Hank Williams points out that the front page of the Angelsoft website is really great. For those that don’t know Angelsoft, it
is a free Web service that many angel investors use to manage their
deal flow. We’ve looked into using it to manage our deal flow and I
wish we could use it, but we don’t currently.

Hank and his commenters mostly focus on the twittervision style map
on the front page that shows the real time deal submissions
geographically. I agree that’s neat, but like twittervision, it’s a
novelty that I don’t feel provides lasting value.

The underlying data, however, is really interesting. Angelsoft is showing the following data on their front page.

The Funnel of Submissions to Transactions

Funnel

The Industry Breakdown

Industry

Deal Submissions Over Time

Submissions

Now this is really useful data to both entrepreneurs and VCs and
it’s not readily available for free anywhere that I know of. Angelsoft
has even more data on this page.

If every VC and every angel investor used Angelsoft, or even if a
represntative sample used Angelsoft, then we’d be able to see exactly
what is going on in the venture market in real time (or near real
time). But right now, the user base is heavily weighted toward angel
investors and the data is skewed in that direction as this chart shows.

Valuations

We don’t use Angelsoft because we have specific workflow issues in
our firm that make it hard for us to use it. Instead we use a wiki. We
used to use Jot until it was bought by Google and rendered basically
unusable over the past year. We recently switched to Zoho and are quite
happy with that choice right now.

I’ve said before that I’d love to integrate our wiki deal log with
Crunchbase via their api to pull company information when they have it
and to push company information to them when they don’t. I’d also love
to push our deal information (with much of our firm specific info
removed) into Angelsoft and other similar systems so that their data
becomes better and richer and more meaningful.

The venture industry has been served over the years by a few
proprietary databases of deal/transaction information. I’ve always
refused to pay for that data because we basically know most of that
information from being in our market every day. But the idea of
collaborating with all the players in the market to build a completely
open set of web services, built on open data, to provide full
transparency would be a big step in the right direction.

I applaud David Rose and the Angelsoft team for being so open with
their data and I applaud Crunchbase for their openness too. I hope
others will follow in their footsteps.

To read more from Fred, visit his blog.

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