Everything You Should Know About Angel Investors When do angel investors turn into demons? Kallol Borah, CEO and Co-Founder, Verified AG, warns of three kinds of angels.

By Kallol Borah

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.

You're reading Entrepreneur India, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media.

Shutterstock

As a necessary part of the start-up ecosystem, angel investors often step in when no one else is willing to take the risk of investing in an entrepreneur. In more than 18 years as an entrepreneur, I have come across all sorts of "angels' — from corporate professionals to high net worth families to successful first generation entrepreneurs.

I have observed three kinds of angels — starting with the one who seeks to be noticed: this is the sort who will spray $20k–50k on every opportunity they like and then pray. These angels simply want to check out the scene whose return on investment is really getting invited to start-up conferences as speakers and getting listed as "prolific investors' in start-ups.

The sophisticated ones are people who can not only invest enough ($300k and more) to turn an idea into a real product but also have connections to help with customer links. They have experienced and achieved enough that they can stay relevant on a start-up's journey and create enough leverage with follow on investors to ensure an exit for them when the time comes.

Then, the "strategic' moneybags are people who invest with an ulterior motive to perhaps actually own the business or bring in family members to run it or force a merger with an existing business they own. You know which ones to avoid. The strategic one!

Coming clean, on limits

Angel investors may bring in some money but they have limits on how much they can invest. It is best for entrepreneurs and angels to know those limits. If an angel goes overboard and invests more than they should and realises this later, they may want to exit prematurely and cause problems for the start-up. Or, come up and demand a price for the investment that the entrepreneur or the start-up cannot afford.

Personal involvement

Angels can help instil basic corporate governance in young start-ups and bring in customer and investor connects. However, when it comes to managing money, no investor, angel or otherwise should be allowed to manage funds they have invested. If anything goes wrong with the start-up's investment plan, the angel may blame the entrepreneur and as investment terms go, the entrepreneur will end up paying the price for the angel investor's meddling in handling money.

Investment instruments

When a start-up's valuation is not clear, an angel may decide to take some equity but then if the amounts increase, there could be convertible debt or just a secured or unsecured loan for working capital. An investment instrument and associated agreements is a way to protect an investor as well as to balance risks on both sides. It is important for entrepreneurs to ultimately get to a point where the start-up becomes a business.

However, angels can turn into demons at any time. Entrepreneurs should be wary of getting angel investors on board and getting a few of them on board may be the way to de-risk individual evil actors.

(This article was first published in the September 2019 issue of Entrepreneur Magazine. To subscribe, click here)

Kallol Borah

CEO and Co-Founder, Verified AG

Business Ideas

70 Small Business Ideas to Start in 2025

We put together a list of the best, most profitable small business ideas for entrepreneurs to pursue in 2025.

Science & Technology

How AI Is Turning High School Students Into the Next Generation of Entrepreneurs

As AI reshapes education, students are turning school problems into products and building the future economy.

Business News

Anthropic Is Now One of the Most Valuable Startups of All Time: 'Exponential Growth'

In a new funding round earlier this week, AI startup Anthropic raised $13 billion at a $183 billion valuation.

Growing a Business

How Building Tech With No Tech Background Taught Me the Most Valuable Skill in Business

The most valuable skill in business today is translation — the power to bridge vision and execution, clarity and complexity, strategy and reality.

News and Trends

How Lab-Grown Diamonds are Reshaping Jewellery Market

As sustainability takes the centre stage shaping the luxury market, lab grown diamonds (LGDs) are leading the way and not merely following the latest trends, says Ishendra Agarwal, Founder, Giva

Starting a Business

My Husband and I Have Built Multiple Businesses Together — Here's How We Make It Work in Business and in Life

Working with your spouse can be an incredible experience, especially when you share the same goals and values. Here's how to do it successfully.