Downloadable File:
BrightStar IRS Final.pdf

MILWAUKEE, Nov. 25, 2013 – The BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation, a groundbreaking
philanthropic approach to supporting job creation and economic growth statewide through
investment in early-stage companies, today announced that the Internal Revenue Service
has granted the foundation’s request for tax-exempt status under section 501(c)3 of the
Internal Revenue Code. The formal determination of the foundation’s status as taxexempt
enables it to begin executing its unique strategy of soliciting tax-deductible
contributions from corporations, foundations and individuals, and investing that
contributed capital in early-state companies that are creating jobs across Wisconsin.

“We are extremely pleased to have been granted the tax-exempt status that is at
the heart of our novel, philanthropic approach to job creation and economic
development,” said Jeff Harris, BrightStar Wisconsin’s co-founder and chairman. “We
can now officially begin our work to engage donors, raise funds and invest capital in the
Wisconsin early-stage companies that are poised for the most growth and job creation.”

Because BrightStar is a non-profit organization, more of the capital it raises
through charitable giving can be invested. Virtually all earnings and returns from the
foundation’s portfolio companies will be reinvested to create additional high-quality jobs
and spur continued growth in Wisconsin’s economy. Donors are not entitled to any return
of their contributed capital or any share of BrightStar’s earnings.

BrightStar Wisconsin was assisted by Tony Handzlik and Amy Barnes of
Reinhart Boerner Van Dueren in securing the IRS determination.

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

The non-profit BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation is using a groundbreaking
philanthropic approach to support job creation and economic growth across Wisconsin
through investment in early-stage 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:
2013-11-14-BrightStarHeinemann.pdf

Foundation also opens Madison office to expand statewide presence

MILWAUKEE, Nov. 14, 2013 – The Wisconsin BrightStar Foundation today announced that former Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions Secretary Lorrie Heinemann will join the foundation as vice president. Ms. Heinemann will head the foundation’s new Madison office, which will have statewide reach.

In addition to her tenure as a state cabinet secretary, Ms. Heinemann is a co-founder of the Wisconsin Angel Network. She also is a trustee of the WiSys Technology Foundation and a director of the Wisconsin Technology Council. She most recently worked at University of Wisconsin Foundation for the School of Business Major Gifts Team.

“Lorrie is an important hire for us because of her ability to expand our reach throughout Wisconsin,” said Jeff Rusinow, a foundation co-founder and director. “I have known Lorrie for years and her work throughout the state is highly regarded by those in government, and the financial and philanthropic sectors. It will be especially helpful to us to have another Madison presence along with our co-founder Mark Burish.” BrightStar’s next milestone will be the receipt of an IRS determination that gives the foundation 501(c)3 tax-exempt status.

“The IRS determination that we are a tax-exempt organization is critical for us.” Mr. Shannon said. “It will allow us to fully engage potential donors across Wisconsin. We have a number of companies in need of financing that have already registered with us. We are looking forward to beginning the vetting process and starting to invest in the early stage companies most likely to create jobs. Madison is an entrepreneurial hotbed and having Lorrie there will be a tremendous boost to our efforts to help build Wisconsin’s economy through philanthropy.”

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

The non-profit BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation is using a groundbreaking philanthropic approach to support job creation and economic growth across Wisconsin through investment in early-stage companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin
through charitable donations to the foundation. Contributions to BrightStar will be tax deductible, assuming receipt of a tax-exempt determination from the Internal Revenue Service. The foundation is filing an application to obtain formal recognition of its status as a tax-exempt organization under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. The organization’s non-profit, tax-exempt status will mean that more of the capital raised can be invested in high-growth, job-creating companies and that virtually all earnings and returns can be reinvested. BrightStar hopes to begin screening companies seeking investment in the fall.

—30—

Contact:
Rod Hise
The Luminis Group Ltd for BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.
608-807-4607
rod@luminisgroup.com

As state capital for early-stage companies has continued to plummet in Wisconsin over the past two years, now down to about $25 million, a new nonprofit organization has taken the first steps of a revolutionary approach that it hopes will fill the financial gap to fuel job growth and business development.

Milwaukee-based BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation, which was incorporated July 1, is turning to the state’s pool of philanthropic individuals and foundations and asking them to donate a portion of their pockets to state-based startup companies.

Funding for early-stage companies has historically been provided by the government in the public sector or angel investors and venture capitalists in the private sector. BrightStar’s experimental approach, however, will rely on contributions from “cheeseheads that care about our state,” particularly those who want to find a way to keep it from lagging, according to Tom Shannon, co-founder, president and chief executive officer of the nonprofit.

Shannon, who has pumped at least a dozen of his own investments into companies in the early-stage space, argues that while Wisconsin’s wealthiest may not be interested in spreading their funds among startups, many of them do have a sincere interest in job creation.

“The truly wealthy don’t have an incentive to invest in early-stage companies, but they have a great incentive to create jobs for the kids they’re educating and to make Wisconsin’s economy flourish,” Shannon said.

According to BrightStar’s business model, the group will work to acquire $150 million in donations during the first three years of its operation. That figure represents the group’s “stretch” goal. While Shannon expects to collect about $60 million in the first three years, he said $150 million is necessary to really make a difference.

All returns from the investments of those donations will be reinvested back into the foundation to upkeep its operations. While the nonprofit may retain a pool of consistent donors, it will primarily rely on continued investments making positive returns, propelling startups forward and opening up job opportunities.

Shannon concocted the concept behind the core of BrightStar late last year while lamenting the lack of capital for early-stage companies in the state. During conversations with his friend and colleague, Jeff Rusinow, who originally founded the angel investment network Silicon Pastures, and his business partner, Jeff Harris, Shannon began to brainstorm a link between educating Wisconsin students and forming businesses to hire them.

BrightStar has emerged as that link.

“Wisconsin has such a rich history of the wealthy donating to education,” Shannon said. “(We thought) that if we could create a vehicle for them to be able to donate for job creation so that there were actually jobs to place our best and brightest when they came out of school, that these people would want to do that.”

No such vehicle previously existed in the state, he said.

To build the base of BrightStar, Shannon and Harris assembled a team of eight core founders who would lend the organization financial credibility and a well-regarded reputation.

The group of founders is comprised of seasoned business executives, many of whom have experienced successful exits from former business ventures. Along with Shannon, Harris and Rusinow, founders include Shannon’s brother, Mike Shannon, and sister, Susan Engeleiter, who live out of state but have strong ties to Wisconsin. The group also includes angel investor George Mosher; Mark Burish, a partner in Hurley, Burish & Stanton S.C. in Madison; and Michael Drescher, co-founder and chief executive officer of Okanjo Partners, Inc. in Milwaukee.

Together, founders have pledged $6 million to get the nonprofit up and running. About $200,000 of that pot will cover organizational costs such as legal bills, website creation and media assistance.

Prior to securing founding members this year, Shannon met with Ryan Murray, chief operating officer and deputy secretary of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corporation (WEDC) in January to discuss the prospects of launching an organization such as BrightStar.

“We were immediately interested,” Murray said. “Just the whole vision for it of taking the conversation way from the investment side and moving it toward a philanthropic one – we were really intrigued with that idea.”

The WEDC has pledged $300,000 to help cover BrightStar’s operating costs as its structure begins to come together.

“We wanted Tom to be able to go to donors and say that their money was going to get invested in companies, and so to the extent that we could subsidize the operational costs of the organization we thought it would make their fundraising more effective,” Murray said.

The actual awarding of this collection of funds is contingent on BrightStar’s recognition as an official 501(c)3 by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). After requesting fast track status with supportive letters to the IRS from officials such as Mayor Tom Barrett and State Sen. Alberta Darling and organizations such as the WEDC, BrightStar’s team is currently waiting to hear the IRS’ decision. Should they be granted fast track status, which they will learn in the coming weeks, Shannon predicts they’ll have their determination letter from the IRS by the year’s end.

In the meantime, the organization is in a sort of holding mode. The nonprofit has moved into its headquarters, a space in downtown Milwaukee’s Empire Building provided by Zilber Property Group, and hired its first two employees, but until the organization has that determination letter in hand, Shannon is waiting to reach out to potential donors and screen potential startup companies.

Following the green light from the IRS, BrightStar will have an investment committee in place to screen companies. The nonprofit plans to partner with angel networks, angel fund groups and venture fund groups throughout the state to spur developments in the early-stage space. Rarely will BrightStar fund a startup or complete all of the due diligence exclusively. Collaboration is more efficient in terms of both cost and effort, said Shannon, who plans to donate his time at the head of BrightStar for its first three years before transitioning to a board role.

Although turning to philanthropy to plant the seeds of startups is highly experimental, a highly experienced team of investors and entrepreneurs overseeing donations and monitoring startups has its founders confident that their organization can build a pipeline of jobs.

While BrightStar will prioritize job creation over rate of return to retain Wisconsin’s best and brightest, Shannon aims to match investments with the Kauffman Metrics, which project a near 26 percent annualized return on investment.

“This could really be a difference maker,” he said.

Original Article:

http://www.biztimes.com/article/20130902/MAGAZINE03/308299982/-1/MAGAZINE

Zilber Property Group will provide rent-free space for BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation in the Milwaukee office building where the real estate developer has its headquarters.

“This contribution by the Zilber Property Group will allow us to direct an even higher percentage of donor dollars to our mission of investing in early-stage companies to fuel job creation,” said Jeff Harris, BrightStar’s co-founder and chairman.

BrightStar is moving into its new space this week, and expects to be able to renew the lease annually, said Tom Shannon, who has agreed to be the foundation’s unpaid president for three years.

BrightStar formed in July with an unusual plan for using charitable donations to make venture investments in young state companies. Harris, Shannon and six others pledged at least $500,000 each, for a total of $6 million, to seed the foundation.

Brightstar also said Tuesday it has hired its first two employees: Todd Sobotka, portfolio manager, is former venture track program director at BizStarts Milwaukee; and Fred Raasch, business manager, is a former self-employed marketing consultant.

BrightStar’s plans hinge on securing Internal Revenue Service approval for tax-exempt status so that donations can be tax-deductible. The foundation said it filed an application with the IRS earlier this month.

BrightStar has “a very good chance” of getting approval, Reed Hall, secretary and chief executive officer of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., has said. WEDC in late July pledged $300,000 in operating funds to BrightStar, pending the IRS approval.

BrightStar has also received a $1 million pledge from Albert O. “Ab” Nicholas, founder and chairman of Milwaukee-based Nicholas Co.

Zilber executives said they asked BrightStar how they could help with the foundation’s mission, and providing the office space seemed like the “first easy step,” said Jim Borris, Zilber’s president.

Zilber’s Empire building is on the corner of Wisconsin and Plankington avenues, and houses Riverside Theater, Mo’s A Place for Steaks and other businesses.

Original Article:

http://www.jsonline.com/business/brightstar21-b9979699z1-220365851.html

Zilber Property Group has provided office space in downtown Milwaukee to house BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc., a new organization seeking nonprofit status that will collect donations to fund startups and job creation statewide.

BrightStar will operate in Zilber’s Empire Building, 710 N. Plankinton Ave., at the corner of Plankinton and Wisconsin avenues, according to an announcement Tuesday.

“This contribution by the Zilber Property Group will allow us to direct an even higher percentage of donor dollars to our mission of investing in early-stage companies to fuel job creation,” said Jeff Harris, BrightStar Wisconsin’s co-founder and chairman. “With the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp.’s grant commitment to us for staffing and Zilber’s contribution of significant office space, the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation will be able to invest nearly all of our assets in job creation across Wisconsin.”

WEDC pledged $300,000 for BrightStar operating expenses. BrightStar has also received a $1 million pledge from Ab Nicholas, founder and chairman of Milwaukee-based investment management firm Nicholas Co.

BrightStar said Tuesday that it has hired its first two employees.

Todd Sobotka, previously BizStarts Milwaukee Inc.’s venture track program director, will serve as BrightStar’s portfolio manager. He is the co-founder and owner of multiple companies.

Fred Raasch, most recently a self-employed marketing consultant, will serve as business manager.
Sobotka and Raasch join BrightStar’s volunteer CEO Tom Shannon.

The foundation plans to hire additional staff once the Internal Revenue Service makes a formal decision regarding BrightStar’s tax-exempt status, the crucial piece in making the foundation’s model work. BrightStar applied for tax-exempt status on Aug. 6.

Original Article:

http://www.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/news/2013/08/20/zilber-property-group-donat…

For Immediate Release – Aug. 20, 2013

BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation opens headquarters, adds staff
Zilber Property Group contributes significant office space

MILWAUKEE – The BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation, a groundbreaking philanthropic approach to supporting job creation and economic growth statewide through investment in early-stage companies, today announced the opening of a Milwaukee office that will serve as its headquarters. Zilber Property Group, a supporter of BrightStar’s approach, has provided the space in its Empire Building at the corner of Plankinton and Wisconsin Avenues in Milwaukee.

The foundation also announced the hiring of its first two employees. Todd Sobotka will serve as the foundation’s portfolio manager. He is the co-founder and owner of multiple companies and served most recently as venture track program director at BizStarts Milwaukee. Fred Raasch will serve as business
manager. Mr. Raasch was most recently a self-employed marketing consultant. The foundation’s two new hires will join CEO Tom Shannon at headquarters.

The foundation anticipates hiring additional staff when it receives a determination letter from the Internal Revenue Service formally recognizing its tax-exempt status. The application seeking that recognition was made on Aug. 6.

“We asked the BrightStar team how we could help ensure their success and providing them office space in our Empire Building seemed to be the first easy step for us,” said Jim Borris, president of Zilber Ltd. “Zilber Ltd. is committed to advancing our economy both in Milwaukee and statewide. We see BrightStar Wisconsin as an innovative approach that will have a significant
impact on those efforts.”

“This contribution by the Zilber Property Group will allow us to direct an even higher percentage of donor dollars to our mission of investing in early-stage companies to fuel job creation,” said Jeff Harris, BrightStar Wisconsin’s cofounder and chairman. “With the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp.’s
grant commitment to us for staffing and Zilber’s contribution of significant office space, the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation will be able to invest nearly all of our assets in job creation across Wisconsin.”

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc.

The non-profit BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation is using a groundbreaking philanthropic approach to support job creation and economic growth across Wisconsin through investment in early-stage companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation. Contributions to BrightStar will be tax deductible, assuming receipt of a tax-exempt determination from the Internal Revenue Service. The foundation is filing an application to obtain formal recognition of its status as a tax-exempt organization under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. The organization’s non-profit, tax-exempt status will mean that more of the capital raised can be invested in high-growth, job-creating companies and that virtually all earnings and returns can be reinvested. BrightStar hopes to begin screening companies seeking investment in the fall.

Money manager Albert “Ab” Nicholas said Wednesday he has pledged $1 million to BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc., a new group with an unusual plan for using charitable donations to make venture investments in young state companies.

Nicholas, who is founder and chairman of Milwaukee-based Nicholas Co., is the first contributor to be named by BrightStar since the foundation launched in July with seed pledges of $6 million from eight founding donors.

BrightStar’s organizers are hoping the foundation will attract donors who might not otherwise make high-risk investments in the state’s high-tech, high-potential start-up companies. Nicholas, a successful manager of publicly traded stock portfolios, said he has never made the kind of angel and venture capital investments BrightStar is planning.

Making a pledge to the foundation appealed to Nicholas as a way to make a contribution that would help the state grow economically, he said.

“If we can get these small companies to start up and expand and be successful, we’re going to have more opportunities for our citizens — and more opportunities for our kids coming out of college — to have jobs,” Nicholas said. “My return is going to be to help the state and that will be a wonderful return for me.”

Nicholas, an alumnus of the University of Wisconsin-Madison, estimates he and his wife have donated as much as $50 million to their alma mater. In January, Nicholas added to that with the announcement he was launching a $50 million endowment that will provide scholarships for selected high school basketball players to attend University of Wisconsin System schools.

BrightStar hopes to raise at least $60 million over the next three years. To have the impact it is seeking, the foundation will have to reach $150 million or more of assets, said Tom Shannon, who has committed to be the foundation’s unpaid president for three years.

Tax-exempt status

The foundation’s ability to operate as planned hinges on its securing Internal Revenue Service approval for tax-exempt status so donors’ contributions could be tax-deductible. BrightStar plans to file its application this week and should know by the end of August if the IRS is going to give it fast-track status, Shannon said. Fast-track status would mean the IRS would make the determination in about six months, he said.

BrightStar has “a very good chance” of getting approval, Reed Hall, secretary and chief executive officer of the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp., has said. WEDC in late July pledged $300,000 in operating funds to BrightStar, pending IRS approval.

BrightStar plans to invest in young state companies in a variety of high-tech areas such as health care informatics, battery technology, water cleanup, web-based selling and medical devices, said Shannon, who has been an angel investor since overseeing the sale of Prodesse Inc., a Waukesha biotech company, for $72 million in 2009.

Prodesse was one of the state’s 10 most successful exits in the last decade, said Jeff Rusinow, a BrightStar founding donor who was principal investor in BuySeasons.com, a successful online costume retailer, among other companies.

Rusinow said he gets approached two or three times a year by people seeking his involvement in new angel or venture capital funds. Shannon’s idea stood out because of its potential to bring more of the big supporters of the state’s economy into the effort to grow start-up companies here.

“I thought, if the model changes to a charitable one, perhaps that’s the tipping point,” Rusinow said.

Wisconsin has lagged the nation in job growth since the mid-1990s, partly because of its low rate of business starts when measured as a share of all private firms in the state, according to a report released this year by the Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance.

BrightStar will go slowly in terms of raising money until the IRS determines whether it will have tax-exempt status, Shannon said.

The foundation will have a minimum contribution requirement “in the tens of thousands,” and hopes to attract donations from wealthy individuals, corporations and foundations in Wisconsin and outside of the state, he said.

“We basically need cheeseheads everywhere to have a way to benefit the state they love,” Shannon said. “And what’s more important than having economic activity increase?”

Original Article:

http://www.jsonline.com/business/nicholas-pledges-1-million-to-brightstar-founda…

For Immediate Release

BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation receives $1-million pledge from Nicholas

MILWAUKEE, July 31, 2013 – The BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation, a groundbreaking philanthropic approach to supporting job creation and economic growth statewide through investment in early-stage companies, today announced it has received a $1-million pledge from Albert “Ab” Nicholas, the founder and chairman of the Milwaukee-based Nicholas Co. investment management firm.

“I’m very pleased to pledge my support to BrightStar’s unique approach to supporting job creation in Wisconsin,” Mr. Nicholas said. “I’ve been a proud, active supporter of education in Wisconsin because of the difference my UW education made for me. My commitment to BrightStar is a natural one because it will support the creation of jobs that will keep graduates of our great colleges and universities right here in Wisconsin.”

The BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation was founded recently by eight business leaders and early-stage investors who pledged nearly $6 million to establish it. The foundation expects to raise an additional $60 million during the next three years. Its new, philanthropic approach will enable the formation of
new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation.

Assuming BrightStar’s application for 501(c)3 tax-exempt status is approved, contributions to the foundation from corporations, foundations and wealthy individuals will be tax deductible. Because BrightStar is operating as a non-profit, more of the capital raised can be invested. Virtually all earnings and returns from the foundation’s portfolio companies will be reinvested to create additional high-quality jobs and continue to grow Wisconsin’s economy. Donors are not entitled to any return of their contributed capital or any share of BrightStar’s earnings.

“The founders and directors of the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation are profoundly grateful to Mr. Nicholas for his generous gift and his support of the foundation’s mission and innovative approach,” said Jeff Harris, the foundation’s chairman and an experienced early-stage investor. “We believe our approach, which promotes capital formation through capital donation, will put more capital to work and provide returns that will allow additional investment in companies statewide that are driving Wisconsin’s economic recovery.”

About the BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc. The non-profit BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation is using a groundbreaking philanthropic approach to support job creation and economic growth across Wisconsin through investment in early-stage companies. This new approach will enable the formation of new investment capital in Wisconsin through charitable donations to the foundation. Contributions to BrightStar will be tax deductible, assuming receipt of a tax-exempt determination from the Internal
Revenue Service. The foundation is filing an application to obtain formal recognition of its status as a tax-exempt organization under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. The organization’s non-profit, tax-exempt status will mean that more of the capital raised can be invested in high-growth, job-creating companies and that virtually all earnings and returns can be reinvested. BrightStar hopes to begin screening companies seeking investment in the fall

Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. would provide operating funds to venture capital vehicle

Wisconsin Economic Development Corp. has pledged $300,000 in operating funds for BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc., a new group that is proposing an unusual plan for raising donations to make venture investments in young state companies.

“The nonprofit BrightStar will provide opportunities for philanthropists to support the growth of Wisconsin entrepreneurs,” said Reed Hall, secretary and chief executive officer of WEDC, the state’s economic development agency. “This is an innovative investment resource to leverage additional private funding dedicated to helping early-stage Wisconsin companies grow and succeed.”

BrightStar plans to send an application in the next few weeks to the Internal Revenue Service to get tax-exempt status. WEDC would provide the money if the foundation got that status, which is critical to the plan for raising funds from wealthy individuals, companies and foundations. Hall has said BrightStar has “a very good chance” of getting approval.

WEDC will have representation on the foundation’s board. As a condition of receiving investments from the fund, WEDC will require companies — for five years after receiving a BrightStar investment — to provide information about employment, salaries and wages, and any other funding they have received.

BrightStar also plans to provide WEDC with information about the investments it makes, said Tom Shannon, who has committed to run the foundation for three years for free. But the foundation hopes to expand beyond the required information and develop indexes to show how well it is performing, he added. One such index might be some sort of “job power index,” Shannon said.

“The main think is we want to know what’s happening with (full-time equivalents) at the end of each year,” he said.

That might not be as simple as it sounds. For example, would it be better to create more jobs with a lower median wage, or fewer jobs with a higher median wage?

“We’d like to monitor a number of inputs over the years and see if we can get some data that makes some sense to help us understand where best to invest for jobs,” Shannon said.

Hall said WEDC was approached in January by Shannon. The agency decided to provide support based on the soundness of the plan, the experience Shannon and the other founding donors have in raising private capital for their own companies, and the amount of time Shannon has volunteered to get the fund established.

BrightStar plans to invest donors’ money in young companies in high-growth, technology-related industries such as information technology, biotech, nanotech, cleantech and medical devices.

Shannon and seven other founding donors have pledged at least $500,000 each, for a total of $6 million, to seed the foundation. They have said they hope to raise at least $60million more over the next three years.

Original Article:

http://www.jsonline.com/business/state-pledges-300000-to-support-brightstar-wisc…

BrightStar Wisconsin Foundation Inc., a new Milwaukee organization that will invest in Wisconsin technology startups and is seeking nonprofit status, has received a $300,000 pledge from the Wisconsin Economic Development Corp.

The WEDC investment will go toward BrightStar operating expenses and is meant to help BrightStar attract private donations to spur business growth and job creation, a Monday press release said.
BrightStar will receive the WEDC funds after it has achieved 501(c)3 status from the Internal Revenue Service, WEDC said.

“The nonprofit nature of BrightStar will provide opportunities for philanthropists to support the growth of Wisconsin entrepreneurs,” said Reed Hall, WEDC secretary and CEO. “This is an innovative investment resource to leverage additional private funding dedicated to helping early-stage Wisconsin companies grow and succeed.”

WEDC representatives will sit on the foundation’s board.

WEDC will require companies receiving BrightStar investments to provide the foundation with information on employment, salaries and wages and capital leverage periodically for five years after receiving the investment. BrightStar will also report to WEDC about the investments it awards, WEDC said.
Hall said BrightStar co-founder Tom Shannon, who has signed on as the foundation’s unpaid leader for three years, approached WEDC in January with the concept.

Hall said WEDC threw its support behind BrightStar because of the “soundness of the plan,” the co-founders’ experience in raising private capital for their own companies and the time Shannon has volunteered to establish the fund.

The co-founders have pledged nearly $6 million to the foundation and expect to raise another $60 million in three years. To read more about the co-founders, click here. To read a Q&A The Business Journal conducted with Shannon, click here.

Original Article:

http://www.bizjournals.com/milwaukee/news/2013/07/22/wedc-pledges-300k-to-bright…