At AngelList, investments in startups are largely made on the basis of a lead's conviction, but not all investors can view every deal
By all yardsticks, Anish Achuthan looks like the perfect entrepreneur to bankroll. Pedigree? He had earlier co-founded companies that were sold to Asianet and Citrus Payment. Swag? The 37-year-old is a high school dropout and a self-taught techie.
Yet, investors didn’t make a beeline for his fourth venture, a digital neobank called Open, despite similar businesses like Tide, Monzo, Revolut and Azlo scaling great heights abroad. Most funds either didn’t see the need for such a business in India or feared regulatory roadblocks. Some offered him a space to work, but not the money.
A few gave him hope and retreated. “All they did was develop their thesis on the subject,” says Achuthan, who spent the early days of Open picking up every other odd cheque that came his way, hoping for some investor euphoria around his startup. Until Vaibhav Domkundwar, founder of Better Capital, unveiled Open before his syndicate on AngelList in late 2017. The goal was to raise ₹25 lakh, but the round was oversubscribed almost two times the target.
AngelList works differently. Here, a group of investors rally around an individual, a team leader of sorts. At AngelList, this group is called a syndicate and the leader, the syndicate lead. The members trust the leads with their money. Unlike venture firms, tied down by investment thesis, stage or cheque size, an investment on AngelList is largely made on the basis of a syndicate lead’s conviction.
Open and euphoria have gone hand-in-hand ever since the 2017 round where the Better Capital syndicate chipped in along with Unicorn India Ventures and some angels to raise about ₹3-4 crore. The firm raised fresh funds in late 2018 at a valuation of about $20-25 million, which swelled to $145 million in its latest fundraise led by Tiger Global Management in May.
Domkundwar and his syndicate, which has since participated in all fundraises by Open, is slated to make a windfall unless Open skids hard and falls off the cliff.
For close to a decade, AngelList has opened the doors to some of Silicon Valley’s stellar startups—Uber, Shyp, Square and Lime to name a few—for investors registered on the platform.
“AngelList opens up the opportunity to a broader class of investors, bringing in more capital to the most desirable and historically most opaque investment sector,” says Naval Ravikant, AngelList founder and one of Silicon Valley’s top thought leaders, in an email.
“Startup investments are opaque, illiquid and risky. On the other hand, your investment can be worth hundreds of times what you put in, and you can’t lose more than you put in. Ideally, founders back founders, but anyone who loves technology, wants to bet on the future, and understands the risks can do it,” he adds.
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Ravikant along with Babak Nivi launched AngelList in February 2010 as an email to a handful of Silicon Valley investors to keep them informed about startups looking for seed funding. The duo had been collaborating since 2007 on a blog called Venture Hacks, essentially a detailed discourse on everything from the purpose of starting up to negotiating term sheets and identifying co-founders.
In one Venture Hacks post, Nivi, who quit AngelList in 2017, wrote, “Startups aren’t here to change the world, they’re here to save the world by bringing us innovation that advances humankind… if super companies are saving the world and every company started as a startup, it is our moral duty to remove frictions along the startup’s way.”
“If the service provider’s duty is to eliminate the frictions in the startup’s journey, then it is the entrepreneur’s duty to only start companies that can make a meaningful contribution to the advancement of humankind,” he wrote.
AngelList India has been growing at a fast clip. Over $10 million has been invested in 60 companies on the India platform
(This story appears in the 02 August, 2019 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)