Post by bayezidislam on Feb 15, 2024 6:09:55 GMT
Above: Individual investors are based off an updated sample size in Feb 2013, while data is accurate, it did not include new startups that were added to this market. Above, On July 14th, I’ve added the following graph, which includes new investors not in the original sample size, collected in Feb. In all cases these graphs are correct, but they represent different sample sizes. New investors include Mike Walsh and Shervin Pishevar, who take the lead, in terms of frequency. Methodology and Data Notations See the full data sample was from 200 startups in the Collaborative Economy. Read the infographic to obtain a summary.
Special thanks to the Collaborative Consumption crew, as many Slovakia Email List of the names were obtained from their site. Of the 37% who’d been funded, we mined public records ranging from Crunchbase, startup website, investor website, Wikipedia, news sources, and press releases to obtain data. We don’t believe this list is complete, but it is a representative sample of funding from easily obtained public sources. We included the term “venture round” is an ambiguous term which can be used in a variety of ways, in the ‘other’ category, as it’s used both in early stage and later stage funding rounds.
Obtaining the exact amount of how much each firm or individual invested is next to impossible, so obtaining frequency, and estimating per round helps to determine a relatively reliable figure. Compounding this complexity, multiple investors are often involved in each round, making specific dollar amounts even more difficult to determine. This information should not be used for official financial advice or guidance, but only for entertainment purposes only. If you liked this post, see all my coverage and data on the VC market. Photos used under Creative Commons, by Philip Taylor.
Special thanks to the Collaborative Consumption crew, as many Slovakia Email List of the names were obtained from their site. Of the 37% who’d been funded, we mined public records ranging from Crunchbase, startup website, investor website, Wikipedia, news sources, and press releases to obtain data. We don’t believe this list is complete, but it is a representative sample of funding from easily obtained public sources. We included the term “venture round” is an ambiguous term which can be used in a variety of ways, in the ‘other’ category, as it’s used both in early stage and later stage funding rounds.
Obtaining the exact amount of how much each firm or individual invested is next to impossible, so obtaining frequency, and estimating per round helps to determine a relatively reliable figure. Compounding this complexity, multiple investors are often involved in each round, making specific dollar amounts even more difficult to determine. This information should not be used for official financial advice or guidance, but only for entertainment purposes only. If you liked this post, see all my coverage and data on the VC market. Photos used under Creative Commons, by Philip Taylor.