US House Votes in Favor of Crowdfund Investing!

One word …. AMAZING!  The debate was amazing and the vote was AWESOME – 407 to 17!  I can’t believe in only 9 short months we went from “hey we’ve got a framework and a solution” to a bill that just passed the US House of Representatives!

We owe a HUGE debt of gratitude to the AMAZING group of people who made this a reality thus far:

1) Karen Kerrigan at the Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council, for listening to me and putting up with my nonsense!

2) Whoopi Goldberg and Tom Leonardis who first publicly spoke out in favor of our idea and got slammed for it. … Guess 96% of Congress agrees with you/us! 😉

3) Angus Loten at the Wall Street Journal for deciding the subject was newsworthy enough in our early days to write about it in the WSJ?!?!

4) Kevin Lawton who wrote The Crowdfunding Revolution and provided major contributions to my testimonies and the Startup Exemption framework.

5) Paul  Spinrad, Jenny Kassan & Danae Ringelmann (of IndieGoGo) who wrote the first petition to the SEC to make equity-based crowdfunding legal.  Paul also provided incredible input in the testimonies and framework.

6) Chairman Darrell Issa who so graciously took 20 minutes after the May hearing to talk one-on-one with me about crowdfunding as a solution.   Peter Haller & Hudson Hollister for pushing the idea forward.

7) Doug Rand from the White House who reached out to us and included our proposal as part of the President’s Jobs Act.  That’s bipartisan support!

8) And the AMAZING Chairman Patrick McHenry for calling the Crowdfunding hearing, writing the legislation, entering it into record, deliberating over TWO committee hearings, bringing together ideas from both sides, passionately debating it on the floor today and pulling off a 96% bipartisan win in the US House of Representatives!!!  Also a shout out to Dana Mauriello for her awesome testimony at the September Crowdfunding hearing!

And most importantly to my cohorts JASON BEST and ZAK CASSADY-DORION without whom NONE OF THIS WOULD HAVE happened!  As Jason said, “we were naive enough to think we could challenge the status quo and make a difference.  Look at what happened?”

WE AREN’T DONE! … Off to the SENATE … Stay tuned because we have our own big news on this front coming out in the next 24 hours!!

THANK YOU EVERYONE!

Sherwood

 

 

 

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House approves bipartisan SEC bills; GOP, Dems still bicker – The Hill’s Floor Action

House approves bipartisan SEC bills; GOP, Dems still bicker – The Hill’s Floor Action.

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President Obama Endorses Our Framework and HR 2930!

When we crafted our framework for Crowdfund Investing in February, 2011 we thought we had a .1% chance of updating the security laws to make equity-based crowdfunding legal.  Now we have HR 2930, the Entrepreneurial Access to Capital Act whose roots come from 2 hearing we’ve had on Capitol Hill and our entire framework!

And this just in from the White House … aaaaaaaah … day by day we get closer to helping entrepreneurs get access to capital to innovate and create jobs!

A TON of thanks for Rep. Patrick McHenry for taking on our cause!!

The Startup Exemption Team!

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Congress is Polling Your Opinion on HR 2930 … Click to Vote

Major backers of our bill: US Chamber of Commerce, National Taxpayer Union, Small Business & Entrepreneurship Council (SBE Council). Add your support!

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Another Step Closer to Crowdfund Investing (CFI) Reality

Yesterday, October 27, 20011, our bill HR 2930 was amended in the Full Financial Services Committee. It now pretty much matches everything we have been advocating for in Washington! From here it goes to the floor of the US House of Representatives.

Sherwood Neiss, chief advocate of the Startup Exemption said, “What an amazing milestone. Several democrats also signed on showing further bipartisan support for entrepreneurship, innovation and JOBS!”

The Startup Exemption formulated only 10 months ago with a goal to update the security laws to use the tenants of crowdfunding to get capital flowing to entrepreneurs. In that short period of time, they acquired thousands of follows on their petition, blog and twitter feed. They were part of 2 congressional hearing in Washington, DC. They were consulted and included in President Obama’s American Jobs Act and were the backbone for HR 2930, what they like to call the Crowdfund Investing Act.

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Crowdfund Investing ITSELF Is an Investor Risk Mitigation Strategy

There has been a lot of progress to date in our effort to make Crowdfund Investing (CFI) legal. The proponents, including the President who included our framework in the American Jobs Act as well as leading Republicans on the Hill who introduced HR 2930, otherwise known as the Crowdfund Investing Act, get it.

  • Capital is hard to come by.
  • Wall St isn’t focused on entrepreneurs.
  • The banks aren’t lending and private money is only for a select few.
  • Since donation-based crowdfunding is working, let’s apply those tenants to equity-based crowdfunding and get capital flowing to entrepreneurs; also known as our nation’s net job creators.

The model we propose is itself, a self-vetting mechanism that utilizes the Internet, and the wisdom of crowds to help mitigate risk for investors. CFI isn’t free money. In a time of recession folks are even more cautious about their money and no one is going to look at this as a way to make a quick buck, entrepreneur, investor or crook. The crowd is more skeptical than ever before. And only those entrepreneurs that are transparent and accountable will be successful in raising capital, forming businesses and hiring Americans.

However the naysayers are surfacing.

  • A number of them can be dismissed because they do not want another competitor in the capital markets. (Our response to them is, step up to the plate and fund our nation’s entrepreneurs at the same degree or better than prior to the financial meltdown).
  • Another group are just naysayers with no solution, just vague fear mongering with little data.
  • And the final group is the conspiracy theorists that believe (with no hard data) it will open the floodgates to fraud. We adamantly refute this.

First, naysayers need to understand the framework and rules under which we are proposing CFI to take place. An entrepreneur wishing to raise capital would have to:

  • Submit to a background/fraud check (name, address, social security and date of birth) to ensure he hasn’t committed fraud.
  • He would have to pitch his idea on SEC-registered Crowdfund Investing platforms.
  • These platforms will be required to perform the fraud checks and contain an investor education component.
  • Investor education and terms of service will warn investors to only invest in people they know, products or services they believe in, entrepreneurs whom they can talk to about the idea and only those ideas that have the greatest number of 1st degree connections. eg: You can feel confident backing an entrepreneur with 89% first degree (meaning they know him personally) investors that represent at least 89% of the committed capital. However, you should be skeptical of an entrepreneur that only has 24% first-degree backers and they have only ponied up 10% of the amount needed. All of this is easily tracked and graphically displayed with standard web tools.
  • The platforms will enable open dialog where potential investors can pick apart the idea, the entrepreneur’s experience, the business model and the amount of equity offered. The entrepreneur will have to respond to each of the comments to the satisfaction of the crowd. The crowd will vote on the answers by using the “like” button. A higher number of likes the more confidence investors will have again. If an entrepreneur doesn’t answer the questions to the satisfaction of the crowd he/she won’t be funded, period. Again all of this can be tracked and graphically displayed for potential investors to see.
  • Our proposal is an all or nothing financing window. If a fraudster is trying to bilk people out of $1M and he hits a funding target of $999,999.00 he won’t be funded and no money will be exchanged. Anyone who is trying to raise capital will have to set small milestones and raise smaller amounts of capital, hit their milestones and go back for more with proof that they’ve achieved what they said they were going to do.
  • Of course, they will have to be transparent and communicate with their investors or again they won’t have the confidence going forward to raise additional money.
  • Another trigger will be the percent of 1st round investors that come back for a second round. The higher that percent the more confidence. The lower, the less likely they will raise additional funds.

So still think fraud can take place with all these triggers? If so, give us the example and let’s work it thru the model.

ps – Remember, this exemption is not be available to foreign issuers, investment companies, and public companies.

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Radio Interview – Sherwood Neiss Interviewed on Crowdfund Investing Part 1

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Radio Interview – Sherwood Neiss Interviewed on Crowdfund Investing Part 2

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A TEDx Pitch by Sherwood Neiss of the Startup Exemption & Crowdfund Investing

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Crowdfund Investing Update – Congressional hearing, HR Bill 2930, Bipartisan Support & President Obama backing … Not a bad week in DC


 

Dear All,

To say it has been quite a week (less a few months since we started this) is an understatement.  What began as a few entrepreneurs completely frustrated over the availability of capital to fund ‘our American dreams’ has turned into a full fledged Bill (HR 2930) before Congress with the President’s support hailing us as the ‘nation’s economic engine and job creators.’  How amazing that both sides are eager to move this forward to help create JOBS!  We would love to have you continue to contribute to this initiative and will provide some opportunities at the end of this email.

We thought we were on to something, but all this?  Seriously!???

So as the expression goes, when it rains it pours.  This week other than having our own hearing on Capitol Hill called “Crowdfunding – Connecting Investors and Job Creators” we were profiled on the Dylan Ratigan Show on MSNBC and our efforts were documented in numerous media across the board.

Needless to say, we owe a debt of gratitude to Karen Kerrigan of the Small Business and Entrepreneurship Council for rallying behind us as well as all the media that covered this issue.  We would love to continue to spread our message about how this idea … ne law … can get a limited amount of capital flowing to our nation’s job creators with the backing and support of the community where the crowd will take over as the vetting ground for these seed rounds.

Yes the naysayers are out there.  We welcome them.  If you think about it, they are just proving our theory.  If the majority of people believe the naysayers and don’t believe in what we are advocating then we won’t be successful in changing the law.  If they do, they will back us with their support much in the same way that successfully funded ideas on these future Crowdfund Investing (CFI) platforms will receive not only money but experience, knowledge, wisdom, and the marketing power of their backers.

We’ve been tasked with a couple follow up items, which we encourage you to contribute.  First, we need more stories of entrepreneurs who have used crowdfunding to help fund their businesses and second, we need to further address how we can mitigate fraud and increase investor protection under our model.  To this end, we’ve started a dialog on our website were people can contribute ideas that will increase transparency and accountability and hence reduce fraud on CFI platforms.  Any other ideas you have would be welcome.  Please email them to us.  We will review them and attach the best to the legislation before Congress.

If you are part of the media, we would love to continue the discussion with you.   There are only a handful of ideas emanating from the Jobs Act that have the bipartisan degree of support that Crowdfunding has, so we believe that we have a unique opportunity to drive this across the finish line because this initiative is all about creating jobs and innovation.

Check out the links below.  It is a great way to see our progress from last week.  Also, please use these materials when you are speaking with friends, colleagues, elected officials and the media.   Every conversation, online or offline, is important to making The Startup Exemption a reality!

  1. Video of our Hearing on Capitol Hill
  2. Copy of Sherwood’s written testimony on behalf of the Startup Exemption
  3. Segment on the Dylan Ratigan Show
  4. Link to HR2930
  5. Link to Crowdfunding in President Obama’s American Jobs Act
  6. Stories from other media:

Thanks again and please share your ideas with us about how we can continue to build on the momentum of the week.  If you want more information, please feel free to email: sherwood@startupexemption.com

Sincerely,
Sherwood Neiss

 

 

 

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