AngelList

Along with lifting the ban, the SEC issued a new, stricter set of requirements to verify that investors are accredited. Before “self-accreditation” was permissible. Now official documentation, such as tax forms and statements from CPAs or attorneys, will be required.

Startups must also notify the SEC 15 days before they publicly discuss raising money, file documents with the SEC every time they update their offering materials, and include legal boilerplates every time they talk about their financing publicly

Many influential people in the tech community have spoken out against these regulations.

AngelList is a social network for startups and investors, where investors can also fund startups for small dollar amounts and create syndicates around specific deals.

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AngelList’s founder Naval Ravikant told VentureBeat that AngelList will support startups who avail themselves of general solicitation and those who don’t. However, he said these rules also have the potential to hurt startups who are not aware of the difficult filing requirements and receive a penalty for making a mistake.

AngelList came out with memo to help entrepreneurs understand what all these changes mean:

“The SEC’s proposed rules will defeat their goals in letting startups raise money publicly. Startups may be forbidden from raising money at all if they accidentally break the rules—effectively putting the startup out of business. Or startups will decide that these rules are so difficult to follow that they will raise money privately, lowering their chances of raising money and moving their conversations to forums that can’t be tracked by the SEC. Either outcome defeats the purpose of letting startups raise money publicly. And it will have the unintended consequence of putting large numbers of otherwise promising startups (and most of the job growth in the U.S.) out of business.”

Graham said that the new filing requirements prove be “burdensome and costly,” and create additional uncertainty as issuers try to determine what actually constitutes general solicitation materials. For example, demo days have been a common practice in the startup community for years, despite existing in a legal gray area. If demo days are considered “general solicitation,” Graham said his could have a “chilling effect” on angel investing.

TechShop

Chief executive Mark Hatch announced this morning that his company is seeking to raise up to $60 million to expand into dozens of new locations.

Hatch was enthusiastic about the lifting of the ban on general solicitation.

“In my mind, the JOBS Act general solicitation rules unravel 80 years of SEC tradition of not allowing entrepreneurs to generally advertise and solicit for investments,” Hatch said. “It’s literally been 80 years since you’ve been able to let people know that you’re raising money in a general way in the U.S. It’s a huge deal.”

Hatch said it takes $2.5 million to $3 million investment to open a new TechShop location. Previously, he was able to open locations in Pittburgh, Detroit, and Austin only with help from local city leaders, followed by a string of face-to-face meetings — “which is stunningly inefficient, particularly in the Internet age,” Hatch said. “You have to show up physically. As a result, it takes an incredible amount of time” to raise the requisite funds. This is going to be so much more efficient.”

Bessemer Venture Partners 

Venture capital is very much a relationship-based world. A lot is based on “who you know,” and it is difficult to get meetings without a warm introduction. On the flipside, investors who are not in this inner circle don’t have the same access to high-quality deals or even know what their options are.

Approving general solicitation brings a greater level of transparency to the fundraising process and allows a greater number of people to be included, but traditional venture capital has a different role to play.

“Any good team or business can raise money,” said Byron Deeter, a partner at Bessemer Venture Partners. ”The best teams also often want a value-added partner who can help the business in other ways: strategy, hiring, partnering, financings, exits, et cetera, and this is where the best venture capital firms repeatedly differentiate themselves.”

CircleUp 

However, some startups struggle to get the attention of venture capitalists. Companies that are far away from centers such as Silicon Valley or New York City, or who don’t make software, have more to gain from raising equity financing in a more public way, and appealing directly to consumers.

CircleUp connects up-and-coming consumer product businesses with accredited investors. The company was founded to give people developing products like kale chips or hand lotion a channel to raise money. Founder Rory Eakin said that it can be a challenge for startups in this sector to raise money, and the lift on the ban means they have more options with whom they raise money from.

A venture capitalist may not be interested in funding in granola, but a mom from Washington, D.C., might be.

“Right now, if you are an engineer in Silicon Valley, there is an ecosystem available for funding. But outside of tech, that ecosystem doesn’t exist,” Eakin said to VentureBeat. “With the ban on general solicitation in place, individual investors are at a disadvantage relative to well-known angels. It is a biased system where equity capital is difficult to find. General solicitation allows that dispersed market to clear more efficiently.”

Like most things in life and in business, there is not a one-size-fits all option. No one I spoke with is sure of how the ecosystem will actually change. Some people are bubbling over with excitement, while others think this will be a disaster. Most said that the change will be slow to manifest, and the real impact will happen next year when non-accredited investors are allowed to invest.

Until then, I am eagerly searching for a billboard that announces a company is fundraising. Keep a look out, readers.

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