Angel Association NZ Summit – Impressions

The angel investment scene is thriving in New Zealand.

That’s my take-out from the inaugural Angel Association NZ summit.  About 80 enthusiastic, committed, and engaged angel investors gathered at the Cable Bay winery for a day of seminars, networking, workshops, networking, debate, networking, food, and more networking.  My biggest regret about the event was that there wasn’t more time for networking.  Seriously.

Luminary speakers Joe Platnick, Stephen Tindall (who quoted my very own Kate Frykberg in his talk), Tom McKaskill and Rob Cameron provided excellent food for thought, while the brilliant culinary team at Cable Bay provided delectable food for the tummy.  I met loads of people with whom I’d only corresponded by email, or knew about through mutual friends before, made many connections and created opportunites for future relationships, and made some new friends too.

The breakout sessions on Building Value in your Portfolio run by Phil McCaw (Movac) and Greg Sitters (Sparkbox), as well as the session on Planning for Exit run by Colin Harvey (Ancare Scientific) and Tom McKaskill were particularly useful.

Phil and Greg built their workshop around key issues raised by the participants, which was a really nice approach.  Phil’s notes for this session can be found in his excellent blog.

Tom’s central thesis was that start-ups should focus on building strategic value for exit, rather than focussing on building a successful business.  The two goals can overlap, but not necessarily. He gave the example of a company he’d built which had virtually no sales revenue and was six months away from insolvency, but had built a product of great strategic value to his chief multinational competitors.  Pick up the phone, create some competitive tension between bidders, and voila – big payday.  Tom made it sound easy, and in order to make this strategy work you’d really need to be adequately resourced and have an appetite for the risks involved; but clearly it worked for Tom.

Both of these sessions underscored the importance of planning for exit before investing, and having clear expectations of value inflection points for everyone concerned.

I went into the conference with the desire to crack a key issue: increasing opportunities for cross-region syndication by angels with similar interests.  Unfortunately, this issue wasn’t formally addressed during the sessions, although I did have a chance to talk about it with a number of different players.

I’ve started an online discussion on the topic in the NZ Angels LinkedIn group.  If you have any ideas, please do contribute to the discussion; if you’re not a member of the LinkedIn group, you’ll need to join first.

In all, the Summit greatly exceeded my expectations; it was educational, created opportunities for new business, and was fun too.  You can’t beat that.