Investigación y educación sobre financiación colectiva de acciones

Investigación y educación sobre financiación colectiva de acciones

Nodo de origen: 2975894

In 2013, a young entrepreneur named Jamie Siminoff went on the TV show “Shark Tank” to pitch his startup.

Jamie’s company was creating a Wi-Fi-enabled video doorbell, so you could see a live video feed of what’s happening at your front door at any time. He called it DoorBot.

Today, I’ll tell you what happened on “Shark Tank” that day…

I’ll reveal which of the sharks made out like bandits when DoorBot sold for $1 billion…

And most importantly of all, I’ll explain how you can invest in the Next DoorBot.

En el Deal

Jamie went onto Shark Tank with two goals in mind:

First, to raise money for his startup. And second, to raise conciencia for his startup.

He eventually succeeded in both of his goals, but not in the way he was expecting.

You see, he didn’t get a deal on Shark Tank.

One shark — Kevin O’Leary, known as “Mr. Wonderful” — made an offer. But it was nowhere close to what Jamie was looking for.

The other Sharks passed entirely. Mark Cuban, for example, thought the business would never be worth more than $50 million, so it wasn’t worth his time or money.

Siminoff walked off the set sad and disappointed.

Then — A Deal

The thing is, “Shark Tank” is watched by millions of people from all over the world.

And one of those people thought Jamie’s idea was brilliant.

The person I’m referring to is Sir Richard Branson, the billionaire founder of the Virgin Group, which controls more than four hundred companies.

Branson called Siminoff and invested in DoorBot.

Good move, Branson…

Anillo anillo

You see, DoorBot soon changed its name to Ring, and over the next few years, it exploded in popularity.

In 2018, it was acquired by Amazon — for $1 billion.

Then, as if a billion dollars wasn’t enough to compensate Jamie for the humiliation of being rejected on TV, “Shark Tank” asked Jamie to come back — as a Shark!

The Real Lesson Here

Many believe the story here is about perseverance and determination.

After all, this guy was rejected in front of millions of TV viewers — but he succeeded anyway, and came back as a Shark.

Sure, that’s a good story. But if you ask me, that’s not the real historia.

The real story — what you need to understand as an investor — is this:

First of all, it’s possible to make a lot of money investing in startups. If the Sharks had taken the deal Jamie offered, they’d have made about 140x their money. That’s enough to turn ten grand into about $1.5 million.

Secondly, determining which startups to back is challenging — not just for investors like you, but also for the Sharks, and even for professional investors.

And that, my friends, is why the professional startup investors called venture capitalists don’t just “bet it all on black…”

Instead, they invest in muchos Inauguración…

Las probabilidades

As legendary venture capitalist Fred Wilson from Union Square Ventures has explained, a typical venture firm invests in 25 to 50 startups per fund.

So, is 25 to 50 investments a good target for you, too? As it turns out, yes, it is. You see, according to Wilson, for every 10 startup investments, the result will likely be:

  • Seven that fail and return nothing.
  • Two that break even or earn a small return.
  • And one startup that earns a massive return. 

And those massive winners are where your profits really start to add up.

As you learned a minute ago, early investors in Ring could have made 140x their money.

Meanwhile, early startup investors in Facebook could have made about 2,000x their money… and early investors in Airbnb could have made about 100,000x their money.

The point is, with a portfolio of 25 to 50 investments, even if just a couple of them are winners — and the rest literally go to zero — you could still be sitting on a portfolio worth a fortune.

Dos formas sencillas de empezar

Ready to dive into this market and find the Next ¿Anillo?

Aquí hay dos formas fáciles (y gratuitas) de comenzar.

Primero, consulte nuestro correo electrónico semanal de "Ofertas". Lo enviamos todos los lunes a las 11 a. m. EST y contiene algunas nuevas ofertas de inicio para que las explore. Muchos de ellos tienen inversiones mínimas de sólo 100 dólares aproximadamente.

En segundo lugar, consulte nuestros documentos técnicos como "Consejos de los profesionales". Estos informes, fáciles de leer, están repletos de sabiduría sobre cómo separar los buenos negocios de los malos.

¡Feliz inversión!

Para obtener más información, llame a nuestro departamento de Servicios para miembros VIP al 1-844-311-3191.

Atentamente,

Fundador
Crowdability.com

PD: A lo largo de los años, hemos creado varios servicios premium que pueden ayudarlo rápidamente a construir una cartera de nuevas empresas rentables, incluso si no tiene ninguna experiencia.

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