One of the most frequent questions I get from a founder is: “How do I get investment from Bangladesh Angels?” The second question I get over the course of a sit down is: “What do you think of my idea?” In the former, we start with a screening process. The team reviews 100’s of applications on our site during a cycle, as well as referrals from both our network members and various ecosystem players we work with, in addition to outreach to start-ups that are gaining visibility within the greater ecosystem.
I’ve found that as we’ve grown as a network, both the quantity and quality of the companies being referred to improves, and that’s where the majority of our time is being spent.
Once a company gets through our initial screening process, we draft internal reviews that are shared with the governing board. The board and I look to whittle this down to a list of 10 or so companies, with follow-up questions.
For any given cycle, we try to limit the companies being showcased to our membership to 5 to 6 maximum. For those outsides, for whatever reason, we make it a point to track and keep them in mind for the next one(s). In the future, I will write more in-depth articles on our funding process, including what happens in the run-up to the showcases and post-showcase, including due diligence, deal close, and post-investment.
Going back to the latter question, though, I have a confession to make: I will try my absolute hardest to avoid telling you if an idea is bad or not. That’s because when I started this role I was very much focused on poking holes in an idea and/or business and figuring out ways in which either won’t work.
As I’ve continued, and have spent more time with experienced angels and investors in our network and learning from different sources, I’ve had to undergo a mind shift. In order to succeed with startups, as a founder, an investor or an ecosystem actor, the fundamental trait you need is optimism. If you approach this with cynicism, you won’t get very far. The very act of starting or investing in a new company, particularly in a place like Bangladesh, beggars a certain willful suspension of disbelief. The startup will have a million things going against it, and if you as part of that startup fall into the trap of cynicism, the company will succumb to those negative pressures.
The second trait you need is humility. There have been companies and founders I was really excited about, that after more than a year, have not gotten off the ground. There have been other companies that I had fundamental questions about, that have gone onto raise capital, gain users and customers and grow. Evaluating startups and investing in them is often a crapshoot, and we are all learning, ideally together.
Having said that, it is important to have frameworks in which to evaluate startup ideas. You develop and hone that over time through experience, discussion, and learning. One of the most useful sources I’ve found for learning is Startup School by Y Combinator, in particular, this short presentation by Kevin Hale on “How to Pitch Your Startup.”
The point about not telling a founder if an idea is bad, I learned from him. I also learned from him and other experienced investors that the role of a good investor is to use a combination of optimism, vision and drawing on an internal repository of different models and strategies to see how an idea could win, and win quickly, and pitch that back to the entrepreneur. Usually, two things happen: An entrepreneur nods their head and immediately vows to do what you said, or quickly tries to change the subject.
Both are bad because the former want to tell you what you want to hear, and the latter only wants funds and nothing else. But if they engage you by either telling you why the suggestion cannot work (ideally because they’ve tried it) or tries to build on that suggestion, then you’ve got a potential partner.
Kevin’s presentation is excellent and I encourage you to watch it in entirety. I will try my best to distill that down into the most salient points for Bangladeshi entrepreneurs and angel investors for the former group to hone their pitch and for the latter group to hone their screening skills.
#1: Startups = Growth
To paraphrase jason, a legendary angel investor and founder of This Week in Startups, taking angel investments and venture capital is an unnatural act. It’s the equivalent of taking on jet fuel to grow, but not every company or founder is meant to or want to move at jet speed.
The expectations for an angel investor should be to make 3–5 times their investment in as many years, at a minimum. This would mean a business has to ideally achieve double-digit growth every month, whereas for normal businesses achieving double-digit growth every year is a win. But the latter kind of growth won’t sufficiently compensate investors for the high risk of failure and the opportunity cost of not putting the money in other available assets, be it their own family business, stocks, land, bonds, fixed deposits, livestock or moving it abroad.
And the former kind of growth isn’t just due to money — there are fundamentals to how a business is designed and built that allows it to scale so rapidly, often by leveraging data, automation and digital means of delivery. It’s not just about having a website or an app on the front-end — it is about how you design your entire processes and systems and constantly look to standardize and automate as much as possible. You can read more about the differences between a startup and a small business in Paul Graham’s article Startup = Growth.
#2: Startup = Hypothesis
A startup is ultimately a hypothesis, predicated around a new way of doing things your target users and customers are already used to doing in a certain way, behind which there are a whole host of incentive systems and power structures, and learned behavior, that we seek to change. What are the elements of that hypothesis?
According to Kevin, there are three: The Problem, or the initial conditions that has created the particular challenge or pain point(s) your startup seeks to alleviate, the Solution, or the experiment that you’re running around the idea that you have to solve that problem and the Insight, or the explanation(s) you have for why your experiment will be successful, and scale quickly.
#3: What Makes an Attractive Problem?
An attractive problem is:
An ideal problem has at least a few of these features. The last one, frequency, is the most important, as it means more opportunities to convert users. If a company is not growing, it could be they may be trying to solve the wrong problem.
#4: Don’t Start with Solutions
I get this a lot. A founder has seen a particular startup from another country, maybe while they were living or studying there, or maybe they read about it or even did some development work for it, and now wants to do something similar in Bangladesh. Or an engineer or a group of engineers have built software, and now wants to build a business around it. Maybe they’re really excited about blockchain, or IoT or data automation or fintech or some other emerging area, and really want to do something in that realm.
There is an inherent assumption that whatever they like or want to see in Bangladesh, is exactly what the rest of the country is clamoring for and will adapt. Kevin and Y Combinator call this a SISP — a Solution in Search of a Problem. It is important to ask which one does the founding team care more about — the problem and the people who face it, or the product/technology? Because solutions can and should evolve or even change, as founders and the company get smarter and more experienced. But the problem, and their fundamental motivation to solve it, should not.
#5: Insight = Unfair Advantages
Another way to think about insight is the unfair advantage the company and its founders have that allow them to grow, and grow quickly. They include:
Unfair Advantage #1 — Founders & Culture
Are the founders among the top 1% of the people in Bangladesh who are potentially capable of solving this problem? A lot of founders try to sell on their experience working for large corporates and MNCs in Bangladesh, even if the startup has nothing to do with what they did in their corporate careers.
One assumption being it takes a lot of talent to get into corporates and move up the corporate ladder, and the fact that they are leaving their cushy roles and starting a startup should be one of the reasons behind their eventual success, and hence, lofty current valuation. I don’t think corporate experience in and of itself is a qualifier or disqualifier.
Sure, you may be 1 in 100 at your university if you do land a coveted gig at a corporate and manage to move up to middle management, but that may also mean that you’re very good at playing by rules or managing organizational politics. You may also have become used to a certain pace at which to do things, and have developed a lifestyle and obligations that make it difficult for you to economize to a startup salary. To mitigate this, some founders choose to stay as part-time founders.
I think you have to take a holistic approach to assess founders. I wrote about some of the negative traits to avoid last week. I will write about the positives to actively look for in another post.
Beyond founders, it helps to have well-respected and qualified people on the side as investors and advisers. That’s also something we like to look for, especially if those investors and advisers are people we like and who end up referring the founders to us.
Culture is an underrated unfair advantage. Many Bangladeshi companies have a toxic culture, built around an imperious founder whose word is the law, with restless underlings jockeying with each other to curry favor. That kind of culture works in traditional industries that are more or less running along on the same customer and finance relationships and business models going back decades, although that is becoming less certain every day. But collaboration is absolutely key to innovation.
If you can build a collaborative, performance-oriented culture, you’re going to do well in making the on-the-fly adjustments that a startup needs because your employees will be empowered to suggest and carry them out.
Unfair Advantage #2 — Product & User Experience
As a rule, a product, and the experience built around it, should be ten times better than the incumbent solution to have wide adoption. It could be faster, cheaper or more durable, but it cannot be incremental if you want disruption. Think about ride-hailing companies like Pathao. Before, it used to take me at least 30 minutes every morning to get out of my house, get on a rickshaw, try to find a CNG taxi that would go to my office across town, negotiate a fare with them and get in. With an app, it takes me 3–5 minutes. I also save at least 50%, even without discounts, on the motorcycle fare compared to a CNG.
Since I stopped using CNGs 4 years ago, I’m confident I’ve saved 100,000s of takas, not to mention all that time looking for CNGs and being stuck in traffic once I’m in one.
Unfair Advantage #3 —Acquisition
According to Kevin, “Marketing and advertising are tax companies pay for not making something remarkable.” If you have to do a bunch of paid acquisition, often via Facebook, then he would discount that channel of growth.
That is because as you grow and better-funded and -connected rivals take notice, all it would take to crush you would be to spend more money than you on paid acquisition via ads and discounts. You have to find acquisition paths that cost little to no money, and there’s no better way than word of mouth.
Unfair Advantage #4 —Monopoly Power
Having monopoly power means you get stronger and harder to dislodge as you get bigger. It’s not just about money. In particular, there are four kinds of monopoly power:
Once again, a startup does not necessarily need to have all these unfair advantages, but the more they have, the more likely they will achieve product-market fit and rapid growth. Marc Andreessen defines product-market fit as:
“The customers are buying the product just as fast as you can make it — or usage is growing just as fast as you can add more servers. Money from customers is piling up in your company checking account. You’re hiring sales and customer support staff as fast as you can.”
That’s the stuff investors and founders dream about.
#6: Zantrik — An Example from Bangladesh
Zantrik was our very first investment as a network. Originally begun as an AAA-type service to provide vehicle owners with access to roadside services, the company had switched to a platform connecting consumers and businesses with certified repair shops by the time they pitched to our members. Since switching to that model in early 2019, the company has witnessed double-digit month over month growth and has raised money from Bangladesh Angels, Accelerating Asia, and Southeast Asian angel investors.
Zantrik and its founders’ grit and ingenuity merit a much longer future write-up, but with the benefit of hindsight and my own obvious bias, you can see some of the elements of both the problem and unfair advantages that this article talks about:
Problem:
Unfair Advantages: