• Episode 36: "Don't Panic" | Angel Capital Association Chair Dr. Ron Weissman on Navigating Market Volatility, Surging Investment in First-Time CEOs, and Why Downturns Are Great Investment Windows
    2025/05/20

    Insights from a 25-year veteran angel who advises investors and governments across four continents while chairing Silicon Valley's oldest angel network and the ACA Board of Directors

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Angels are insulated from market turbulence - Ron's data shows angels maintaining pre-2021 investment patterns despite market volatility in recent months.
    2. First-time CEOs are getting MORE funding - Contrary to what you'd expect in uncertain times, angels are backing more first-timers than ever. This challenges the conventional "flight to safety" narrative.
    3. Long-view investing as emotional discipline - Ron's emphasis on the reality of 5-8 year time horizons for angel investments is a psychological framework that helps investors avoid reactive decisions to monthly or quarterly fluctuations.

    I explore these ideas and more with Ron Weissman, Chair of the Board of Directors at the ACA. He brings over 25 years in global venture capital and nearly two decades as an angel investor to his role. As Chairman of the Software Industry Group at Band of Angels, Silicon Valley's oldest angel network, Ron combines deep technical knowledge with historical perspective, having previously served as a CMO and Director under Steve Jobs at NeXT. His unique background as both a former Professor of History and technology executive made this a fascinating lesson in navigating uncertainty.

    During our conversation, Ron shares:

    • Evidence-based perspective on angel resilience backed by quantitative data showing investment patterns remain consistent despite economic turbulence.
    • A counterintuitive insight that angels are funding more first-time CEOs than ever before, challenging the assumption that uncertain markets drive investors toward experienced founders.
    • Historical patterns showing funds started after economic downturns "went higher, faster" and why this makes economic turbulence potentially advantageous for disciplined investors.

    Connect with Ron

    LinkedIn

    Stuff We Reference

    • Denominator Effect by Ron Weissman
    • Mary Todd Lincoln
    • ACA
    • Band of Angels

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    8 分
  • Episode 35: "108,000 Startups and Counting" | Dealum CEO Seren Rumjancevs on Angel Group Efficiency, AI-Powered Portfolio Tracking, and Bridging Global Angel Networks
    2025/05/13

    Insights from a global ecosystem builder who's processed data on 108,000 startups while helping 240 investor communities across six continents manage their deal flow

    GET FREE SOCKS: Seren will send the first 100 listeners that sign up for the AI Portfolio Monitoring waitlist a pair of Dealum’s signature red socks. What better way to impress your fellow angels at the next pitch event?!

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. A 30% spike in angel fundraising activity in Q4 2024 - Seren shared data showing a remarkable uptick in companies submitting fundraising applications, which could have a wide range of implications.
    2. 2,000 new companies per month - That's 108,000 startups total with structured data! Such a value-add for the ecosystem.
    3. The "pitch deck black hole" - Seren's firsthand experience as a failed founder gives her empathy for entrepreneurs who send applications “into the void.” This perspective is so important for investors to consider as we design and implement our processes.

    I explore these ideas and more with Seren Rumjancevs, CEO of Dealum.

    Seren brings a rare 360-degree perspective to early-stage investing as Dealum's CEO, having previously served as a founder, accelerator manager, and innovation consultant across Estonia and the UK. Since 2019, she's led the platform that now manages deal flow for over 240 investor communities worldwide with data on more than 108,000 startups. Her firsthand experience with the "pitch deck black hole" as a former founder drives her mission to create greater transparency and efficiency across the early-stage fundraising ecosystem.

    During our conversation, Seren shares:

    • How a perfect storm of platform failures created both opportunity and skepticism - revealing the challenges European startups face when trying to win trust from US angel communities during a crisis.
    • Insights from tracking 108,000 startups globally, including recent data showing a 30% spike in fundraising activity starting in Q4 2023.
    • Why portfolio tracking remains a major operational challenge for angel groups, detailing how Dealum’s newest AI solution will transform unstructured email updates into structured data visualizations.

    Connect with Seren

    LinkedIn | LinkedIn | X


    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    29 分
  • Episode 34: "Angels Are Always Hopeful" | Incoming ACA Chair Kristina Montague on Growing Women's Capital Networks, Expanding the Investor Tent, and Finding Arbitrage in Overlooked Innovators
    2025/05/06

    Insights from a fund manager who has mobilized hundreds of women investors, championed gender-lens investing in the Southeast, and is now steering the ACA as its incoming Chair

    Today's episode explores 3 ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Women angels grew 8x in 10 years - Kristina shared that female angels increased from 5% to 40% of all angel investors since 2014.
    2. "Get out of your sandbox" - Her advice to deliberately step into unfamiliar networks struck me as the simplest yet most overlooked strategy for finding opportunities others miss.
    3. Let’s be honest: we make investment decisions from the heart - When she quoted Bill Payne that investing ultimately comes from the heart, it validated what I’ve observed again and again. At the end of the day, most angel investment decisions, no matter how well researched or diligenced, are made with our gut.

    I explore these ideas and more with Kristina Montague, Managing Partner at JumpFund, which supports women-led ventures in the Southeast. As incoming Chair of the ACA and author of Jump In: Women Investing in Women, she brings over a decade of experience in gender-lens investing and building investor networks that drive returns and expand opportunities for overlooked founders.

    During our conversation, Kristina shares:

    • Her account of launching the first micro-venture fund in the Southeast focused entirely on women-led ventures, illuminating the unique challenges and opportunities of pioneering a gender-lens investment approach in a traditionally underserved region.
    • Tactical approaches for overcoming bias in investor due diligence questioning, including awareness of "prevention vs. promotion" questioning patterns that can disadvantage certain founders.
    • An insider's view of the ACA's strategic initiatives, including new individual membership programs and advanced AI tools to leverage 20 years of investor data.

    Connect with Kristina

    LinkedIn | Website | X

    Stuff We Reference

    • Angel Funders Report
    • Ron Weissman
    • Marcia Dawood

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    32 分
  • Episode 33: "Angel Investing Isn't a Trending Topic" | ACA Chair Emeritus Marcia Dawood on Angel Investment Cycles, Using Philanthropic Capital for For-Profit Ventures, and Making Fundraising Easier for Entrepreneurs
    2025/04/29

    Insights from an award-winning author and podcast host whose advocacy work is reshaping how angels invest and entrepreneurs access capital across ecosystems

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Clarity is kindness - Marcia highlighted how the most requested entrepreneur feedback is for angels to simply say "no" faster.
    2. Angel investing is still a mystery for many - It struck me how Marcia still encounters people unaware they can participate in angel investing. There exists a massive pool of "latent” angels.
    3. The golden gut - 30 years of industry experience can serve as a very effective "BS detector." Angel groups with diverse expertise can perform fantastic due diligence.

    I explore these ideas and more with Marcia Dawood, Host of the Angel Next Door Podcast.

    Marcia is a veteran angel and the Chair Emeritus of the Angel Capital Association. She is also a partner with Mindshift Capital and author of the award-winning book "Do Good While Doing Well." Her work advocating for entrepreneurship in DC and leading the Growing Women's Capital syndication initiative exemplifies her commitment to making early-stage investing more accessible and effective for both investors and founders.

    During our conversation, Marcia shares:

    • Insights on angel investing during market downturns that help investors avoid making reactionary decisions based on public market volatility.
    • Her approach to podcast content strategy that shows how thoughtfully organized episodes can better educate both investors and entrepreneurs on complex investment concepts.
    • The story behind her award-winning book "Do Good While Doing Well" that offers a roadmap to avoid common mistakes she made as a new angel investor.

    Connect with Marcia

    LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube

    Stuff We Reference

    • Kevin Learned
    • The Angel Next Door Podcast

    About the ACA

    The Angel Capital Association is the largest professional organization for angel investors, representing 15,000+ members across 250 groups who collectively invest over $650M annually in startups.

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    43 分
  • Episode 32: "The Founder is Everything" | Super Angel Katie Dunn on Effective Due Diligence, How Relationship-Building Drives Returns, and Why Clarity is Kindness
    2025/04/22

    Insights from a commercial real estate veteran who's now funding underrepresented founders while challenging traditional angel investing assumptions

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Financial models are founder due diligence too - Katie evaluates financial projections not for accuracy but to understand how founders think.
    2. If it’s not a heck yes it’s a heck no - When Katie can't quickly decide, she defaults to "no." This candid approach respects founder time more than stringing them along.
    3. Angels tend to overvalue their money, undervalue their networks - The real value angels bring isn't capital but connections and expertise. Katie's viral LinkedIn post for a founder where she invested just $2,500 exemplifies this misunderstood dynamic.

    I explore these ideas and more with Katie Dunn.

    Katie Dunn brings over 25 years of commercial real estate finance experience to angel investing, having underwritten more than $10 billion in deals throughout her career. Now focused exclusively on funding underrepresented founders in CPG and technology, she's helped startups raise over $27 million by teaching entrepreneurs how to articulate their vision with clarity and confidence. Her board positions with Outcast Brands, Fierce Foundry, and the Enthuse Foundation further demonstrate her commitment to transforming how capital flows to previously overlooked founders.

    During our conversation, Katie shares:

    • A framework for identifying the "fast no" in angel investing that respects founder time while maintaining clarity about investment criteria – something angels often struggle to articulate.
    • The troubling reality of gender bias in startup funding including shocking examples of inappropriate investor demands that highlight why underrepresented founders face structural disadvantages.
    • How founders can structure investor updates to maximize engagement and support, with specific communication best practices to look for.

    Connect with Katie

    LinkedIn | Website

    Stuff We Reference

    • Outcast Brands
    • LOOP
    • Caroline Dell
    • LOLA
    • CHIEF
    • Citrine Angels
    • Gaingels

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    44 分
  • Episode 31: "Less Than 2% of VC Funding" | SWITCH CEO Kate Brodock on Untapped Founder Talent, The Arbitrage Opportunity in Women-Led Ventures, and Equipping New Angel Investors
    2025/04/15

    Insights from a twenty-year tech ecosystem veteran creating pathways for women angel investors

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Capital distribution defies logic - Kate highlighted that less than 2% of VC funding goes to women-led teams, yet data shows they're 3x better at capital efficiency. Wild.
    2. Education activates capital - Confidence gaps, not capability gaps, often prevent qualified individuals from angel investing. Kate's focus on education first, then group formation, flips the traditional model brilliantly as this is something I’ve seen many investor communities struggle with.
    3. Unconscious bias has measurable patterns - Research shows identical pitches get forward-looking questions when delivered by men versus backward-looking questions for women. The awareness of this tendency alone is a key step to evolving our approach.

    I explore these ideas and more with Kate Brodock, CEO of SWITCH.

    Kate brings nearly two decades of leadership in the tech startup ecosystem as CEO of SWITCH and General Partner at The W Fund, focusing on addressing funding disparities for women and underrepresented founders. Her dual perspective as both investor and educator positions her uniquely to identify market inefficiencies, having created pathways for hundreds of new angel investors through her "Angel Sessions" programs. Kate combines academic knowledge with practical investment experience to address systemic challenges in the venture capital landscape.

    During our conversation, Kate shares:

    • Specific examples of portfolio companies positioned to thrive through challenging market cycles - from agricultural data solutions to community-focused fintech platforms serving traditionally underbanked populations.
    • A framework for recognizing unconscious bias in due diligence by comparing how investors typically approach male versus female founders with identical pitches.
    • Insights on the "feminine versus masculine" leadership traits that impact how founders are perceived, along with strategies for founder coaching that strengthens leadership capacity beyond Series A.

    Connect with Kate

    LinkedIn

    Stuff We Reference

    • The Angel Sessions
    • W Fund
    • SWITCH
    • AGTech

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    42 分
  • Episode 30: "You Need 500 Site Walks" | B2B Sales Leader Henry Talamantes on The Competitive Advantage of Ridiculous Customer Discovery, Post-Mall America, and the Next Chapter for Urban Office Space
    2025/04/08

    Insights from a PropTech growth veteran who's scaled multiple startups to $175M+ in venture funding while driving innovation in commercial real estate

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. Ridiculous customer discovery is what it takes – The “in” doesn’t matter. What matters is being ready to make the most of that “in”. His first enterprise pitch came about because the buyer liked his logo. But the capacity to close was predicated on a stupid deep understanding of the problem.
    2. Entertainment could save retail – The anchor mall tenant is changing. The TopGolf comparison suggests that destination experiences may replace traditional retail anchors in malls.
    3. From office building to urban microcosm - Henry envisions mixed-use transformations where office spaces evolve into self-contained neighborhoods, blending apartments, offices, and amenities. This shift challenges traditional concepts of commercial real estate and our experience of urban living. Fascinating.

    I explore these ideas and more with Henry Talamantes, PropTech Growth Expert.

    Henry Talamantes is a PropTech growth expert who has guided numerous seed to Series B startups at the intersection of real estate and technology, driving over $175M in venture capital and creating thousands of jobs. He blends real estate operations experience with B2B technology expertise and is committed to community service through organizations like the Knights of Columbus and Ronald McDonald House of Dallas, as well as serving as President of the Dallas A&M Club.

    During our conversation, Henry shares:

    • A counterintuitive framework for evaluating real estate technology that focuses on understanding incentive structures before examining the actual innovation
    • How return-to-office trends are creating unexpected opportunities in urban real estate transformation
    • Why technical solutions often fail in real estate - illustrated through examples of misaligned incentives and market misunderstanding

    Connect with Henry

    LinkedIn | X

    Stuff We Reference

    • WeWork
    • Airbnb
    • Vrbo
    • Icon
    • Amazon
    • Google
    • Bose

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    41 分
  • Episode 29: "Values on Our Sleeve" | Liberty Ventures Founder Alexander McCobin on Values-Forward Capital Allocation, Building Authentic Communities, and Why Great Events are 100% Worth the Effort
    2025/04/01

    Insights from a former philosophy student who's built a 15,000+ member network of principled business leaders and facilitated values-aligned investments

    Today's episode explores three ideas that caught my attention:

    1. The power of a radically transparent thesis - Alexander's approach of explicitly stating values upfront both attracts aligned founders and repels mismatches.
    2. Patient capital as competitive advantage - His willingness to build relationships over months/years before investing challenges the all-too-common "FOMO" mindset. Slowing down can lead to better decisions.
    3. Events as ecosystem catalyst - Liberty Ventures uses gatherings to enhance their thesis and build a stronger community, not just for deal flow. A vital lesson for investor communities that highlights the value of consistent connection.

    I explore these ideas and more with Alexander McCobin, Founder of Liberty Ventures.

    Alexander brings a unique journey from aspiring philosophy professor to conscious capitalism pioneer. As Founder & CEO of Liberty Ventures, he's building the largest network of values-aligned investors and entrepreneurs committed to advancing capitalism as a force for good, drawing on his experience leading both Students For Liberty and Conscious Capitalism.

    During our conversation, Alexander shares:

    • Why typical "quick close" pressure often leads to suboptimal decisions - illustrated through specific examples of relationship-based investing.
    • How conscious capitalism principles shape investment strategy - detailed through Liberty Ventures' approach to building aligned ecosystems.
    • Practical approaches to running investor events - including specific tactics for starting small and finding the right partners.

    Connect with Alexander
    LinkedIn | X | Website

    Stuff We Reference

    • Conscious Capitalism
    • Whole Foods
    • John Mackey
    • Liberty Ventures
    • Raj Sisodia
    • Steve Forbes
    • Joe Lonsdale

    Know someone who would enjoy this episode? Share it with them!

    P.S. Your feedback is important to me. Also, it tells the algorithms to pay more attention, which helps me out a lot. If you enjoyed this episode, hit the "like" button or leave a comment with your thoughts.

    Want more?

    • Get essential angel intel straight to your inbox every week with The Diligent Observer Newsletter.
    • Check out the entire show library and follow via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

    Connect with Andrew

    LinkedIn | X | Angel Ops E-Book

    All opinions are personal and may not reflect the views of The Diligent Observer. Not investment advice.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    43 分