Angel Investor

Is £1k enough to be a proper Angel Investor?

Is £1k enough to be a proper Angel Investor?

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#CapitalAtRisk

Lamborghini Vs Porsche

We all think about money differently. What is a lot to me maybe isn’t to you. We all make different choices, and no matter how much money I have, I will never buy a Lamborghini, not even an,  admittedly beautiful,  Miura.  I  would,  however,  have a  Porsche  911  from every decade since they started making them. That Lamborghini Vs Porsche question is, for me, as easy as it gets. Spending a fiver on a cup of hipster coffee though, no thanks.

Before  you  invested  you  were  someone who might be an investor. Now you have invested, you’re somebody who is an investor.

So when someone recently asked me if investing ‘just £1,000’ into a startup was enough I bluntly answered, “Yes”.

However,  that easy-for-me-to-say,  “Yes”  deserves more explanation.  I  didn’t want to be flippant but I did want to be clear. Angel investing is about taking some of your own hard-earned cash and handing it over to a risky, early-stage company and the list of reasons a company will fail can be very long.

Yes, £1,000 is a lot of money, but if you have the right mindset now and going forward then of course £1,000 is enough — more than enough. I think any amount that makes you take the investment  decision seriously, (you might lose the whole lot), makes you want to help the company (is it doing something you can help and be proud of?) and gets you excited at the potential of getting many more times your money back,  (there’s nothing quite like angel investing for the potential upside) is definitely enough.

What’s holding you back?

One of the biggest things holding people back from angel investing is that they think they don’t have enough money. They’re not a big-shot big-exited multi-millionaire.

However, even if you are a multi-millionaire and you are considering investing then you might also be hesitating. And if you are hesitating then it’s probably not the amount that’s making you stop. It’s not whether the £1,000, £10,000 or £100,000 is enough at all.

The thing that is making you hold back from investing may be included in the ‘Other risks’ part  of this post.  Those things are the  “How will  it look?”  risks.  These  are  the  same hesitations that can hold us back from getting out of our comfort zones in any other area of life. These hesitations are the ones stopping us from doing our best work. If you go ahead with something that’s risky you have to say, “Here, I did this” in a similar way to that which Seth Godin describes in his “Out on a limb” post here1. What you’re doing, or what you’re planning, it might not work.

Most people don’t reach the “wanting-to-do-this-thing-but-hesitating” stage so if you are there then you are ahead of many who wouldn’t even try. And you’re way ahead of those who thrive on potential schadenfreude. Please ignore that lot.

But now that you are considering that first Angel Investment, what can you do next?

Tune up your investor mindset

Imagine turning off that hesitation for a moment. Imagine those few minutes after you hit ‘confirm’ to send your money to the startup company. How will you feel? Hopefully excited. And nervous.  Can  you convert  that nervous  excitement  into  something  that  will  give  the company a better chance of succeeding? Here’s what you could do…

●   Remember why you did it in the first place. You should be making investments you can be proud of and that you will publicly cheer on from the sidelines. Tell the world what you’ve done — be proud of it!

● Before  you invested you  were someone who might be an investor. Now you have invested, you’re somebody who is an investor. You’re an owner so you need to start thinking like an owner. And even more so, as an owner, start acting like one.

● Be confident that the company will succeed and that you can contribute in a big way. Be the most confident, ambitious and supportive investor the company has. You can’t cover all bases but I know people who’ve bought pyjamas, bought curtains, booked holidays, and are more organised freelancers because they’ve heard me saying how amazing those companies are.

●   As we heard from Tom Fairey here, entrepreneurs should be, and in most cases are, immensely grateful for investment cheques of all sizes (and in that episode, he told me why he certainly was). You’ve done an amazing thing.

●   You  should  enjoy  it!  Remember,  I  look for companies that are already great that I might   be   able   to   help become a   bit   better.   It’s   great fun   to   work with a rapidly-expanding,  stretching-the-limits,  fast-paced company.  As  Derek says here, “the standard pace is for chumps”. Embrace the unknown and keep learning.

*Bonus take from the amazing Steven Pressfield on “This might not work” here.

● Take inspiration from others.  As  Jason  says,  put  in  £10,000  but  act  like  it  was £100,000. Once it’s invested the money is gone (and might be forever) but what you can do is work hard to try and help maximise your return. You could do what Sacca did. He describes (here) that when invested $25,000 in Twitter, it was a credit card cheque because he didn’t really have the money. He says that he just had to get that money back somehow so showed up at the offices day after day to try to contribute(much to the annoyance of Jack apparently).

Decide

So while we all think about it differently, money is about where you put it, how you think about it and how it makes you feel after you spend it. I remember my Grandfather telling me about occasionally   going   to  posh  hotels  and  restaurants  (yes,  even  up  north).  He  was  a nothing-special  farmer  from  Northumberland,  but  when he had it and fancied a treat he’d walk  confidently  into  a  posh  restaurant, knowing that his money was “as good as anyone else’s”.

Yours is too. Now go act like it.

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Important: This post is not investment advice. If you are thinking about investing you should seek the advice of a suitably qualified independent advisor.

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