Last month marked a milestone of sorts for Michael Terpin. BitAngels, the first âseriousâ angel network in bitcoin, celebrated its second birthday.
Things are markedly different since the groupâs first impromptu meeting at the Bitcoin Foundationâs Bitcoin 2013 conference. After sending out a Reddit invite with the goal of six or seven people showing up, Terpin and co-founders David Johnston and Sam Yilmaz had 35 attend (60 joined within a week).
âThe spirit of discovery and camaraderie from those early days was magical and unforgettable,â said Terpin. âWhen we did our first set of fundings with bitcoin it was lower, $100. But compared to $5 that time a year earlier it seemed like it was on the rise.â
Today, over 500 investors make up BitAngelsâ decentralised global network. Those first discussions in crowded Mexican restaurants have made way for big budget conferences and monthly online presentations which Terpin describes as a âWhoâs Whoâ of bitcoin and blockchain companies. By January 2014, the group had invested over $7m in a dozen bitcoin startups including Blueseed, CoinTerra and GoCoin. From anecdotal evidence, Terpin estimates this total is now in the mid 20s.
With most deals negotiated outside its sessions, BitAngels is part social club, part due diligence service for its members. Now, under Terpinâs leadership, it plans to become a matchmaker, with a âcity networkâ that aims to foster entrepreneurship on a local level. Johnston and Yilmaz, meanwhile, have spun off into âcrypto 2.0â projects with Dapps fund.
So far, six BitAngels chapters including London, San Francisco, Tel Aviv and New York are down to hold quarterly meetings where startups and angels can meet face-to-face.
Besides angels and founding teams meeting in person, this new initiative is important, Terpin said, to pump new blood into the bitcoin ecosystem.
Itâs not that deals arenât happening, or that companies arenât good enough, but that bitcoinâs price drop has divided ranks. Some investors have abandoned the bitcoin sector altogether, while others have chosen to buckle in for the âlong road aheadâ.
âWith the price going down thereâs not this huge demand for people saying âthis is the perfect time to get inâ. If [bitcoin] hit $400 next week youâd have a lot of interest ⦠but thereâs an equivalent fear that itâs going down to double digits. Iâve heard that several times.â
The long-term bitcoin holders that make up the core BitAngels demographic are less likely to part with their funds now than at the currencyâs peak, or when the market appeared more stable. The quality of startups pitching to the group remains high, Terpin said, but only 15% of people tuning into its monthly calls would be considered âseriousâ investors.
To boost these numbers, the group is reaching out to other angels who havenât yet invested in blockchain technology. An agreement with the worldâs largest angel group, Keiretsu Forum, will see BitAngels present bitcoin deals to some of its 1,500 members. The initiative will start in the locations with the greatest âsynergyâ to its new city network, he said.
Rather than speculating on price, Terpin thinks these tech-savvy individuals may help build out bitcoinâs utility into use cases beyond payments.
âIâm committed to growing the group in ways that are even more relevant today, which I believe must include reaching out to people who were not involved in bitcoinâs earliest days,â he added.
âTwo years ago it was a given that investing in companies was riskier than just buying bitcoin because it pretty much always went up â but now thatâs certainly the minority view.â
Now, BitAngelsâ competition is fierce. As Terpin admits, âweâre not the only game in town anymoreâ. Companies like Tally Capital (Xapo, BitFury, BitPay), Pantera (Ripple Labs, 21, BitPesa) and Barry Silbertâs newly-formed Digital Currency Group are laser focused on fostering crypto-talent.
Silicon Valley accelerator Boost VC, helmed by fourth-generation venture capitalist Adam Draper, announced its first âtribeâ of bitcoin startups in November, pledging to fund a total of 100 bitcoin companies by 2017.
The abundance of seed capital that these initiatives have brought to the ecosystem, sprinkling $50,000 here and there, has had a knock-on effect Terpin terms the âY combinator effectâ.
âEverybody who raised a seed round wants an A and not everyone is worthy of it,â he said, noting that this issue affects all companies in tech, not just bitcoin.
âYouâre not able to get something funded with a scratched out idea, youâre not able to get a second round without really showing some traction.â
When bitcoin marketplace Buttercoin shuttered just four months after launching with at least $1.3m from high-profile VCs, including Google Ventures and Y Combinator, its CEO blamed a lack of interest in smaller bitcoin deals.
Terpin disagrees, adding that the general consensus was that Buttercoin spent too much time âcourting investorsâ over users.
The void between seed and A rounds in bitcoin wonât stop great companies getting funded, he said, citing Shapeshift as an example. For the Circles and Coinbases of the world, if you are hitting targets and have top tier investors on board, it seems like the B rounds are the easiest ones these days, he said.
Michael Terpin first fell into angel investing in the 1990s when tech startups he liked couldnât afford the fees at his PR firm, The Terpin Group.
While some of these companies failed, Terpin had âa few good exitsâ from these early deals and bridge loans, including dot-com Xoom â then the fourth highest IPO of all time.
With over 100 angel investments now under his belt, the PR guru says he doesnât regret the time and money spent on projects that went nowhere, but the billion-dollar firms that slipped through his net two decades ago.
âTwo of the best-known companies in tech I turned down working with when they offered stock instead of cash. Both are $100bn companies today.â
But beyond B rounds, which of these startups has what it takes to be bitcoinâs first unicorn? This is a question Terpin considers as a partner at the AngelList Bitcoin Syndicate, part of top angel Gil Penchinaâs Flight.vc. If he thinks the answer is no, he said, itâs simply a case of moving on to the next deal.
âWeâre looking for revenue growth and a really big market where theyâve already got traction to be a leader. If youâre putting in something in a $5â10m valuation, whatâs your path to a $100â200m exit?â
Terpin said the answer was âabsolutely in the wallet and exchange spaceâ, with the general consensus in the community that due to its funding and traction Coinbase is leading the pack.
If the mining sector recovers, he added, startups like BitFury and KnCMiner could be potential unicorn candidates, too.
Terpin himself is also launching a new Idea Lab-style incubator in Las Vegas, bCommerce Labs, alongside Jim Blasko. Its first startup will be unveiled at CE Week later this month.
âI donât know that there will be a blockchain frenzy in a couple of years, but I think there will be good blockchain companies that  are recognised by investors in the public markets certainly in the next three to five years. Iâd like to start building some of those in Las Vegas.â
Long road ahead image via Shutterstock.Â