Interviews, Tips & Tricks

Interview: Mark LaRosa of QuotaCrush & Angelsoft, Part 1

0 Comments 21 April 2010

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Mark LaRosa is the founder of QuotaCrush. Started as a blog on sales techniques for start-ups, QuotaCrush now provides outsourced sales consulting and services to several start-ups, incubators, and universities. Mark also plays an active, key role at Angelsoft, where he was also previously the VP, Sales.  Angelsoft provides software that helps angel and venture capital investors manage their investments.

In Part 1, Mark talks about how when, where and from whom to raise an angel round of financing and the pros and cons of professional angels vs. friends, family and wealthy individuals.

Sean: I’m here with Mark LaRosa, from QuotaCrush. So Mark, tell us a little bit about you.

Mark: So, I’m the founder of QuotaCrush and I founded it about 18 months ago, although I ran it as a blog – just a blog about sales – for about a year before that.  It’s really about advice for salespeople and sales managers within organizations that are startups.  That’s what the blog mostly is about, and what I’ve done is extend that to be a consulting company for startups. I’m working, right now, with about four different startups as their acting VP of sales, and essentially helping them develop their sales strategy, move their sales strategy, ultimately get their product out there in a more sellable way.

Sean: Before QuotaCrush you were VP of Sales at Angelsoft which, of course, was started by David Rose from New York Angels.  So, and you’ve done a couple other startups in your life; both good and bad results…

Mark: Yeah. (chuckles)

Sean: So, if there’s two things that I could ask you today, one would be:  I guess, what advice would you have for a couple of founders in a garage about from whom to raise money? How much and when?

Mark: Yeah.  So I can tell you that you should …don’t just raise money for money’s sake. You want to get money because it’s time, because you need to expand out your business, and you want to hold that off as long as you can. So if you can do anything with bootstrapping or friends and family or if you’ve got a contract and you can take that to a bank and get a loan based off of that contract, that’s the better way to go. And then when you do ultimately get money, you want to make sure that’s smart money. It’s not just money for money’s sake.  Somebody that can help you that’s going to understand your vision that’s going to help you carry your vision that maybe can take you and give you advice. So that may be waiting until the VC rounds that may be some angel money. But you really have got to make sure that you’re getting a partner when you get that money.

Sean: So if you think about angel money, you have friends and family and fools – [inaudible] friends and family and fools – and then, sort of, professional angel communities, which is what Angelsoft tries to harness both for that community as well as entrepreneurs trying to access, right? There’s clearly pros and cons to both.

Mark: That’s right.

Sean: You just mentioned one pro for professional angels, assuming they have been an entrepreneur before and now are investing; they can give you lots of advice. What would be a con of raising money from a professional angel versus, you know, a [inaudible] guy?…

Mark: Yeah, so, with a lot of the professional angle groups, it can add some complexity to the deal. You know, with friends and family, a lot of times you getting an in and they’re just giving you the money and it will be convertible at some point. You know when you get into a professional angel group a lot of times you get into the same situation you get into with VC’s where you’re going to go through an entire round and spend up to $50,000 trying to get lawyers to close this deal and it may take a very, very long time because – we always call it, you know – “you’re herding cats”  because you’ve got all of these individual people that are making their own decisions and you’re trying to bring them together. And there’s a lot of work that you have to do to bring these angels together even though they’re a part of a professional group. And you will also find that a lot of the professional angel groups – not New York Angels and a lot of these real professional angel groups – but there’s a lot of angel groups out there that do a lot of looking at deals but they don’t actually do a lot of actual investing. So you will spend a lot of time working with these guys and you actually won’t get money in the end. So you need to look really towards the real professional organizations. You know, like right in New York here we have the New York Angels, we have Golden Seeds, you know, a lot of really great angel groups, and those are the ones that you should be making sure that if you’re going to go the angel  group route that you’re sticking with those types of groups.

Sean: Top-tier? Reputable?…

Mark: Exactly.

In Part 2 Mark gives startups some advice on how and when to think about sales.  It will be published on Friday.

Do you agree/disagree with Mark’s advice around how, when and from whom to raise angel money?  Share your opinion in the comments!

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Sean Black

Sean Black - who has written 45 posts on StartupAlley.

Sean is the author of StartupAlley, Founder & CEO of SalesCrunch.com, and formerly founding VP, Sales of vertical search engine Trulia.com. Sean lives in Hell's Kitchen and works in Union Square. Connect with Sean on LinkedIn here http://www.linkedin.com/in/seanblack

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