Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project

Venture capitalists (VCs) usually utilize a bundle of selection criteria in identifying a potential venture among hundreds of business plans they receive every year. These guidelines primarily cover four major categories: management, product, market and financials. Management, including entreprene...

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Main Author: Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen
Format: Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21000/
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author Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen
author_facet Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen
author_sort Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Venture capitalists (VCs) usually utilize a bundle of selection criteria in identifying a potential venture among hundreds of business plans they receive every year. These guidelines primarily cover four major categories: management, product, market and financials. Management, including entrepreneurs and venture team, are the most frequently indicated factor to be critical to the success of a new company. The key points related to these criteria from various literatures are summarized in this study. Meanwhile, this report is to seek the factors offsetting the effect of these criteria and making VCs invest in a company with no return. VC firms'strategies and VCs'own personal biases, experience limitations, peer and market pressures, and rough communication skills would be the major blame to some irrational behaviour, leading to a wrong choosing or miss a good opportunity. Through interviewing twelve ventures which are screened from the internship project for the East Midlands Early Growth Fund, this study used the viewpoints from ventures to scrutiny VCs' behaviour. The research method starting from the ventures' points is proved in this study to be more effective than the traditional one taking off from the VC side. The findings showed that VCs did behave unprofessionally sometimes. Additional discoveries came out that some quality companies would request for value-added benefits other than capital from VCs, while VCs may lose them because these ventures' invisibility to VCs. Meanwhile, quite a few of decision aid models can assist VCs in avoiding the biased judgement, although the VCs' introspection and experiences are still the key to their correct decisions. Ventures can also acquire inspiration from this study. Some relevant topics are raised at the end for future researches.
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spelling nottingham-210002017-12-27T17:52:00Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21000/ Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen Venture capitalists (VCs) usually utilize a bundle of selection criteria in identifying a potential venture among hundreds of business plans they receive every year. These guidelines primarily cover four major categories: management, product, market and financials. Management, including entrepreneurs and venture team, are the most frequently indicated factor to be critical to the success of a new company. The key points related to these criteria from various literatures are summarized in this study. Meanwhile, this report is to seek the factors offsetting the effect of these criteria and making VCs invest in a company with no return. VC firms'strategies and VCs'own personal biases, experience limitations, peer and market pressures, and rough communication skills would be the major blame to some irrational behaviour, leading to a wrong choosing or miss a good opportunity. Through interviewing twelve ventures which are screened from the internship project for the East Midlands Early Growth Fund, this study used the viewpoints from ventures to scrutiny VCs' behaviour. The research method starting from the ventures' points is proved in this study to be more effective than the traditional one taking off from the VC side. The findings showed that VCs did behave unprofessionally sometimes. Additional discoveries came out that some quality companies would request for value-added benefits other than capital from VCs, while VCs may lose them because these ventures' invisibility to VCs. Meanwhile, quite a few of decision aid models can assist VCs in avoiding the biased judgement, although the VCs' introspection and experiences are still the key to their correct decisions. Ventures can also acquire inspiration from this study. Some relevant topics are raised at the end for future researches. 2007 Dissertation (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21000/1/Jasmine_-_individual Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen (2007) Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project. [Dissertation (University of Nottingham only)] (Unpublished) venture capital equity investment screening criteria individual bias
spellingShingle venture capital
equity investment
screening criteria
individual bias
Mu, Jasmine Chao-wen
Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title_full Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title_fullStr Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title_full_unstemmed Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title_short Interaction between Venture Capitalists' Screening Criteria and their Individual Bias - A Part of the East Midlands Early Growth Fund Project
title_sort interaction between venture capitalists' screening criteria and their individual bias - a part of the east midlands early growth fund project
topic venture capital
equity investment
screening criteria
individual bias
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/21000/