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Why the Smart Money Invests B2B, Not B2C An expert explains the upsides of creating a B2B company .

By Sam Hogg

This story appears in the June 2016 issue of Entrepreneur. Subscribe »

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I get it: You want to build a consumer product that will wow your friends, and that maybe even your mom will use. You want to join the herd of unicorns roaming the venture-backed pastures of Silicon Valley. But thanks to some painful and costly lessons, I've learned to mostly pass on business-to-consumer companies -- or B2C, as we call them. These days, my colleagues and I are more excited to hear about startups building often boring solutions for other companies -- and that means you should be excited to create these business-to-business (B2B) companies. Here's why.

Sam Hogg

Entrepreneur Contributor

Sam Hogg is a venture partner with Open Prairie Ventures, a Midwest-based venture-capital fund investing in agriculture, life-science and information technology.

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