Vinit:
   
  My sense is that it is going to be a while before you see California kind of 
funding of new companies. Folks out in California, read Silicon Valley, are 
willing to take a bet on unproven teams with a great idea, but that is not the 
case with India. In India, 
   
  In India VCs typically seem to focus on a proven team, or a start-up that has 
built a product and acquired customers. There is some amount of seed and angel 
funding available, but then everybody is tapping into them.

Most of the money that is coming into India is Prive Equity-related, who 
typically invest in very late-stage or public companies.  So, I guess it is a 
bit of an error to say billions of VC money is pouring in...I suspect a good 
chunk of change is PE-money. But, that does not preclude the fact that millions 
of VC money is available in India.
   
  Kamla
  
Vinit Bhansali <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  I've noticed this for a while ... But does this group have more to add to
identify the reasons behind this lack of funding newbie's other than the
usual catch-22 "I'll fund you if you already made money on your last
venture" ?

- Vinit

---------------------------------------------- 

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/006200705141124.htm

'Many potentially good companies fall by the wayside' 

By D. Murali and C. Ramesh 

Chennai, May 14: Billions of dollars are pouring into India via the venture
capital (VC) route as more and more US-based players set up shop in the
country to ride the next big growth wave. 

However, the increasing interest in investing in India has not translated
into easier access to capital for entrepreneurs at the angel and truly early
stage levels, says Ms Anjana Vivek, co-founder and CEO of VentureBean
Consulting, a Bangalore-based firm that works with early stage ventures and
companies in transition, including those looking at funding options. 

Speaking to Business Line, she says that startups needing less than $1
million still find it difficult to raise funds. 

"While many noises are being made, we do not see funding to the extent it is
required in this space. This is a bit of a worry for the industry as a
whole. While everyone seems to agree that this requirement is to be met,
there are very few risk takers for this space." 

She goes on to ask: "If we do not have seed stage and very early stage
funding, where will we get enough numbers of companies eligible for VC
funding?" 

According to her, it's a lot like the link between the number of
college-going students and students who have gone through primary, middle
and secondary school; you don't have many of the former if there aren't
enough of the latter. 

"Similarly, most companies need the funding at the idea, seed and early
stages to take them to the level of VC funding. These are typically
companies for whom loans are not advisable." 

[... Continued online ...]





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