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Venture Capital

 
With the right invention, and a good business plan, there should be plenty of money to fund your project.  Venture capitalists compete with each other for start-ups with the most promising inventions.  Our links page has extensive connections with venture capital sites.

With us, you can have the right to assign shares in the start-up to a venture capitalist of your choice.  Their funding will pay the salary for yourself and those you hire.  In exchange the venture capitalist gains a large share in the company, and has a say in how it is run.

Our links page has sites discusses putting together your business plan for getting venture capital.  Consider first sending out abbreviated business plans by e-mail to hundreds of venture capital firms listed on the web.  Write your own business plan or hire the many business plan writers on the net.

Resumes For Your Business Plan:

Along with your business plan you can include the resumes of different high quality candidates who are interested in working for you for a certain salary plus share in the company, you decide to allocate to them. 

Shares To Your Employees:

Generally, employees retain and get greater shares in your start-up the longer they stay.  Increased royalty is commonly generated by restricting employees from cashing in a portion of their shares until they have been with your company for some years.  You are better able to compete for talent by offering shares, while at the same time keeping down your salary costs.  There are also tremendous tax advantages.  Many countries outside the U.S. like some in Western Europe lack the vision to see how beneficial stock sharing with employees in helping their high tech economies grow.

VC Firms’ Profitability Remains Strong:

Venture Capital returns averaged 167 percent in 1999.  Returns may not always be this high.  Many venture capital firms say they are doing fine and continue to raise huge amounts of funds.  Venture capital investments have shifted from dot-com start-ups to firms with patent rights in electronics.  Returns are still much higher than the Dow Jones industrial average, despite the fact that VC firms previously poured a large portion of their money’s into the internet bubble that generally lacked crucial patent right protection.  This helps explain why VC firms have so much money, and continue to seek wise investments

See the links page for extensive information.

(C) World Patent Rights 2001