[cycloneslider id=”smartcapital”]
When Paul Foley co-founded his startup Augur in Denver in 2015, he couldn’t find Colorado investors who were willing to write him checks.
“We ended up struggling raising from Colorado,” the Colorado native said. “We ended up raising from New York and Toronto.”
Augur, which helped ad tech and security companies recognize the devices their consumers were using, ended up selling to BounceX about two years ago for $12 million.
Foley, 30, a graduate of the University of Michigan, pocketed more than $1 million from the sale and began dabbling in investing. He put money into Denver-based Sheets & Giggles and San Francisco-based Sage AI. And he began thinking of how he could help local startup founders avoid the problem he had in 2015.
“I was really interested in getting more VC funding here in Colorado,” he said.
Foley founded SmartCapital, an effort to build the number of local angel investors backing Colorado startups. In January, he began searching for the 25 startups he found to be the state’s most promising, based on revenue growth and their ability to raise funding in the past. He wanted companies with the highest likelihood of giving investors at least a 3X return.
Now, SmartCapital is trying to raise a $10 million fund to be invested into those startups.
While Colorado has accelerators such as Techstars and the Rockies Venture Club, Foley believes the state doesn’t have enough Colorado-based funding for Series A and Series B rounds. A 2018 report by the Rockies Venture Club found companies in New York, San Francisco and Boston received 76 percent of venture capital in the previous year.
Investors willing to put up between $30,000 and $500,000 can join the fund. Foley said his goal is to lure 250 investors, but he refused to disclose how many investor commitments he has so far.
The money invested in each of the 25 companies won’t be equal, because it will depend on startup valuation, Foley said.
Foley believes that for investors to get a good return, they need to write checks for a diverse range of startups, upwards of 25. And in order to participate in investment rounds at promising companies, he said investors typically have to put $25,000 forward, meaning they’re spending at least $625,000.
With SmartCapital, he said, investors can invest in 25 companies with only $30,000. The company benefits from federal legislation signed into law last year that increased the number of angel investors allowed to join a small fund from 99 to 250.
“That allows us to get more people in with smaller checks,” Foley said. “That way, more people could participate.”
The pitch to investors, Foley said, is that SmartCapital already has done the legwork to find the right companies to bet on: the ones that have raised money and have growing revenue.
“It’s giving them a very convenient way to be able to invest,” Foley said.
SmartCapital’s portfolio of 25 wide-ranging Colorado startups includes plenty of software startups, in addition to a Boulder-based online retail company selling party clothing and accessories, a tea startup and a fitness recovery product.
SmartCapital — based on Commons on Champa, at 1245 Champa St. — charges a 1 percent management fee per year. It also will take 20 percent of the overall profits.
Here’s a list of the 25 companies that SmartCapital plans to invest in:
Alpin: Boulder-based software management startup
Blink: Online mortgage startup
Brandzooka: Boulder-based online and video advertising firm
CaliberMind: Boulder-based customer data and revenue-tracking software startup
Community Funded: Fort Collins-based startup connecting philanthropic organizations with donors
Copper: Boulder-based energy-monitoring startup
Cusa Tea: Boulder-based instant tea company
EnVision Meditation: Denver-based meditation app
Flytedesk: Boulder-based college advertising startup
Good Buy Gear: Denver-based startup selling used child gear
HarperDB: Denver-based database software startup
Hemp Foundry: Hemp extraction and processing startup
hobbyDB: Boulder-based online database for selling and buying hobby collectibles
Hygge Power: Boulder-based startup making a new kind of electrical outlet
mcSquares: Denver-based startup making dry erase tile whiteboards
Only Sky: Denver-based software startup for scheduling and booking in the outdoor industry
Proof: Boulder-based legal tech startup
Realvolve: Greenwood Village-based real estate tech startup
Recoup: Denver-based startup making fitness and sports recovery products
Rever Moto: Eagle-based motorcycle app
Sana Packaging: Denver-based cannabis packaging startup
Shinesty: Boulder-based online party apparel and accessory retailer
Shotzr: Ad tech and stock photo startup based in Denver
Upsuite: Denver-based coworking finder
Whistler: Boulder-based compliance and HR software
[cycloneslider id=”smartcapital”]
When Paul Foley co-founded his startup Augur in Denver in 2015, he couldn’t find Colorado investors who were willing to write him checks.
“We ended up struggling raising from Colorado,” the Colorado native said. “We ended up raising from New York and Toronto.”
Augur, which helped ad tech and security companies recognize the devices their consumers were using, ended up selling to BounceX about two years ago for $12 million.
Foley, 30, a graduate of the University of Michigan, pocketed more than $1 million from the sale and began dabbling in investing. He put money into Denver-based Sheets & Giggles and San Francisco-based Sage AI. And he began thinking of how he could help local startup founders avoid the problem he had in 2015.
“I was really interested in getting more VC funding here in Colorado,” he said.
Foley founded SmartCapital, an effort to build the number of local angel investors backing Colorado startups. In January, he began searching for the 25 startups he found to be the state’s most promising, based on revenue growth and their ability to raise funding in the past. He wanted companies with the highest likelihood of giving investors at least a 3X return.
Now, SmartCapital is trying to raise a $10 million fund to be invested into those startups.
While Colorado has accelerators such as Techstars and the Rockies Venture Club, Foley believes the state doesn’t have enough Colorado-based funding for Series A and Series B rounds. A 2018 report by the Rockies Venture Club found companies in New York, San Francisco and Boston received 76 percent of venture capital in the previous year.
Investors willing to put up between $30,000 and $500,000 can join the fund. Foley said his goal is to lure 250 investors, but he refused to disclose how many investor commitments he has so far.
The money invested in each of the 25 companies won’t be equal, because it will depend on startup valuation, Foley said.
Foley believes that for investors to get a good return, they need to write checks for a diverse range of startups, upwards of 25. And in order to participate in investment rounds at promising companies, he said investors typically have to put $25,000 forward, meaning they’re spending at least $625,000.
With SmartCapital, he said, investors can invest in 25 companies with only $30,000. The company benefits from federal legislation signed into law last year that increased the number of angel investors allowed to join a small fund from 99 to 250.
“That allows us to get more people in with smaller checks,” Foley said. “That way, more people could participate.”
The pitch to investors, Foley said, is that SmartCapital already has done the legwork to find the right companies to bet on: the ones that have raised money and have growing revenue.
“It’s giving them a very convenient way to be able to invest,” Foley said.
SmartCapital’s portfolio of 25 wide-ranging Colorado startups includes plenty of software startups, in addition to a Boulder-based online retail company selling party clothing and accessories, a tea startup and a fitness recovery product.
SmartCapital — based on Commons on Champa, at 1245 Champa St. — charges a 1 percent management fee per year. It also will take 20 percent of the overall profits.
Here’s a list of the 25 companies that SmartCapital plans to invest in:
Alpin: Boulder-based software management startup
Blink: Online mortgage startup
Brandzooka: Boulder-based online and video advertising firm
CaliberMind: Boulder-based customer data and revenue-tracking software startup
Community Funded: Fort Collins-based startup connecting philanthropic organizations with donors
Copper: Boulder-based energy-monitoring startup
Cusa Tea: Boulder-based instant tea company
EnVision Meditation: Denver-based meditation app
Flytedesk: Boulder-based college advertising startup
Good Buy Gear: Denver-based startup selling used child gear
HarperDB: Denver-based database software startup
Hemp Foundry: Hemp extraction and processing startup
hobbyDB: Boulder-based online database for selling and buying hobby collectibles
Hygge Power: Boulder-based startup making a new kind of electrical outlet
mcSquares: Denver-based startup making dry erase tile whiteboards
Only Sky: Denver-based software startup for scheduling and booking in the outdoor industry
Proof: Boulder-based legal tech startup
Realvolve: Greenwood Village-based real estate tech startup
Recoup: Denver-based startup making fitness and sports recovery products
Rever Moto: Eagle-based motorcycle app
Sana Packaging: Denver-based cannabis packaging startup
Shinesty: Boulder-based online party apparel and accessory retailer
Shotzr: Ad tech and stock photo startup based in Denver
Upsuite: Denver-based coworking finder
Whistler: Boulder-based compliance and HR software
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