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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper. This paper is a basic overview of venture capital - what it is, what these firms look for, the ratio of success, the expected rate of return. The writer also includes steps the applicant must take to improve success rates. Bibliography lists 9 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGvecap.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
P. McCabe, October, 2001 properly! Venture capital is funding that is provided by sources other than banks and the
government. The National Venture Capital Association defines venture capital thusly: "Venture capital is money provided by professionals who invest alongside management in young, rapidly growing companies that have the potential
to develop into significant economic contributors. Venture capital is an important source of equity for start-up companies" (NVCA, 2001). Many people still hold images of wealthy financiers providing seed
money for start-up companies. It is a misperception. This may have been true in the 1920s but today, venture capital is an industry in itself and this kind of funding
comes from venture capital firms (NVCA, 2001). Venture capital and private equity companies represent a pool of investors, most often structured as limited partnerships. These enterprises are most often tightly
held private partnerships or corporations that are professionally managed. Venture capital companies are funded by private and public pension funds, foundations, corporations, endowment funds, wealthy individuals, and venture capitalists (NVCA,
2001). Venture capital firms invest in companies where they expect to receive a high rate of return within five to seven years. Most often, venture capitalist firms work closely with
the managers of the company in which they are investing. They use their vast experience and business knowledge gained from working with other companies who were in the same or
similar growth stage. Venture capitalists who provide seed money are referred to as "angel investors." These are individuals who not only provide the funding but they also mentor the individuals
who are setting up a new company (NVCA, 2001). Venture capitalists mitigate their own level of risk by creating a portfolio of new or young companies in one single venture
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