Check out BrightStar’s 2016 Annual Report that we have just released!

Brightstar Wisconsin 2016 Annual Report

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

BrightStar announces first 2017 investment and sale of tax credits

MILWAUKEE, Feb. 28, 2017 – BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc. today announced its first investment of 2017, HuTerra Rewards. They offer a technology platform that empowers consumers to more efficiently support nonprofits and local businesses in their community.  Once a consumer downloads the HuTerra app, receipts from purchases made at participating local stores, service stations, or restaurants can be scanned by their smartphones and a set percentage of that purchase gets automatically allocated to that consumer’s selected charity.

The Foundation hopes that this most recent investment will not just create high quality jobs in the state, but that its business model will also help countless small businesses and non-profits throughout the country as well.

“There are so many things to like about HuTerra, from the track record of the people involved to the positive results on communities when the business is successful,” said BrightStar board and investment committee member Pam Evason.  “I’m also excited that we made our first investment in the Green Bay area.”

BrightStar also disclosed it netted over $367,000 from the sale of Wisconsin Early Stage Seed Tax Credits.  The Foundation sells its credits to offset its annual operational expenses.  “Once again, the Wisconsin state investment tax credits will continue to allow 100% of the donations to BrightStar to go towards the mission of investing in innovative Wisconsin entrepreneurs,” said BrightStar President and CEO Tom Shannon.

The credits were sold to a group of individuals as well as one of BrightStar’s new partners, American Family Insurance.

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This unique approach enables the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

Shortly after selling agricultural machine maker Miller St. Nazianz Inc., John W. Miller jumped into a riskier endeavor: start-up investing.

“I could have gone anywhere after selling the company, but I decided I wanted to stay and build more in Wisconsin,” said Miller, who sold Manitowoc County-based  Miller St. Nazianz in 2014. “I’m only 42, so I still have some interest in taking an informed gamble on things.”

Miller’s attitude, along with his appetite for start-up investing, is increasingly common in the state, particularly in the Milwaukee area. He is among a growing number of younger “angel” investors who are sorting through the state’s youngest companies so they can put money into those that appear to be the most promising.

Their names are new to much of the public. Adam Berger, Mark Grosskopf and Mia Moe don’t have the visibility of their more established counterparts. But with every investment, they’re becoming more known.

“The next generation of business leaders in the community is emerging and they’re making their mark by investing in our best and brightest through angel investing,” said Joe Kirgues, co-founder of gener8tor, a Wisconsin-based accelerator and training program for start-ups. “Because of the efforts of people like this, we think that Milwaukee is actually ahead of its peers when it comes to the size and capability of its angel community relative to many other communities in the Midwest.”

Many of the area’s newest angel investors, like Berger, say they started out watching and learning from more established angel investors like National Business Furniture founder George Mosher and Tom Shannon, CEO and a founder of BrightStar Wisconsin, a nonprofit that makes venture capital investments.

“I’m just trying to get my feet wet, lay the bread crumbs of positive experiences, so I can do this in a big way later in my life,” said Berger, who is partner and vice president of sales at Doering Fleet Management and a member of the BrightStar Wisconsin board.

Berger said he has made five investments since April 2015, with an eye toward creating a small, diverse portfolio rather than pumping a lot of money into one deal. One of the five has been a gener8tor-trained company, he said. Another, Somna Therapeutics, is a Milwaukee company with Medical College of Wisconsin roots that sells a device to resolve acid reflux symptoms.

Grosskopf has also made a handful of investments after being invited to hear pitches from gener8tor’s first class in 2012.

Starting a company takes an enormous amount of commitment, energy and “intense discipline,”  said Grosskopf, chief executive officer and owner of New Resources Consulting, which helps large companies deploy their technology, and two other companies.

When he evaluates start-ups, Grosskopf said he tends to favor discipline over brilliance.

“You need a little bit of both, but certainly I would take someone hard-working over brilliant,” he said. “There’s just a lot of heavy lifting that needs to happen.”

The new angel investors are definitely investing to make profits, not donations to charity, said Rob Barnard, CEO and founder of Black Maple Capital, a Milwaukee hedge fund. But investing locally makes you feel good, he said.

“A lot of times when you’re dealing with big markets, it’s a very impersonal exercise,” Barnard said. “With these companies, you’re dealing directly with the people responsible for making them work or not work, and you can really make a difference with them.”

Milwaukee lags the national scene in terms of entrepreneurship, but the climate for start-ups is much healthier now than it was a decade ago, Barnard said. He says gener8tor has been a big part of that, with training that produces polished companies for investors to evaluate.

Wisconsin Women’s Business Initiative Corp., Brightstar Wisconsin, Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. and American Family Ventures have all played a role as well, added Berger, who says he’s working to launch an angel investment group for younger investors.

Angels benefit in many ways when they work with start-ups by learning about new uses of technologies like artificial intelligence or software-as-a-service systems, for example, said Moe, the daughter of the founders of Renaissance Learning, who held several positions with the Wisconsin Rapids education technology company. Her parents and family held nearly 70% of Renaissance Learning’s stock when it was sold for $440 million in 2011.

“Not only are you keeping up-to-date, you’re working with some of the top talent,” Moe said.

And in some cases, the angels’ investments are helping to attract more companies to Milwaukee. Gener8tor has lured three start-ups to the area through its training classes: Bright Cellars, a monthly wine club; Lumanu, whose software platform finds ambassadors for word-of-mouth marketing campaigns; and Exit7c, whose mobile app functions like a digital fuel card at gas stations.

But to continue that trend, the area needs to better connect its larger companies with their emerging counterparts, Moe said.

“We’re going to create a community here with established companies and start-ups,” she said. “Otherwise you’ll see them come in and start to shiver, and then you’ll see them leave.”

Link to the article: MJS

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation has invested a combined $550,000 in three Milwaukee-based startups, the nonprofit said Thursday in a news release.

The most recent additions to BrightStar’s portfolio, which now comprises 32 companies, are: Access HealthNet, which gives employees of business clients the ability to purchase and schedule common medical procedures from local providers; OnKöl, which sells a box-shaped device aimed at older adults that ties together myriad home and health monitoring devices; and Rent College Pads, which has developed technology to help students find off-campus housing.

“This round is exciting because BrightStar made investments in companies with unique technology products,” Adam Berger, a member of BrightStar’s board of directors and vice president of sales at Brookfield, WI-based Doering Fleet Management, said in a prepared statement. “We expect rapid growth from all three during the next 24 to 36 months.”

Milwaukee-based BrightStar uses an unconventional venture philanthropy approach that pumps charitable donations from wealthy individuals and foundations into early-stage businesses that are creating jobs in Wisconsin. Any returns BrightStar nets from its investments are plowed back into the organization’s fund.

“With the ongoing support of generous donors who share our goals, we will continue to actively invest in Wisconsin companies that will help the state’s economy continue to grow,” Michelle Picard, portfolio manager at Henderson Geneva Capital Management and a member of BrightStar’s investment committee, said in the news release.

In October, BrightStar invested $250,000 in Moxe Health, which develops digital tools to help facilitate the flow of data between healthcare providers, insurers, and software applications. Earlier that month, Moxe Health raised $5.5 million in a Series A financing round led by Radnor, PA-based Safeguard Scientifics (NYSE: SFE).

The other company that BrightStar added to its portfolio this year was Phoenix Nuclear Labs, which has developed particle accelerator technology with applications in areas such as medical imaging and weapons inspection.

Many of the companies in BrightStar’s portfolio are graduates of Gener8tor, a startup accelerator that has run programs in several Wisconsin cities and the Minneapolis/St. Paul area. Among the Gener8tor alumni that have received investments from BrightStar are AkitaBox, AltusCampus, Beekeeper Data, Bright Cellars, GrocerKey, Project Foundry, and Quietyme.

According to BrightStar’s website, other Wisconsin-based companies that the nonprofit has invested in include Fetch Rewards, Forward Health Group, Shine Medical Technologies, Stemina Biomarker Discovery, and Swallow Solutions.

Link to the article: Xconomy Article

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

Alana Platt waits in a line at the back of an auditorium at the Monona Terrace convention center in Madison.

When it’s her turn, Platt takes her place in the spotlight, in front of a red curtain, and presents the Whitefish Bay-based company she’s been working on for the past year-and-a-half—a fundraising management tool for school districts called Classmunity.

There are 50.4 million students in the U.S. and it takes about $11,600 per year to educate each one. Many schools have to fundraise to meet these costs, but fundraising is disjointed and prone to fraud, she says.

“If you can think of a fundraiser, Classmunity can help the school manage it,” Platt says. “We bring modern financial technology to a sector that has been doing things pretty much the same way for decades.”

She presents the company’s growth path and then she gets to the reason she’s making this five-minute pitch:

“We’re looking to raise $500,000 to bring on more full-time staff members to help accelerate the growth of our platform and bring on more customers.”

Walking the tightrope

Classmunity is raising its seed funding round, the first institutional capital the company has sought out since its foundation. It is just moving beyond friends, family and grants into real cash.

Once the company gets its seed round and grows larger, it will face the monumental challenge of raising an even larger sum – usually $2 million to $6 million – from venture capitalists for the series A round. Several Wisconsin entrepreneurship experts call the gap between seed capital and venture capital the “valley of death” because crossing it successfully can be so taxing.

The “valley of death” is a particularly big problem for Wisconsin’s economy.

Milwaukee ranks 39th among the 40 largest metropolitan areas in the country when it comes to startup activity, a set of economic indicators measuring new business creation, while Wisconsin ranks dead last among the 25 largest states, according to the latest Kauffman Index of Startup Activity from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. Startups are a vital source of new job creation. And the state’s lack of new business formation could translate to a less active venture capital community.

There are only a handful of venture capital investors in the state, and three major names pop up again and again: Mequon-based Capital Midwest Fund, Baird Capital (with offices in Milwaukee and Chicago), and Madison-based Venture Investors.

The East and West Coasts have the lion’s share of venture capital investment in the country. California had $33.9 billion in venture capital investment in 2015, according to the National Venture Capital Association. Wisconsin, on the other hand, only attracted $88.9 million in venture capital investment last year.

However, some cities in the middle of the country, like Chicago and Dallas, have managed to put themselves on the map, according to a study by the University of Toronto’s Martin Prosperity Institute.

“There needs to be more venture capital than currently exists in Wisconsin in order to compete in the knowledge economy,” said Joe Kirgues, managing director of Milwaukee-based startup accelerator gener8tor. “We need more engineers building more products and we lack the infrastructure that facilitates people taking the leap into entrepreneurship. In my opinion, venture capital is a lagging indicator. The leading indicator will be the number of angels in Milwaukee and the broader region.”

“We lack that add-on capital,” said Dan Steininger, president of Milwaukee-based entrepreneurship assistance organization BizStarts Inc. “There’s just not enough for us, no question about it. We don’t even have enough angel capital, let alone add-on capital.”

“We can use more capital, not just on the angel side, but between that angel and that later stage, there is a huge gap,” said Todd Sobotka, investment manager at BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc., a Milwaukee-based venture philanthropy firm. “Wisconsin as a whole needs more capital and that was the focus of BrightStar. It’s not for lack of wealth. We do have a lot of wealth here but it’s just our culture – we just don’t invest in early stage companies.”

“Obviously we have a lot of opportunity for growth, whether it comes to entrepreneurship or investment,” said Bram Daelemans, director of investor networks at the Wisconsin Technology Council. “It’s even something we put in our presentations and refer to as the ‘valley of death,’ but I think it’s getting better. If you look at the Badger Fund of Funds and some other funds that are getting started, I think people are making an effort to bridge that gap.”

Classmunity was one of five Milwaukee-area companies pitching themselves at the Wisconsin Technology Council’s 2016 Early Stage Symposium. Startups from across the state and nation each got a five-minute window to tell investors about the company, what it does, its addressable market, the investment opportunity, how much it has raised so far and its customers. They practiced and honed their pitches with the WTC to get them ready for an audience of investors from Wisconsin and the wider Midwest.

The other southeastern Wisconsin firms were Menomonee Falls-based NewOz Big Data Analytics, which created a system to decrease logistics costs for corporations; Milwaukee-based Metria, which innovated a single-camera 3D optical motion tracking technology; Waukesha-based Intellivisit, which developed an artificial intelligence that integrates health care with daily life; and West Bend-based Spaulding Medical, which aims to improve cardiac care accessibility.

Making the pitches were entrepreneurs and early employees at these fledgling firms, most of which are working on their series A funding rounds.

Intellivisit, founded in 2014, has tested its virtual health care technology on more than 1,000 patients and has brought two physician groups on board as customers.

The company has grown to eight employees and has raised a total of $2 million from two angel capital rounds. It’s time to raise a series A round, so it can scale and deploy its technology to other provider groups, hire more employees and move faster, said Drew Palin, chief medical officer. Intellivisit is currently crossing the valley of death.

“We need the money. VCs want a good investment,” said Palin, who has helped start four companies. “So you try to work to get to a common ground. It’s risky for them if they go too early and it’s hard for us to grow if we go too late.”

Intellivisit is aiming to raise between $4 million and $6 million, and is just getting started pitching venture capitalists. Its founders have drawn upon their networks and narrowed down a few investment firms to pitch. One or two are in Milwaukee, four or five are in Chicago and a few are on the East and West Coasts.

“Our experience is the Midwest, it’s a little more thoughtful, a little more friendly, a little more Midwest nice,” Palin said. “But you still have to hit the right milestones, have the right market opportunities, present the right team to get anybody’s interest.”

It could be challenging to raise up to $6 million from Wisconsin investors, though, since angel groups aren’t set up to give that amount of money. The state’s entrepreneurship ecosystem has adjusted as more angel groups entered the scene over the past 10 years, Palin said.

“Angels and angel groups have kind of taken the place of venture capital,” he said. “They’re doing the earlier, high-risk investments. And the VCs have moved up the chain to kind of be more like private equity, where they’re doing later investments.”

If some of the companies getting seed capital from the angel networks achieve successful exits, that could attract and drive additional venture capital investments in the state, Palin said.

Risky business

When a new company is formed, the founder usually first raises money from friends and family, crowdfunding or a private investor.

After that initial seed capital, the company moves on to the institutional investors. Among those are angel investors, groups of wealthy individuals who make small investments of about $1 million to $2 million to help new companies develop their products, find customers and move the product to market.

Once the product is selling and the company is generating revenue and has a “story to tell,” it looks for venture capital, said Steininger. This is when it can begin raising a series A round. The space between angel capital and venture capital can feel like a yawning canyon, especially in Wisconsin.

Venture capital is invested in companies with high growth potential and frequently jumpstarts job creation and economic growth.

The Wisconsin Technology Council helped facilitate 380 meetings between investors and startups during a “speed dating” event at the Early Stage Symposium.

“I know this is kind of a small sample and a small snapshot, but 70 companies had at least one meeting,” Daelemans said. “There’s a lot of excitement and there’s a lot of activity in the state and investors are looking for that next investment opportunity. So if it doesn’t happen, is it because we’re not connecting the right investors to the right entrepreneurs or is it because the ideas aren’t that good?”

Part of the reason the valley of death is such a big problem in Wisconsin is the state’s conservative cultural roots, Sobotka said.

“We’d like to see Milwaukee step up more,” he said. “It’s old German culture: we’re risk averse, frugal, don’t necessarily do things that we’re not comfortable with, and stay inside the box.”

“What’s happening in default (without enough venture capital) is we go back to the angel investors and say, ‘Hey, we’ve got a million dollars in; we need to raise another million,’” said John Torinus, a general partner in Milwaukee-based Wisconsin Super Angel Fund. “It’s looking good. Would you double down? That’s a little tough to do because this could be a round for $2 million, $3 million, and it’s pretty hard to get that kind of money out of angels.”

Torinus’ angel fund invests mainly in Wisconsin businesses, since it has the proximity to connect those companies to investors, banks, customers, professional services providers and other resources, he said. There is also plenty of opportunity to get in on the ground floor of Wisconsin businesses.

“It’s sort of a paradox,” he said. “Because there’s so few players here, it’s a good place for the players who are here. We don’t go priding ourselves on how many deals we turn down. We like to do deals and we like to do Wisconsin deals.

“I wouldn’t feel too comfortable starting a company in Indianapolis. We’re touching and feeling and we’re interacting with these guys every week. Local money, in a way, is better than far away money.”

Seeding growth

In September, Milwaukee entrepreneur Bryant Randall wrote a LinkedIn post titled “Why Milwaukee sucks for startups.”

Randall doesn’t pull any punches while telling the story of his unsuccessful attempts to raise seed and angel capital.

He talked to accelerators, he pitched a private bank, he jumped through hoops at government lenders, he presented to angel investors. But no one would givehim a dime for his startup, Northern Elements, which sells modern, bioethanol fuel-burning furniture online.

Randall previously started an audio/video resequencing agency called Reverse Enginears out of his Milwaukee bedroom. He worked with companies like Google, Showtime and Microsoft. But this is the first time he’s had to raise money.

“It’s been really bad,” he said. “I used to work out west a lot with Disney and Pixar, a lot of movies, and I’ve never seen a city so much in its own way as Milwaukee. My honest advice to any young entrepreneur would be: ‘leave.’”

Most disconcerting was that Randall, who is African-American, would email investors and get immediate interest, but once they met him face-to-face, they weren’t as engaged.

“I think it’s the investment community. Our conservative culture, bundled together with our propensity to make everything about race,” Randall said. “They would always call us back, sometimes the same day. But the minute that they saw our face, it always was so many excuses.”

But when Randall emailed West Coast flash sale retailer TouchofModern.com, he quickly got a placement on the company’s site and had sold $10,000 worth of product in five days. No paperwork or protracted process required.

Northern Elements is now working to get crowdfunding through a Kickstarter campaign, which was 10 percent funded after its first week, Randall said.

“It’s just super conservative and all this talk happens and quite frankly, especially with millennials, (Wisconsin investors are) getting left behind,” he said.

“They’re not keeping up with the speed of business. The new business economy is completely antithetical to the slow Wisconsin glad-handing…this old boys’ network. You don’t become successful because of Milwaukee, you become successful in spite of Milwaukee.”

Platt, the co-founder and chief executive officer of Classmunity, has only just started raising seed funds, but has had the opposite experience.

“This is my first startup company, so I don’t really have a lot to compare it to,” she said. “The biggest thing that I’ve been seized with so far is how supportive different groups have been. In Wisconsin, there seems to be a real emphasis on paying it forward and trying to help each other.”

Platt pitched her startup, a fundraising platform for school districts founded in 2015, for the first time at the Early Stage Symposium.

“We had been previously contacted by some investors, so we chatted with them and got a sense for what they’re looking for, but that was kind of our kickoff,” Platt said.

Classmunity has two employees, plus five founders, and has six school districts paying for its service as of May.

So far, Classmunity has operated on a few hundred dollars from each founder and a two-part Ideadvance seed grant totaling $75,000 from the University of Wisconsin-Extension.

Since its Early Stage pitch, Classmunity has received interest from a number of different investors and is setting up meetings to tell them more.

Platt has thought ahead to the series A round and knows Classmunity will have to prove its concept further before it can get to that level.

“Everything that we’re looking to do, it’s all based around customer acquisition and growth because we know that we need that as a company and we know that is going to make us desirable for a series A round,” she said. “We were warned to expect Midwest investors to expect your idea to be further along. Here, people expect you to have revenue, and your cost of customer acquisition is less than what you’re bringing in, and you actually have a product that people are willing to pay for.”

Good ideas attract money

Tim Keane, director of Brookfield-based Golden Angels Investors LLC, says it shouldn’t matter if Wisconsin has enough home-grown venture capital, when the best startup ideas will attract funds from afar.

If out-of-state venture capitalists want to invest in a Wisconsin company, state lines aren’t stopping them, Sobotka said. Money finds good deals, wherever they are.

Wisconsin may have a lower risk appetite than other regions, Keane said. Culturally, Boston or Chicago might have more risk takers. Probably, startups need more customer proof here than in California.

“There’s a lot of money around that’s just more comfortable being in the stock market or being in real estate rather than startups. Startups are risky. We lose 50 percent of the time,” Keane said.

“It kind of depends on who you ask,” Daelemans said. “If you talk to investors, they’ll say they don’t have enough good companies to invest in; if you talk to entrepreneurs, they’ll say there’s not enough money available.”

“Where you stand depends on where you sit,” said Cory Nettles, managing director of Milwaukee-based Generation Growth Capital Inc. “The investment community feels there is enough (venture capital). The entrepreneur who’s told ‘no’ doesn’t.

“It’s always nice to have more capital, but all the capital in the world without the ideas and the entrepreneurs and the ecosystem to support it doesn’t really move the needle.”

Not every investment starts with an entrepreneur and a venture; existing businesses with the infrastructure and reputation to succeed are a less risky investment, and some investors are attracted to that, he said.

Like Nettles, Jerry Jendusa, co-founder of Wauwatosa-based consulting and investing firm Stuck Inc., is one of those more cautious investors. He prefers to acquire or invest in a more established company and then use traditional strategic methods to help it grow.

“In our particular case…we’re believers in the management team and the tools, their current customers, and creating ‘aha’ moments that could help a company grow,” Jendusa said. “It’s just a different thought process. We can be a patient investor, not expecting a big return really quickly.”

Entrepreneurs have a stake in whether they get funded, Kirgues said. They need to convince venture capitalists that they’ll get a good return on their investment. And that happens by creating scalable business models and products that are fundable.

Kirgues said universities could do more to help students create new companies, forming a funnel of entrepreneurship that could attract venture capital.

“I don’t think there’s enough accountability about where the community’s investing resources to facilitate more startup creation and the outcomes those organizations are achieving,” he said. “I think everyone who takes economic development dollars related to startups should be accountable to one metric, which is how many of your startups receive angel and venture financing.”

Other options

“If you don’t get that next stage, things get ugly,” Steininger said, which is why startups should think ahead on funding. “Long before you start your business, you have to think about: What are you going to do after angel?”

There are other pathways to funding that are often overlooked, Steininger said. Beyond the traditional funding rounds, early stage companies can seek capital from crowdfunding, contests and business grants, credit or a loan, an incubator, a corporate investor, an interested distributor, a barter deal or a customer grant.

“That’s the problem. There’s too many entrepreneurs starting companies thinking about making a boatload and exiting. They don’t think about profit. They think about investor capital because that’s where they want to get their money and get out. That’s sad,” Steininger said.

He pointed to Joe Bartolotta, Barry Mandel, Sue Marks, George Mosher and other Milwaukee entrepreneurs who have done it for themselves, bootstrapping their ideas into major names in the Wisconsin business world.

“They created thousands of jobs and you know what they all have in common?” Steinger asked. “They all have in common that they built profitable businesses right from the get-go.”

A cautious state

Torinus has been brainstorming with a group including the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. and the Milwaukee 7 regional economic development partnership to determine how to build up a better venture capital pool for Milwaukee’s entrepreneurs.

Among the ideas that have been proposed by stakeholders across the state:

Offering loan guarantees like those obtainable from the U.S. Small Business Administration or the Wisconsin Housing and Economic Development Authority, which could help a business obtain bank financing.

Big companies could invest in smaller counterparts that are coming up with innovative industry solutions, and could eventually be strategic acquisition targets.

Foundations could designate that their investment portfolios’ alternative investments go to Wisconsin startups.

Raising the limits on early-stage business investment credits, which can be claimed by those who invest angel or venture capital in a young Wisconsin company that meets certain criteria and has the potential for significant economic impact and job growth.

And while there is a need for additional venture capital to help grow Wisconsin’s early stage companies, the state’s startup scene has come a long way from just 15 years ago. At that time, there were no incubators, accelerators or campus entrepreneurship programs, Torinus said.

“Entrepreneurs need two things—they need a support system and they need capital,” he said. “Today, there’s a very nice support system across the state.

“When I hear dearth (of available venture capital), I don’t like that word because we’re so much better than we used to be. That doesn’t mean we couldn’t use more capital. We could use 10 more of my fund.”

Series A seekers

“The ‘valley of death’ seems to be going on forever today,” Steininger said. “Twitter has never had a profitable day in its life. It’s still living on investor cash. It’s a problem in Milwaukee; it’s a problem nationally.”

In Wisconsin, part of the reason for the long-lasting valley of death is the difficulty of obtaining bank capital in the tight regulatory environment, Torinus said. Even if a company has receivables, collateral and equipment, it’s a tough sell.

“Theoretically, you become bankable,” he said. “The truth of the matter is it’s not in the current mission or business space the banks want to be in. It’s especially hard because the regulators at state and federal levels are being especially scrupulous, maybe overly scrupulous, about any deal that has some hair on it, some risk.”

Torinus has vouched for companies his angel fund has invested in as they seek to get to the next level by obtaining bank or venture financing. With revenue, a proven market and some customers, many companies are growing quickly and could use some operating capital to help them expand.

“Every entrepreneur that comes in shows you his hockey stick,” Torinus said. “They’re zero today and they’re going to be $900 million in three years. We only have a few companies that have met their original hockey stick.

“Every one of them’s different but they’re generally at the point where they’re starting to expand. You’d love to get debt capital versus equity capital because it’s less expensive and it’s not dilutive.”

Badger battle

In 2015, 128 Wisconsin companies received some kind of seed or series A funding, according to Daelemans, who tracks Form D filings, investor surveys and announcements. Of the 128, 70 of them are in the greater Madison area, while 36 are in southeast Wisconsin. In 2016, Daelemans has so far tracked 64 companies receiving funding, 44 of which are in Madison and 18 of which are in southeast Wisconsin.

“There’s a large gap between Madison and Milwaukee, maybe not in dollars invested, but in the number of startups,” Daelemans said.

Madison’s startups are spread throughout the metropolitan area, while most of Milwaukee’s startup activity is concentrated in the Historic Third Ward and in Walker’s Point, he said. That could contribute to the less prominent entrepreneurship ecosystem in Milwaukee, he said.

“It seems that the states around us, the states that we’re sort of ‘competing with’ or that we’re measuring ourselves against, it’s hard, in my opinion,” Daelemans said. “If you add Milwaukee and Madison together, we’d still be a small city compared to Chicago or Minneapolis-St. Paul or Detroit. Having that separation (between Milwaukee and Madison) doesn’t really make it easier.”

“Milwaukee desperately needs better community leadership around entrepreneurship activities,” Keane said. “We have too many people trying to do their own thing and not enough proven expertise. It’s like talking to a neurosurgeon about dermatology.”

“Madison has a good chance of being a health care IT hub over the next decade, with Epic being there,” Sobotka said. “There’s just no way around that. Madison does have a little better vibe right now. It ebbs and flows. Is there greater activity right now, so it seems, in the Madison area? Yeah.”

“I don’t think there is any Milwaukee and Madison (competition),” Keane said. “Nobody that I’ve ever met said, ‘We will fund your company if you move down the road to Madison.'”

Link to the article: BizTimes

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

BrightStar announces new investments

MILWAUKEE, Dec. 9, 2016 – BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc. today announced that it has committed $550,000 to three new companies, Access HealthNet, Onkol, and Rent College Pads. The investments bring the BrightStar portfolio to 32 companies in less than three years of investing.

“These investments show that we have effectively stepped up to fulfill our mission of funding innovative, job-creating early-stage companies in Wisconsin,” said BrightStar investment committee member and donor Michelle Picard, portfolio manager at Henderson Geneva Capital Management.  “We have created a unique model to support companies that are committed to job creation.  With the ongoing support of generous donors who share our goals, we will continue to actively invest in Wisconsin companies that will help the state’s economy continue to grow.”

“This round is exciting because BrightStar made investments in companies with unique technology products designed to lower employer health care costs, fill off-campus student housing, and support the assisted living and in-home care providers,” said BrightStar board member Adam Berger, partner and vice president of Doering Fleet Management. “The companies varied in stage, expertise and industry.  We expect rapid growth from all three during the next 24  to 36 months. That’s great for Wisconsin and in keeping with BrightStar’s mission.”

Giving News
Please note that the IRS has chosen to make permanent the IRA charitable contributions rules.  As a result, individuals over 70½ can elect to make a tax-free donation of up to $100,000 to a charity of their choosing from their IRA.  Please contact BrightStar Wisconsin if you would like to learn more about how to use this new rule to support our foundation.

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation. Contributions to BrightStar are tax deductible.

Downloadable File:
Fall Ad Campaign.pdf

Dear BrightStar friends:

Hopefully many of you saw the ads that we are currently running in the Milwaukee Business Journal, BizTimes and Wisconsin State Journal. For those of you that haven’t seen it, click the link below.

This is the second year that we’ve run our “donor appeal” ad campaign. Our BrightStar donors wanted everyone to know how their donations are working to keep Wisconsin’s best and the brightest in our great state by investing in early stage startups that have the potential to create many good paying jobs.

Also, some of you have expressed interest in the past about our portfolio companies and investment opportunities. If you are interested in early stage investment and are an accredited investor, please let us know if you would like to be invited to investment presentations for current BrightStar portfolio companies or opportunities we are actively vetting if there is extra room in their offerings. Our mission is to create jobs by increasing the flow of funds to Wisconsin start-up companies, and we are happy to share our access and insights on deals we see.

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

Downloadable File:
BSW Moxe press release 10-21-16.pdf

BrightStar announces investment in a job-creating Wisconsin company

MILWAUKEE, Oct. 24, 2016 – BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc. today announced another 2016 investment and would like to welcome Madison-based Moxe Health into its portfolio of Wisconsin early-stage, job-creating companies.

Moxe provides the healthcare market with a more effective electronic health record integration technology that, among other things, automates the exchange of data between healthcare providers and health plans to aid service to high-risk populations.

“Providing a longitudinal patient record is one of the core components of the country’s move to outcomes-based medicine,” said Todd Sobotka, BrightStar’s portfolio manager. “Moxe has designed the “pipes” that clinical and demographic information travels through that allow for more efficient data transfer between providers and payers. The company’s product is being used around the country, bringing a newfound efficiency to our healthcare system.”

It was announced earlier this month that Moxe received $5.5 million in capital led by Safeguard Scientifics (NYSE:SFE), a Pennsylvania-based growth-capital provider.

“BrightStar’s investment earlier this year was key in allowing us to expand operations, while also putting us in a stronger position to identify and partner with excellent Series A investors,” said Dan Wilson, CEO of Moxe. “In the end, BrightStar helped us bring additional capital into Wisconsin in support of our aggressive hiring plans.”

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

BrightStar is a 501(c)(3) non-profit foundation created to facilitate job creation and increase Wisconsin’s economic activity by deploying donated funds into equity stakes in early-stage, rapid growth companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

About Moxe Health

Founded in 2012, Moxe Health enables bi-directional flow of information between payers and providers. The company’s flagship product, Substrate, is an electronic medical record integration solution connecting payers and provider networks, facilitating real-time data exchange among industry stakeholders. Through this exchange of data, provider networks are rewarded with key patient health insights and a reduced administrative footprint. Moxe is based in Madison, Wisconsin. For more information, please visit moxehealth.com.

Media Contacts

For BrightStar

Rod Hise

608-770-7850

rod@rodhise.com

For Moxe Health

Terri Leigh Rhody

Vice President, Marketing and Customer Experience

608-699-9176 ext. 702

terri@moxehealth.com

BrightStar invests $250k in Madison firm

By Molly Dill, October 24, 2016, 1:02 PM

Milwaukee-based BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc. has invested $250,000 in Madison health care IT startup Moxe Health.

BrightStar’s funds, deployed in April, were used to fill a gap while Moxe worked to close a $5.5 million funding round, which occurred earlier this month, said Todd Sobotka, portfolio manager at BrightStar.

“It gave (Moxe CEO Dan Wilson) a very solid runway of time to combine that with the money he did have to put him in a stronger position over the next few months, because he was talking to multiple players,” Sobotka said.

Moxe has developed an electronic health record integration technology that automates data exchange between health care providers and health plans to help both serve high-risk populations. The company currently has nine employees, but Sobotka expects it to grow quickly.

“I think this is a hot space, I think he’s got something that could be incredibly valuable to the space and I think this scored about as high on the job creation side as about anything in the past three years,” Sobotka said.

The capital investments will be used to fund Moxe’s rapid growth across the board, he said.

“Providing a longitudinal patient record is one of the core components of the country’s move to outcomes-based medicine,” Sobotka said. “Moxe has designed the ‘pipes’ that clinical and demographic information travels through that allow for more efficient data transfer between providers and payers. The company’s product is being used around the country, bringing a newfound efficiency to our health care system.”

A nonprofit, BrightStar was formed in late 2013 to practice venture philanthropy, in which donations are deployed to early stage startup companies that will create jobs in Wisconsin. The returns are invested back into the organization and new startups. BizTimes detailed the process in a 2014 cover story.

“BrightStar’s investment earlier this year was key in allowing us to expand operations, while also putting us in a stronger position to identify and partner with excellent Series A investors,” Wilson said. “In the end, BrightStar helped us bring additional capital into Wisconsin in support of our aggressive hiring plans.”

This is the first investment BrightStar has made solo and its second investment in 2016.

Follow this link to view on BizTimes

BrightStar has been very active investing in early-stage companies that are creating high quality jobs in Wisconsin. Below is a link to a video that will update you on our progress, and has comments from nine of the companies in our portfolio. We hope you’ll take a few minute to give it a view!

Click here to view our video