothing
better to do than sell the web scam to you?
Trust me, entrepreneurs who just get funded
barely have time to eat, let alone talk.
7. "Look at all these written testimonials."
This is harder to disprove because the testimonials
look so real -- even the companies might
be real. But unless the testimonials, and
the companies, can be verified independently,
I wouldn't trust them. And I'll lay odds
that they cannot be verified independently.
There is one huge exception to this: ACE-Net
(http://activecapital.org). This is more
properly the Access to Capital Electronic
Network run by venture capitalists, institutional
investors and individual accredited investors.
It was developed by the U.S. Small Business
Administration's Office of Advocacy to encourage
the creation of a national marketplace for
investors to find and invest in equity offers
by small companies.
ACE-Net isn't for all companies. Those seeking
under $1 million will probably find the
paperwork daunting. Those seeking over $5
million won't qualify. There are special
qualifications, and of course lots of forms
to fill out -- but nothing like the forms
required for a formal initial public offering.
But for those who do qualify, it's an amazing
tool in raising financing. Spend some time
with the website and the forms, and see
if your local SBA office can put you in
touch with another company that went through
the process.
As with any investor tool, don't rely exclusively
on ACE-Net. Use it in conjunction with your
personally developed targeted funding search.
This, combined with an exceptional business
plan, doesn't guarantee success but it places
your company head and shoulders above all
the rest.
About the author:
Ms. Shank is a seasoned business plan specialist,
having served over 20 years with venture
capital firms and emerging companies.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|