He was instrumental in helping me out when I was new to the game and of all the investors/angels I have dealt with, he is the most down to earth and awesome in many ways.
I feel very confident that he is one of the few guys in the valley who actually cares about helping entrepreneurs and is not in it for the cash. Angellist's success is proof of that.
It is also pretty awesome that Naval tries to help out startups outside the valley (and outside the US). In fact, not just Naval but other people in the team really want to help startups succeed and will reach out to you and talk to you. Great company DNA. Congratulations!
I'm a huge fan of both Naval and AngelList. They have done so much already to make life better for entrepreneurs. I'm excited to see what they do with the cash infusion when it comes.
AngelList is a game changer. Great idea and execution. I like how they are moving into other areas like startup recruitment and facilitating the financing process by providing standardised docs, electronic signatures, etc..
Naval has been a prolific angel investor over the past few years. It would be interesting if some of this capital is used for direct investments out of AngelList. Years ago Sequoia did something like that by investing in YCombinator, and multiple venture funds created a similar structure when they invested in Betaworks.
Unless I misunderstand things, a valuation of $150m means that the company is worth $150m, not that they'll be raising that much. Instead they'll be selling a shares of the company at that valuation, so if they sell 10% they'll get $15m.
Can you please share with us some resources (if you may have) on how these companies are valued? What metrics, parameters are taken into account while evaluating a company's worth?
As far as I understand it, it is based on educated guesswork. The idea is that you make a prognosis of where you think the company will be in the coming 5-10 years, and how much money they will be making at that time.
To aid your guesswork you look at the state of the market the company will be in, and if possible compare it to similar companies.
Once you think you have an idea of what the company will be making, you can calculate its worth. The worth of a company is usually between 5 and 15 times its yearly profits (depending on the market), multiplied by some risk factor.
Though in practice this is hard because early-stage companies invest most/all/more of their profits back in to the company to allow it to grow. And ofcourse estimating risk is also a very hard thing to do.
This is the process as far as I understand it. If you think I missed something or got something wrong please let me know. Also remember this is more a science than an art, most of these parameters come from experience and gut feeling.
He was instrumental in helping me out when I was new to the game and of all the investors/angels I have dealt with, he is the most down to earth and awesome in many ways.
I feel very confident that he is one of the few guys in the valley who actually cares about helping entrepreneurs and is not in it for the cash. Angellist's success is proof of that.