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Capital Access Network - Application Process
Eligibility
- Applicant should be seeking between $50,000 and $1,500,000 of equity
financing.
- Company must be located in the Mid-Atlantic region (District of
Columbia, Maryland, Virginia, or Delaware); at this time, CAN does not
consider applicants located outside of this region.
- A complete application must be submitted, which includes Executive
Summary, Financials and Business Plan.
When to Apply
CAN applications are accepted on a rolling basis. You should apply when:
- Your product is developed or near completion (proof of concept at a
minimum)
- You have existing customers or potential customers who will confirm they
will buy from you
- You can demonstrate that the business is likely to grow rapidly, is
scalable and has sufficient untapped market potential
- Well defined sales/marketing strategy with defendable market
differentiation
- Compelling business model to reach at least $15 million in revenues in
the next 3-7 years, can be profitable and leads to reasonable returns for
investors.
How to Apply
CAN accepts applications through Angelsoft. There is a $100 application fee
plus $10 processing fee payable by credit card at the time of application.
To apply, please follow this link:
Apply Here.
CAN Screening Process
Step 1: Pre-Screening - The Capital Access Network staff
will review your written application and provide feedback within 14 days
regarding eligibility for the next step.
Step 2: Preview and Coaching - Companies will be asked to
present their investor pitch via conference call. Initial due diligence of the
product, financial plan and team is also conducted. Documented feedback is
provided. Our hope is that, through this rigorous coaching process, you are well
prepared to successfully meet investors throughout the region.
Step 3: Review Day - Final candidates will be invited to
present to our Entrepreneurs-in-residence in College Park. These coaches are
professionals who have experience in capital raising across many industries and
will provide real time feedback on content and delivery.
Step 4: Investor Presentation - Breakfast presentations to
CAN investors are held the 2nd Wednesday of each month from September to June.
If Not Selected
If your application is not selected, we will provide you with
recommendations/resources to pursue for additional mentoring. We also
encourage you to keep us posted on any salient developments as you
continue to build your company. You may reapply for CAN at a future
date.
Once Your Application Has Been Approved...
CAN investors review the circulated applications and plans, and will engage
in one of several ways:
- Request to Present. Dingman Center Management will invite
companies to present at a formal CAN breakfast event. Multiple companies are
selected for each event.
- Investor/Entrepreneur meeting. Investors may choose to directly
contact an entrepreneur or request facilitation of a meeting through the
Dingman Center.
- Investor Collaboration. Investors with a mutual interest in a
particular company may collaborate to provide feedback and/or pursue an
investment in a company.
Investors will make their own decisions about which companies to invest in
and for how much. They will lead their own due diligence and negotiations with
the company. The Dingman Center is not involved in this process. We do, however,
stay closely connected to the entrepreneurs and investors to document
interactions and follow-on fundraising.
Concerned About Disclosure?
Capital Access Network does not sign Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs). This
is a common apprehension for most entrepreneurs. However, most professionals and
venture capitalists will NOT sign an NDA until some time late in the due
diligence process. A company presenting to CAN, or to any private or
institutional investors outside of CAN, should prepare its business plan and
presentation in such a way that its secrets are not fully revealed.
Most ideas which entrepreneurs are afraid to disclose have to do with
scientific or technical details. Entrepreneurs need to realize that investors
are not concerned about such details in the first or second meeting. What they
are concerned about is:
- the market need;
- the cure for the need;
- the demonstration of a large and growing market;
- validation of product or service viability; and
- the management team and its capability to execute the business plan.
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